| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | THE HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY |  | 
| EARLY HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCHFROM ITS FOUNDATION TO THE END OF THE THIRD CENTURYBY 
        MONSIGNOR LOUIS DUCHESNE 
             VOLUME I
          
         I.-The Roman Empire, the home of ChristianityII.- The primitive church at JerusalemIII.-Antioch and the missions of St PaulIV.-The Christian in the Apostolic AgeV.- The origin of the roman churchVI.- The first heresies 
        VII.- The episcopate 
        VIII.- Christianity and the State 
        IX.- The end of Judaic-Christianity 
        X.- The Christian Books 
        XI.- Gnosticism and Marcionism 
        XII.- Evangelization and Apologetics in
        the Second Century 
        XIII.- The church in Rome under Nero and
        Commodus 
        XIV.- The churches of the second century 
        XV.- Montanism 
        XVI.- The Paschal Controversy 
        XVII.- Controversies in Rome—Hippolytus 
        XVIII.- The Christian school of Alexandria 
        XIX.- Church and State in the third centuryXX.- African Christianity and the roman church in the middle of the third century—CyprianXXI.- Christianity in the east, before Decius.XXII.- Paul of SamosataXXIII.-
        Dionysius of Alexandria 
        XXIV.- Eastern theology after Origen
        and Paul of Samosata 
        XXV.- Christian PracticeXXVI.- The Christian SocietyXXVII.- The reaction against Christianity at the end of the third century
         PREFACE 
           
         At the time
        of Diocletian’s persecution, when the churches were destroyed, the sacred books
        burned, and the Christians proscribed, or forced to apostasize,
        one of their number was quietly working away at the first history of
        Christianity. His was not a mind of the highest order, but he was patient,
        hard-working, and conscientious, and during many long years, he had collected
        materials for his contemplated book. He succeeded in saving these materials
        from the general shipwreck, and even in turning them to account. Thus Eusebius
        of Caesarea became the father of ecclesiastical history. And the first duties
        of those who take up the same task again—so long after, but in days not much
        less dark—is to recall his name and his incomparable services. But for his unrivalled
        diligence in searching through those Palestinian libraries, where the learned
        Origen and Bishop Alexander had collected the whole Christian literature of
        early days, our knowledge of the first three centuries of the Church's life
        would be small indeed. We cannot of course but lament the destruction of these
        libraries, yet, thanks to him, and to the remarkable fragments he preserved, we
        can appreciate in some measure what they were. 
   Eusebius,
        however, is not the only witness to the treasures of this ancient literature.
        Several of the early books he mentions have come down to us, and others have
        been read, and passed on, by painstaking students like St Epiphanius, St
        Jerome, and Photius. It is possible, therefore, to write the literary history
        of Christianity from the earliest times, and the task has often been attempted.
        In recent years a very remarkable treatise on this subject by O. Bardenhewer has been produced in Germany. During the last
        thirty years Adolph Harnack and his school have been actively employed, like
        Eusebius before the persecution, in collecting documents for a great synthesis.
        And the scientific world has been kept informed of their progress by the
        publication of the Texte und Untersnchimgen, and especially by two preliminary works
        on the transmission of early Christian literature and on its chronology. 
   These
        works—and it would be easy to add others to the list, of French, English, or
        Italian origin—have thrown much light on these ancient writings and their
        relationship to each other. The knowledge of documents has indeed made great
        progress. Towards the end of the 17th century, the honest and judicious
        Tillemont based his treatises on the most conscientious study of all the
        sources of information then available. He would be much astonished, could he
        appear in our midst now, to see all that has been discovered since. 
   Nevertheless,
        we must not think that the progress of research has essentially, or even
        greatly, modified the tradition set forth in his learned volumes. The partial
        results attained by so many discoveries and so many efforts, tend on the whole
        to justify the views taken by the wise critics of the time of Louis XIV. There
        has been a reaction; we have recoiled from the wild theories emanating from
        Tubingen, though others have taken their place, the human brain being always
        fertile in strange inventions. But there is a middle position, represented by
        the judgment of serious, right-minded men, which commends itself to the
        common-sense public. I need not say that I believe that position to be mine; I
        may deceive myself. But the folly of some of the theories is as repugnant to me
        as the foolishness of some of the legends. I think even that if I had to choose
        I should prefer the legends, for in them at least there is always some poetry
        and something of the soul of a people. 
   The task,
        therefore, which I now undertake—the modest task of merely explaining and
        popularising my subject—is justified by the great progress of learned research.
        Yet I have taken up my pen only in response to so many and such insistent
        entreaties as almost compelled me to comply with them for the sake of peace. 
   The people
        who so pressed me are, for the most part, not literary, and will not therefore
        defend me against the critics. But sensible and understanding people will
        comprehend why, for instance, I have not encumbered my text with discussions
        and bibliography, why I have not lingered long over the very first beginnings,
        and why, without entirely ignoring theologians and their work, I have not
        devoted overmuch attention to their quarrels. There is a time and place for
        everything. I hope I shall also be forgiven a tendency to limit my
        speculations. I look up to those superior people who wish to know everything,
        and admire the artistic ingenuity with which, by the help of a little most
        seductive hypothesis, they prolong into the realm of the imaginary those vistas
        into the past which reliable investigation has opened out. But for my own part,
        I prefer solid ground : I would rather go less far and walk securely. 
   Rome, Nov.
        22, 1905.
         
         
         CHAPTER I 
        The Roman Empire, the home of Christianity 
          
           
         At
        the moment when Christianity came into the world, the Roman Empire was
        established in peace throughout all the countries bordering on the
        Mediterranean. It coincided almost exactly with what is now the continent of
        Europe, but was more isolated. The very existence of America was still
        unsuspected, and the great masses in China, India, and the interior of Africa
        were as ignorant of the Mediterranean as the people on the shores of that sea
        were of them. It was indeed possible to communicate with those almost fabulous
        regions by the Nile, or by the gulfs on either side of the Arabian peninsula,
        which open into the Indian Sea: it was in fact along these highways of the
        world that the empires of Egypt, Assyria, Chaldea, and Susiana had flourished
        from remote antiquity. But, notwithstanding their geographical situation, so
        apparently favourable for communication with distant
        lands, these states seem always to have been practically closed towards the
        east. Their victorious and civilizing expansion was towards the Mediterranean :
        and on that side they finally came into conflict with other younger and
        stronger nations, destined to stop their farther development and history, and
        to replace them in the political government of western Asia. 
   In
        the 6th century before the Christian era, the Nile and the Euphrates were both
        under the dominion of the Persians, an enterprising race, whose conquests
        extended to the Aegean and the Danube on the west, and on the east to the
        Indus. Two hundred years later, Alexander broke up this short-lived empire, and
        brought the East into subjection to Greece. This political settlement, which he
        intended to crown his magnificent enterprises, proved indeed of very short
        duration. But the Macedonian conquest of Persia remains notable as bringing to
        the East the spirit of Hellenism. Alexander launched these countries, which
        possessed an ancient and vigorous civilization of their own, on a course
        destined to lead them to a fate quite different from that of his own empire. It
        is true that Iran, carrying with it its former vassals on the Tigris and the
        Euphrates, soon regained its freedom and lived its own life, independent of the
        Greek kingdoms. But neither the Parthian kings nor their successors, the Sassanides, ever succeeded in
        recapturing the position Darius or Assurbanipal had held in the eyes of the
        western world. That was denied them; for though the Greek kingdoms fell, the
        armies of Rome took their place, and the frontiers remained unchanged for
        centuries. Mistress of Italy, victorious at Carthage and in Greece, Rome broke
        up the kingdom of the Seleucidae (64 BC), and thirty years later inherited the land of the Ptolemies.
        The whole Mediterranean, from Antioch to Spain, acknowledged her supremacy.
        Julius Caesar gave her Gaul; Augustus extended her frontier to the Danube, and
        Claudius to Scotland. On the north the Roman world impinged only on barbaric
        peoples; the ocean formed the western boundary, the desert the southern
        frontier. It was but on the east, towards the Tigris and Armenia, that Roman
        territory was coterminous with that of another empire, and even there, from the Euxine to the Red Sea, a line of small tributary
        kingdoms intervened between the Parthian and the Roman Empire. 
   It
        was in one of these small tributary kingdoms, in Judea, that Christianity first
        appeared. Judaism, which had preceded and prepared the way for it in this
        corner of southern Syria, was at the outset represented by the religious life
        of a little people of various tribes, knit together first into one and then
        into two kingdoms, which were of short duration, and finally succumbed to the
        attacks of the Assyrians and Chaldees. When this last
        catastrophe took place (590 BC), their religious life, which had been gradually
        purified by inspired prophets, centred round the
        national sanctuary at Jerusalem. There, One God only was worshipped : He was
        worshipped as the only true God and Lord, before whom all other so-called
        divinities were but idols and demons. Israel recognized this One God as the
        Maker and Master of the world; he knew himself bound to this God by ancient and
        special covenants. Yahweh, the Creator, was his own God, as he was the chosen
        of Yahweh. Hence arose an exalted sense of his dignity, race, and vocation;
        hence came an unshakable confidence in his destiny, and in the God who had
        ordained it. 
   The
        Temple was destroyed, the kingly dynasty suppressed, the whole people dispersed
        in distant exile; but Israel still hoped on, and his hope was not vain. The
        Persians destroyed the Chaldean Empire, they took and pillaged the hated city
        of Babylon, and finally they allowed the Jews to rebuild their sanctuary, to
        settle round it, and even to fortify Jerusalem. National independence was gone,
        but the Jews consoled themselves by drawing closer and closer the bonds which
        united the Children of Israel to Yahweh, and to each other in Him. The rulers
        of Susa allowed a considerable measure of local self-government; so did the Ptolemies and also the Seleucids; until Antiochus Epiphanes conceived the mad scheme of Hellenizing the
        people of God. Then the Jews’ defence of their
        religion culminated in insurrection. From this insurrection, crowned by
        success, arose an autonomous state governed by the Asmonean high priests, the sons of the heroes of the independence. Little by little,
        these priests became kings of Judea. Their rule lasted nearly a hundred years,
        until the Romans came. Pompey, who put an end to the kingdom of the Seleucids,
        and took Jerusalem (63 BC), practically continued the same state of things. But
        Antony (40 BC) replaced the last Asmoneans by a
        native adventurer, Herod, the man called Herod the Great. It is with his name
        that the Gospel begins. When he died (750 A.U.C. = 4 BC), the vast kingdom
        assigned to him was divided into three; the part which included Jerusalem fell
        to the share of his son Archelaus; he reigned until 6
        A.D. Then he was deposed and replaced by procurators, who, except during an
        interval of three years (Herod Agrippa, 42-44), governed in succession until
        the great insurrection of 66 A.D. 
   When
        this insurrection broke out, Christianity was already in being, and the lines
        of its future propaganda laid down. They did not lead it at first towards the
        East; it was only later that it took root in Parthia. From the first its eyes
        were turned towards the world of Greece and of the Roman Empire. 
   This
        Roman Empire, notwithstanding the many scandals of which Rome was the scene,
        secured peace, safety, and even liberty, in so far as it favoured the growth of municipal organization. The provinces were governed, some by
        proconsuls elected annually in the name of the Senate, others by procurators (legatus pro praetore),
        appointed in that of the emperor, and might be considered as groups of communal
        districts presided over by magistrates elected in the chief city. In countries
        where municipal rule was not introduced, the self-government was differently
        organized. The government officials, excepting those concerned with taxation,
        were few; the administration of justice, except in criminal cases—and that not
        everywhere— remained in the hands of the municipal magistrates. Those, however,
        who enjoyed the right of Roman citizenship could only be tried by Roman
        tribunals. Only frontier provinces were garrisoned by imperial troops; the
        maintenance of internal peace was still a local affair, and entrusted to the
        local authorities. This liberal organization never led to serious disorder;
        care had been taken that the municipal power should lie in the hands of the
        upper classes; the populace had no influence in the communal government. 
   Under
        this rule, the world prospered, and the civilization of Greece and Rome rapidly
        gained ground in lands where different customs, or actual barbarism, had
        prevailed. The country places still retained their ancient dialects-Celtic,
        Punic, Iberian, Illyrian, Syriac, and Egyptian; but
        in the towns hardly anything was spoken but Greek or Latin. A vast system of
        roads bound together the different parts of the empire; along them travelled
        both private carriages and the imperial posts. The Mediterranean itself formed
        a great water-way, where travelling was safe and rapid; intercourse between the
        various parts of the empire, being made easy, became incessant. 
   In
        this great body, however, pulsated more material than intellectual life. The
        age of Augustus was past; no poetry or eloquence glowed; grammarians had
        succeeded the great writers. Philosophy itself was under eclipse. The most
        prominent sects, the Epicureans and the Stoics, interested themselves but
        little in metaphysics; and those rare souls who still meditated, such as
        Seneca, meditated only on morality. In Rome, a few noble characters, Thrasea and Helvidius Priscus, for
        instance, kept alive the protest of the human conscience against the tyranny of
        the Caesars and the Flavians, together with a
        half-appeal to a vanished liberty. But neither their public-spirited protest,
        nor the speculations of philosophy, had any appreciable influence on the
        populace of Rome or the masses in the provinces. 
   As
        to religion, the upper classes were generally skeptical.
        Hardly anything remained of the ancient Roman or Greek rites except the
        official ceremonies. The old Roman religion had but little besides rites and
        ceremonies. It adored abstract divinities, without form, without poetry,
        sometimes even without a name. The imagination of the Greeks, on the contrary,
        had transformed the abstract conceptions of primitive naturalism into brilliant
        beings—men, but transcendently beautiful, strong, and intelligent. Their poets
        sang the exploits and adventures of these seductive immortals, but no serious
        theology ever came from their Pantheon. It is true that philosophy exerted all
        its ingenuity to connect these religious fables with nature-myths, but the
        result was rather to discredit than to explain them. Thus diverted from the
        Olympus of tradition, the religious instinct turned to the mysteries, which
        claimed to have discovered the clue to the eternal enigmas of the universe, to
        deliver the captive soul, and to assure it of happiness in another life. But
        the Greek initiations hardly touched the people; and some which endangered
        morality were either restricted or altogether prohibited. The Roman conquest of
        the East and of Egypt introduced other religious elements. Noisy, exciting, and
        immoral cults spread in all directions, and to their ceremonies men and women,
        rich and poor, free-men and slaves, were admitted indiscriminately. From Egypt
        came the mysteries of Isis and Serapis, from Syria
        those of Adonis and Astarte, from Persia that of Mithras, and from Phrygia
        those of Cybele and of Sabazius.
        Everywhere endless associations sprang up in honor of
        these new deities, whose worship soon supplied the common religious instinct
        with a food sadly wanting in the official ceremonies. 
   The
        official ceremonies, indeed, were undergoing a transformation. The ancient
        national sanctuaries, no doubt, were still served, but a new divinity, more
        present and more potent, was set up beside the old ones, and threatened to
        supplant them. This was the worship of Rome and of Augustus, which first
        appeared in the provinces, under the Emperor Augustus, and spread with extreme
        rapidity. In every province an assembly of delegates from the cities met each
        year in a temple consecrated to Rome and the emperor. These delegates, elected
        as priest one of themselves, who for the ensuing year held his sacerdotal
        office in the name of the province, under the title of flamen or sacerdos,
        (high priest). Sacrifices, and, above all, public games, were celebrated in the
        most solemn manner, and then, having inquired into the administration of the
        retiring priest, the assembly separated. Besides these provincial ceremonies,
        the worship of Rome and Augustus had temples and municipal priests in almost
        every town, as well as religious associations. Following the lines of the
        municipal and provincial organizations, and connecting them by a sort of sacred
        bond to the supreme government of the empire, it soon became the most obvious
        representation of the religion of the State. 
   All
        these forms of worship, so various in origin and meaning, existed side by side,
        and no one of them claimed a monopoly. Every man, according to taste and
        convenience, made his choice amongst them, and, broadly speaking, all were
        allowed, according to circumstances. Christianity did not find the ground
        unoccupied. When the souls of men opened to it, not only had it to root out a
        special attachment to such and such a form of worship, but also a certain
        sympathy with the many pagan cults which had gradually won their way into the
        popular devotion. 
   From
        all this it is clear that Christianity found both facilities and obstacles in
        the Roman Empire. Foremost among the facilities come universal peace,
        uniformity of language and ideas, and rapid and safe communication. Philosophy,
        by the blows it had struck at old pagan legends, and by its impotence to
        replace them, may also be reckoned as a useful auxiliary; the Fathers of the
        Church speak of paganism in the same tone as Lucian. Finally, the religions of
        the East, by feeding the religious instinct, had prevented its perishing and
        kept it alive, to await the new birth of the Gospel. These were the facilities,
        but what obstacles stood in the way! The Roman Empire soon took to persecution,
        and over and over again engaged in a death struggle with Christianity. The
        spirit of reasoning in Greek philosophy seized on the doctrinal elements of
        Christian teaching, and produced plenty of heresies. As to the popular pagan
        cults, although they had tended to preserve the religious instinct, yet from
        them could come no assistance in the warfare against those selfish and shameful
        passions, which in nations, as in individuals, always form the most serious
        obstacle to the work of salvation. 
    
             CHAPTER II 
         The Primitive Church at Jerusalem 
           
           
         “Salvation
        is of the Jews”, said Jesus to the woman of Samaria. This saying is
        characteristic of the external aspect of the Gospel mission. Jerusalem was its
        starting-point, and it was in passing through the Jewish colonies, established
        more or less throughout the whole empire, that it touched the heathen races. 
   After
        Alexander and the Romans had opened up the world, Judaism left the parent hive.
        Outside Palestine, its cradle, it had had, since the exile, an important
        settlement in Babylon. Babylon, however, may be ignored in a history of
        primitive Christianity. Not so the Jewish colony at Alexandria, which formed
        about two-fifths of the population of that great town. From Alexandria
        emanated, besides the exegesis of Philo, the canonical book of Wisdom and
        several important apocryphal books. However, we need not dwell on the
        evangelization of Egypt either, for it is shrouded in obscurity. All the
        principal towns throughout the empire had a more or less large Jewish
        population, engaged in the smaller branches of commerce, and protected by
        special privileges, which had been renewed several times since the days of
        Alexander's earliest successors. The children of Israel assembled in their
        synagogues to listen to the reading and explanation of the Holy Books, to pray
        in common, and to transact the spiritual and temporal affairs of the local
        congregation. Their religious discipline required them, first of all, to
        separate themselves as absolutely as possible from the heathen, then to have
        faith in the God of Israel, to acknowledge the Messianic hope, and to observe
        the Law, as modified, however, by circumstances, and freed from the narrow
        formalism of Jerusalem. 
   In
        Palestine, the one sanctuary of the worship of Yahweh, the Temple, retained its
        high prestige. The sacerdotal hierarchy, swayed by the aristocratic Sadducean party, strictly maintained the ritual
        observances. But the luxury, the depravity, the religious indifference of these
        sacerdotal leaders, their subserviency to the Roman
        authorities, their contempt for the Messianic hope and the doctrine of the
        resurrection, had alienated from them the affection of the people, and, in the
        eyes of some, even cast discredit on the Temple itself. Some indeed were so
        disheartened that they fled the official sanctuary and its servants, and, afar
        from the world, devoted themselves to the service of God and a strict
        observance of the Law. The Essenes represented this movement: grouped in small
        communities they lived on the borders of the Dead Sea, near Engaddi. 
   The Sadducean priests persecuted Jesus Christ and His
        disciples. As for the Essenes, they lived alongside of the new Faith, and if
        they did embrace it, it was but slowly. The Pharisees, so often condemned in
        the Gospels for their hypocrisy, their false zeal, and their peculiar
        practices, did not form a special sect; the name was applied generally to all
        those who were ultra-scrupulous in following the Law, and not the Law only, but
        the thousand observances with which they had amplified it, attributing as much
        importance to them as to the fundamental precepts of morality. Still, they were
        faithful defenders of the Messianic hopes and of belief in the resurrection.
        Beneath their proud and overstrained attachment to details of observance, they
        had a solid foundation of faith and piety. Amongst them the Gospel made many
        excellent converts. 
   But
        what circumstances first attended that movement in the religious world of
        Palestine, which culminated in the foundation of the Church? All accounts agree
        in pointing out as its starting-point a small group of persons living in
        Jerusalem during the last years of the Emperor Tiberius (30-37 A.D.). These
        first believers acknowledged the name and doctrine of Jesus of Nazareth,
        recently condemned to death by order of the procurator Pilate, at the
        instigation of the Jewish authorities. Many of them had known Him in life; all
        knew that He had been crucified; all believed also that He had risen from the
        dead; although only a few of their number had actually rejoiced over His
        presence after His resurrection. They believed Him to be the promised and
        expected Messiah, the Messenger, the Son of God, who was to re-establish in the
        world a reign of righteousness and bring about the final triumph of good over
        evil. He had promised to found a kingdom, the Kingdom of God, from which the
        wicked should be excluded, and which would be open to all who loved Him. His
        death indeed had delayed the accomplishment of this promise; but its certain
        fulfilment was pledged to them by the triumphant defeat of death in the
        resurrection of the Master. He was now seated at the right hand of God, His
        Father, and from thence He would come again to manifest His glory and to found
        His Kingdom 
   Meanwhile,
        His faithful followers went about spreading the good news, the Gospel, and thus
        gathering in the elect. They lived in close spiritual union: the same faith,
        the same expectation, bound them closely to one another. The leaders were
        twelve men who, during the preceding years, had lived in His most intimate
        circle; they had received from Jesus's lips the teaching they imparted in His
        name, and they could bear witness to His miracles. This intimacy with their
        Master had not indeed prevented their forsaking Him at the critical moment, and
        it was not without a struggle that they acknowledged His resurrection. But it
        was manifest before long that now their convictions were proof against all
        contradiction and all trials 
   This
        first group of the faithful were still deeply imbued with the Jewish spirit.
        Between them and the pious Jews there was scarcely room for dissension. All
        that the sincerely religious people of their nation believed, hoped, and
        practiced, they also believed, hoped, and practiced. They went with the rest to
        the Temple; they submitted to the common observances of the Law. One point
        alone distinguished them : for them the Messiah did not belong to a vague,
        uncertain future. They had found Him, for He had come and had revealed Himself:
        and they were sure of seeing Him again soon. 
   But
        if there was nothing in all this which ran counter to Jewish ideas or
        prejudices, it was not likely that such an expectation, and the social ties it
        led to, would suit the Jewish priesthood, or fail to affect it. To acknowledge
        the claim of Jesus, and specially to point to Him as the Hope of Israel, was to
        protest against the execution of One whom the rulers of the nation had thought
        dangerous, guilty, and worthy of death. Besides this, the popular movement
        which had so greatly alarmed the high priest was appearing in another form.
        Quiet preaching had replaced the loud acclamations, but there seemed already
        more steady adherents than during the lifetime of Jesus; they were increasing
        every day, and enrolling in an organized society. They had their leaders—the
        very friends whom Jesus had gathered round Him in Galilee at the first. 
   In
        these circumstances it would have been surprising had the Jewish authorities
        not made life difficult for the disciples of Jesus. And this is just what they
        did, as the book of the Acts records. The apostles, when arrested and
        reprimanded, defied all prohibitions, and neither stripes nor imprisonment
        intimidated them. The priests, however, had not a free hand. The governor
        apparently was not inclined to lend himself to new condemnations. But there was
        worse to come. Stephen, one of the first converts, a zealous helper of the
        apostles, was accused of blasphemy against the Holy Place and against the Law
        of Moses. To judge by the speech he is described as making in the Acts of the
        Apostles, it does seem that his words were rather peculiarly vehement. At any
        rate, the Sanhedrim, perhaps encouraged by the weakness of the governor, or
        taking advantage of the post being temporarily vacant, pronounced sentence of
        death against Stephen, and caused him to be stoned in the traditional manner.
        They followed this up with severe measures against the faithful, and the
        terrified community dispersed for a time. But the alarm did not last long, and
        the "Church," as it now began to be called, soon came together again. 
   The
        internal organization of the Church seems to have been very simple. Converts
        were admitted by baptism, the symbol of their union with Jesus, in whose name
        it was administered, and also of the conversion, the moral reform promised by
        the believer. A common daily meal was the sign and bond of their corporate
        life. There they celebrated the Eucharist, a perceptible and mysterious
        memorial of the invisible Master. In those first days the desire for a common
        life was so intense that they even practiced community of goods. This led to
        administrative developments; the apostles chose out seven helpers who were the
        fore-runners of the Deacons. A little later there appeared an intermediate
        dignity, a council of elders (presbyteri, priests), who
        assisted the apostles in general management and took counsel with them. 
   Although
        this first Christian community grew rather rapidly, it soon had to give up the
        hope of incorporating the main body of Palestinian Jews. Its missionary work
        came into conflict not only with the ill-will of the religious authorities, but
        also with public opinion. Opposed in Jerusalem, it spread in other directions,
        apparently rather to suit circumstances than according to any preconceived
        plan. The dispersion, following on the death of Stephen, scattered far and wide
        many enthusiastic believers, and they spread the “good news” not only
        throughout Palestine, but further still, in Phoenicia and Syria, and even as
        far as the island of Cyprus. Galilee, the first home of the Gospel, still
        preserved a nucleus of the early disciples they were also found even at
        Damascus, in the kingdom of Arabia. It was at this time, and in these
        circumstances, that the infant Church gained the most unexpected adherent in
        the person of Saul of Tarsus, an eager and learned zealot of the Law, and till
        then a fanatical persecutor of the disciples of Jesus. Converted by a vision of
        the Lord as he journeyed from Jerusalem to Damascus, he joined himself first to
        the Christians there, and then began to evangelize the kingdom of Arabia. 
   Like
        all the first converts, Saul was a Jew by birth, imbued with the exclusive and
        disdainful spirit which inspired his race and influenced all their dealings
        with other nations. In this little Jewish world, it was taken for granted that
        the Kingdom of God was for the people of God, for the privileged race whom He
        had loaded with favours, and to whom He had made so many promises. But the
        people of God, as a whole, seemed but little disposed to join the ranks of
        believers in Jesus, and so there gradually arose among these latter a tendency
        to enlarge the borders of their community. Some of them, driven from Jerusalem
        by persecution, made their appeal to men like the minister of the Queen of
        Ethiopia and the centurion Cornelius, who were well disposed towards the Jewish
        faith, and who practiced it to some extent. Even the Samaritans were attracted
        by the preaching of the Gospel. The book of the Acts relates some typical and
        characteristic episodes which, even when they do not expressly say so, convey
        the impression that such conversions were not unattended with difficulty. The
        admission of the centurion Cornelius and his companions into the Church roused
        such strong opposition among the Christians in Jerusalem, that the Apostle
        Peter found it necessary to confute them ; but he did so only by sheltering
        himself under a Divine intervention. 
   The
        events and developments so far related lie between 30 A.D. and 42 A.D.; this is
        practically all that can be said as to the chronology, which, for want of
        precise data, is very vague in details. In 42 A.D. a Jewish king again reigned
        in Jerusalem—Herod Agrippa, the grandson of Herod the Great. For several years
        he had governed the tetrarchies of Philip and of Herod Antipas (i.e., the
        country beyond Jordan and Galilee). The favor of the Emperor Claudius then
        established him in the Holy City, and he reigned there three years: and they
        were hard years for the Christian community. It was to the interest of Agrippa
        to flatter the chiefs of the sacerdotal aristocracy, and they used him as the
        tool of their ill-will against the disciples of Jesus, several of whom suffered
        in consequence. One of the most prominent apostles, James, the son of Zebedee,
        was beheaded; Peter was also arrested; he only escaped the same fate by a
        miracle. 
   But
        Herod Agrippa died soon after (44 A.D.); the rule of procurators was
        reestablished, and the faithful enjoyed comparative security. 
   According
        to an ancient tradition, the dispersion of the twelve apostles took place at
        this time; until then they had remained in the community in Jerusalem. The
        violence of Herod had been especially directed against them, and would quite
        explain their departure. Nevertheless, Peter was certainly still in Jerusalem
        some years later. 
   
         CHAPTER III 
         Antioch and the missions of St Paul 
           
           
         In
        the early Christian society those who clung most tenaciously to the Jewish
        tradition and characteristics were the converts from the Judaism of Palestine,
        who spoke Aramaic, and were necessarily impervious to external influences. But
        even in Jerusalem there were Jews by birth and religion who were not Jewish in
        language or country. These came from Jewish colonies long settled in Greek
        lands. They felt more at home in their native surroundings, which differed
        widely from those of the Holy City. And in spite of their attachment to the
        national traditions and religious observances of their mother country, they had
        too many points of contact with Hellenism not to be rather susceptible to new
        impressions. From the outset, a certain number of these Greek Jews dwelling in
        Jerusalem attached themselves to the apostles. When for a time persecution
        dispersed the community in Jerusalem, some of these converts carried the Gospel
        to the towns on the Phoenician coast, to the island of Cyprus, and as far as
        Antioch. There were even some—they were natives of Cyprus and Cyrene—who went
        so far as to preach to the "Greeks" of Antioch—to men, that is, who
        however well-disposed they may have been towards the God of Israel, yet were
        not of the circumcision. Many were converted, and formed the nucleus of the
        Church at Antioch, which quickly became a second centre of Christian development, and especially of evangelization. 
   The
        Church in Antioch was organized by Barnabas, a believer, of Cypriote origin,
        and one of the first and most zealous of the early disciples. The community at
        Jerusalem at once was moved by this influx of Gentiles to commission Barnabas
        to organize matters. They could not have made a better choice. Barnabas had
        sufficient breadth of mind to grasp the situation and to discern the future
        lying before this new group. He took to him as associate, Saul, the converted
        persecutor, who for some time had been back in Tarsus, his own country. Thanks
        to them, the number of the faithful increased rapidly. And it was at Antioch
        that the disciples of Jesus were first called Christians, i.e., the people of
        the Messiah or the Christ. 
   In
        Antioch was organized the first mission to distant lands. And it was Saul and
        Barnabas again who were in charge of it. They sailed first to Cyprus, and
        traversed the island from Salamis to Paphos, where Sergius Paulus, the proconsul, impressed by their
        miracles, embraced the faith. Thence they went over into Asia Minor, and made a
        long stay in different places in Pamphylia, Pisidia, and Lycaonia. They
        stopped in towns where there were Jewish colonies, and on the Saturday sought
        the synagogue, and there began their preaching. Among the actual Jews they had
        but limited success; but the Jewish proselytes, “the people who feared
        God”—that is, pagans who had more or less accepted the monotheism of the
        Jews—were more ready to listen. There were many conversions among these, and
        even among the actual pagans, to whom the apostles turned when banished from
        the synagogues. After four or five years, the missionaries went back to
        Antioch, leaving behind, in each town where they had sojourned, a little
        Christian community, distinct from the Jewish communities, and organized under
        the guidance of "elders" (presbyteri,
        priests) installed by the apostles. 
   Saul,
        who was now called Paul, and his companion Barnabas were warmly welcomed by the
        Church. The conversions they had effected, and particularly their success among
        the actual pagans, could not but arouse the deepest interest. A problem,
        however, which had already presented itself in the community of Antioch, now
        assumed an urgent character. Under what conditions could they accept these new
        converts, drawn either directly from the heathen ranks or from the Jewish
        proselytes? Was it necessary to impose upon them all the religious obligations
        which bound Jews by birth, and, above all, must they submit to circumcision?
        Many, and especially the missionaries themselves, though not other influential people were inclined to be stricter. Dissensions arose,
        and it was agreed to appeal to the apostles and “elders” at Jerusalem. A
        deputation set out from Antioch for the Holy City, Paul and Barnabas being of
        the number. At first they met with very decided opposition, as may be imagined
        in such surroundings. But those in authority, especially Peter, John, and
        James, the brother of the Lord, sided with Paul and Barnabas, and their view
        prevailed. The idea was apparently, that just as everywhere there were
        proselytes admitted to the meetings in the synagogues by the side of the Jews
        proper, so the Christian Church might allow two classes of believers, equally
        privileged as to initiation in the mysteries of Christianity, though not both
        incorporated into Judaism. Judas Barsabbas and
        Silas, two members of the Church at Jerusalem, carried a letter notifying this
        decision to the Church at Antioch. 
   It
        seemed at first as if this settled the matter, but this was not so. Defeated on
        the principal points at issue, the Jews who advocated strict observance, fell
        back on the details. They could not prevent pagans having the Gospel preached
        to them, or their admission into the community, but they tried to assign them a
        place apart. One of the points upon which the Jewish scruples turned was that
        of meals. To eat with heathen, with the uncircumcised, was most repugnant to
        Israelites of the old school. And this was a crucial question, because the
        chief religious act of the Christian community was precisely a common meal. If
        in any particular place the faithful could not eat together, there was an end
        of communion and unity. The issue of such a state of things would have been,
        not Christian brotherhood, but a religious society divided into two strata, as
        was, later, the sect of the Manicheans. 
   In
        Jerusalem, among Jews, this danger was not realized; but Paul, who saw much
        further, was distressed to observe, that even in Antioch the circumcised held
        themselves aloof from the uncircumcised. On Peter's coming to the Syrian
        capital, Paul induced him to accept his view, and to eat with uncircumcised
        Christians. But the Jewish party kept an eye upon the Head of the Apostles.
        Persons sent by James, or giving out that they had been sent by him, came from
        Jerusalem, and caused Peter to change his attitude. His defection was followed
        by that of many others. Even Barnabas separated from the companion of his apostolical labours. But Paul
        never wavered. He opposed the great chief of the faithful to his face, and
        reproached him, in rather hard terms, for inconsistency. 
   We
        do not know what was the immediate and local issue of this dispute. One thing,
        however, is certain, and it is that the opinions of Paul finally prevailed
        throughout the organized Christian societies. This was, in fact, inevitable.
        The Jewish converts, except in Palestine, were already in a minority, which
        diminished as time went on. The spread of Christianity, which had begun with
        them, now advanced independently. 
   To
        the achievement of this result, Paul devoted the remainder of his career. He
        set out at once for Asia Minor—no longer with Barnabas, for between them there
        was still some coolness, both on account of the recent conflict, and for other
        reasons, but with Silas, a distinguished Christian from Jerusalem, who had
        evidently come over to Paul’s views. On his way through Lycaonia he picked up a valuable assistant, Timothy, the son of a Greek father and a
        Jewish mother. He had him circumcised, for he knew how to bend to
        circumstances, and had no wish to create unnecessary difficulties. By way of
        Phrygia and Galatia, he reached the port of Troas in Mysia,
        and from thence passed over into Macedonia; after staying some time in
        Philippi, Thessalonica, and other places, Paul embarked for Athens, where he
        remained a short time, and finally settled himself for eighteen months at
        Corinth (53-54 A.D.). This is known as his second missionary journey. Thence he
        embarked for Ephesus, where he made no stay, and passing through Caesarea in
        Palestine, returned to Antioch. 
   He
        did not remain long in Antioch, and soon set out again on his third journey.
        Traversing Asia Minor from east to west, he reached Ephesus, where he remained
        for three years (55-57 A.D.). At Ephesus he found two Roman Christians of some
        standing, Aquila and Priscilla, who had already welcomed him at Corinth during
        his last voyage. It does not appear that Aquila and his wife had taken part in
        evangelistic work. But, before the arrival of Paul, they had had occasion to
        confer with Apollos, an Alexandrian Jew who preached
        the Gospel, but knew no other baptism than that of John. Apollos had made disciples who, in the hands of Paul, became the nucleus of the
        Ephesian Church. As a result of the preaching, first in the synagogue and
        afterwards elsewhere, this Church increased in numbers. And besides Ephesus,
        many other places in Asia Minor were now initiated into the Gospel mysteries.
        At last the apostle determined to return once more to Syria, but not without
        first visiting his Christian colonies in Macedonia and Achaia. He wintered at
        Corinth (57-58 A.D.), and in the following spring, passing through Macedonia
        and by the coast of Asia, he definitely set sail for Phoenicia and Palestine.
        About the Feast of Pentecost (58 A.D.) he arrived at Jerusalem. 
   Paul
        thus returned to the cradle of Christianity, after long years spent in
        preaching the Gospel in distant lands, where no one else had as yet brought the
        “good news.” He had laid solid and living foundations throughout the greater
        part of Asia Minor, Macedonia, and Achaia. Thanks to him, the great towns of
        Ephesus, Thessalonica, and Corinth, and many others also, had churches glowing
        with faith, zeal, and charity. What these great achievements had cost him may
        be imagined; indeed he tells us something of it in one of his letters; besides
        all the necessary inconveniences of long journeys, hunger and thirst, brigands
        and shipwrecks, he enumerates the results of his conflicts with the
        authorities, scourgings, stonings, “stripes above
        measure.” The apostle was also a martyr. No one else had laboured or suffered more for the common faith. He brought to the mother church of
        Jerusalem the homage of his new foundations, and also, in token of their
        respectful love, a large tribute in alms. Yet he was far from hopeful as to the
        welcome awaiting him, and his misgivings, as was soon seen, were but too well
        founded. 
   The
        narrow spirit, which Paul's broad-minded tendency had encountered ten years
        ago, had been overcome in Antioch, but in Jerusalem things were very
        different. The apostles had long quitted the Holy City. And if in such
        surroundings there had ever been any men with a wider outlook, they seem to
        have followed the apostles, and had either migrated to Antioch or had taken to
        mission work. Thus left to themselves, the old conservatives could but become
        more inveterately rigid. At their head was James, the brother of the Lord, who
        had been held in high esteem from the days of the first apostles, and had with
        them ruled the local church. He was renowned for sanctity and profoundly pious,
        but deeply attached to Jewish customs, and little inclined to minimize their
        obligatory character. The people about him had rather suffered Paul’s boldness
        than acquiesced in it. From them had emanated the influences which for the
        moment divided the Christians in Antioch, and brought Peter and Paul into
        collision. They also sent out emissaries, who dogged Paul’s footsteps in Asia
        Minor and Greece, and endeavoured to bring the Greeks and proselytes he had
        converted under the strict Judaic law, trying to impose circumcision upon them,
        and as a means to this end, striving to bring the apostle of the Gentiles into
        personal disrepute. 
   Over
        these conflicts and crises the peace-making book of the Acts passes very
        lightly. But by this time six letters of St Paul were already in circulation.
        They give us much more precise information. In the two Epistles to the
        Thessalonians, written during Paul’s first visit to Corinth, there is no
        question, as yet, of this Judaizing opposition. The apostle pours out his heart
        to dearly-loved disciples; he recalls to their memory the trials they had to
        endure from the Jews, when Christianity was first preached to them. These
        trials have not ceased. They must be borne with patience. It is a pleasure to
        Paul to congratulate his Thessalonians on their attitude and conduct: he is
        proud of them. Their hearts are filled with the thought of the approaching
        advent of the Lord: the apostle answers their questions and does his best to
        calm them. 
   The
        Epistles to the Corinthians follow these idyllic letters, and both bear witness
        to some misunderstanding between the apostle and his neophytes. Their conduct
        seems to have given him more than one cause for complaint, but what hurts him
        most is, that different schools of opinion have grown up amongst them, and that
        his authority is called in question. Other missionaries have passed through
        Corinth since his visit. Some have made a show of a more advanced teaching than
        that of Paul, who had had to keep to the elements of the faith. Others came
        with letters of commendation, making capital out of the name and authority of
        the great apostles, compared to whom, Paul, they would have you believe, was
        only a second-rate missionary. All this had led to divisions, and in the Church
        of Corinth there is one party of Paul and another of Apollos;
        others appeal to Peter, and others again to Christ Himself. 
   Yet
        there is nothing in these letters to lead to the conclusion that the apostle's
        rivals had introduced Judaizing tendencies in Corinth. The way in which Paul
        speaks of circumcision and of idolators, implies
        rather that his mind was quite easy on that score. 
   It
        was not so in Galatia. This country, evangelized by Paul during his first
        mission, and which he had twice visited since then, contained several Christian
        communities which had every reason to consider him as their special director.
        To them came the Judaizing preachers, telling them that Paul was an apostle of
        whom they should beware, and that salvation could only be secured by
        circumcision. The good Galatians allowed themselves to be got hold of and
        circumcised. When Paul heard this, he hastened to write them a burning epistle,
        in which his indignation at the stupidity of his beloved disciples struggles
        hard with the paternal tenderness he feels for them. Paul was not of a very
        long-suffering disposition; these Judaizers suffer
        considerably at his hands in the letter to the Galatians. 
   The
        opinions which circumstances led him to express here in a more or less stormy
        manner, he repeats more calmly in his Epistle to the Romans, written at Corinth
        during the winter preceding his return to Jerusalem. 
   Gentiles,
        Jews, all are sinners, some without the law, others under the law. The Jews
        have no advantage over the Gentiles, except their position as guardians of the
        Word of God. Salvation, justification, that is to say, reconciliation with God,
        can only come through faith. This is the meaning of the dispensation which
        began with Abraham. 
   Sin
        had reigned since Adam, and death by sin, and from Jesus Christ, the second
        Adam, flows life-giving grace. The Law of Moses, formerly inefficacious, and
        apt rather to cause sin than to justify, was now abrogated and replaced by the
        Christian Law, the law of liberty, which consists in the simple obligation of
        conformity to Jesus Christ. 
   This
        theology sweeps away the Mosaic Law entirely, not only its obligation, but even
        its utility. The law is of no use; it is no advantage to be a Jew. Here Paul
        suddenly faces a question of actual fact. What is then the position of Israel?
        The apostle does not hesitate. In spite of his strong feeling of nationality,
        he declares that the mission of Israel is at an end, or rather that it is
        interrupted. God, angry at their unbelief, has turned His face from them; it is
        to the Gentiles now that the Promise is addressed. Israel is like a branch
        broken off from the olive tree, and in his place the Gentiles are grafted in.
        Yet the time will come when the remnant of the people of God will share in the
        heritage. 
   This
        manifesto, addressed to the Christians in Rome, and passed on to other
        Christian communities, must have preceded the apostle on his visit to
        Jerusalem. In the eyes of his adversaries it amounted to a declaration of
        apostasy. The law, circumcision, Jewish life, the dignity of the people of God,
        he repudiates all. The reception awaiting him in the Holy City is easy to
        imagine. Just then the national feeling was much excited. The rapacious and
        brutal rule of the Roman procurators had alienated the minds of these turbulent
        people more and more from the empire. The official priesthood, swamped by the
        fanaticism of the zealots, felt their authority failing; tumults, suppressed
        with difficulty, were always threatening round the temple; insurrection was at
        hand. No doubt, the faithful followers of Jesus, absorbed in their own hopes,
        were not drawn into these excesses; but, in the midst of all this fierce
        exasperation, how were they to possess their souls in patience? 
   Paul
        was welcomed by his friends, and presented himself before James the day after
        his arrival. There he found the council of "elders" assembled, and he
        told them of his apostolic journeys, of the churches which he had founded, and
        no doubt handed over to them at the same time the proceeds of the collection he
        had made for the needs of the mother-church. When he had finished, they began
        by congratulating him. Then they called his attention to the great number of
        Jewish converts, to their extreme devotion to the Law, and to the unfortunate
        reputation which he (Paul) had amongst them. To remove these suspicions, the
        only thing for him to do was to prove, by some striking demonstration, that he
        had been calumniated, and that he was, as always, a faithful observer of the
        Law. 
   Paul,
        whose principle it was “to be all things to all men”, accepted this solution of
        the difficulty. He joined four of the disciples, who had taken upon themselves
        the vow of Nazarites, allowed his head to be shorn,
        submitted with them to the customary ritual purifications, and took part with
        them in a series of devotional exercises in the Temple courts. These lasted
        seven days, and were concluded by a sacrifice. The writer of the Epistle to the
        Romans, after having bid such a decided farewell to the Law of Moses, again
        feels its weight upon his rebellious shoulders. 
   The
        ordeal was just over. God alone knows what would have happened when Paul found
        himself again face to face with those who had imposed it upon him. But suddenly
        the whole course of events was changed. If Paul was in bad odour among the Christian zealots, we may imagine that there was not much affection
        for him amongst the Jewish zealots. These latter saw him in the Temple, and at
        once made an uproar. He would have perished, had not the commander of the Roman
        garrison rescued him, protected him from the fanatics, and for his greater
        safety, sent him off to Caesarea, to the procurator Felix. There he was
        formally accused by the heads of the Jewish priesthood, but not convicted.
        Finally, after being kept two years in Caesarea, as he insisted upon his privilege
        as a Roman citizen, and his right to be judged by the emperor, he was sent to
        Rome. 
   Thus
        Paul escaped from internal dissensions to appear in the character of defender
        of the common faith. Like Jesus, he was denounced to the Romans by the Jews,
        his own countrymen. 
   But,
        at any rate, they distributed their hatred with impartiality, for James also,
        James the Judaizer, the head of the Judaizing
        Church, suffered from it. In 62 A.D. the high priest Annas the younger, taking advantage of the death of the procurator Festus, summoned
        James, with several other Christians, before the Sanhedrim, as violators of the
        Law, and sentenced them to be stoned. This sentence was immediately executed. 
   This
        enforced pause in the internal dissensions will serve for an inquiry as to
        what, in the eyes of the majority of Christian converts, was the relationship
        between the ancient Hebrew traditions and the new development introduced by the
        Gospel. 
   
         
           CHAPTER IV 
         The Christian the Apostolic Age 
           
           
         The
        Christian convert, whether from the ranks of pure Judaism or from the bosom of
        paganism, came into the community by an act of faith in Christ Jesus. 
   He
        believed that Jesus was the Messiah expected by Israel, that He had died and
        had risen again, as had been foretold in the sacred books of the Jews. His
        faith in Christ was, as it were, wrapped up in a more comprehensive faith in
        the religious tradition of Israel, however that tradition might be restricted
        or interpreted by individual preachers. The most ardent disciple of St Paul,
        if faithful to his master’s fundamental opinions, could never dream of
        representing Christianity as a perfectly new religion. Moses might have become
        less important, but Abraham remained, and with Abraham a whole series of facts,
        persons, beliefs, and institutions, linking the Gospel to primitive history, to
        the very beginning of the world, and to God, its Creator. 
   To
        the new disciple this hoary past was personified in a nation, living with
        vigorous religious life in its Palestinian centre,
        and its colonies in the Hellenic world. It was, moreover, represented by a
        unique sacred literature, of which the latest productions were books of his own
        day. For if the Old Testament be considered as a storehouse of the memorials of
        ancient Israel, it certainly should include Josephus. He related for the public
        of his own time, and above all for the Christians, the catastrophes which
        ruined the Jewish nation. After his day, the Jews seemed schismatic and
        undeveloped Christians; before them, on the contrary, the Christians were
        progressive Jews. 
   Whatever
        these transient relations were, it is certain that Christianity has its roots
        in Jewish tradition, that the first crises in its history are those of the
        separation of mother and child, that Christianity always regarded Jewish
        history as the preface to its own, and that the sacred books of Israel are
        sacred also to the Christian; there was, indeed, a time when he knew no others. 
   Thus,
        admission into Christianity was necessarily and actually regarded as
        incorporation into Israel, an enlarged Israel it is true, but still
        fundamentally the same. As to this identity, however, opinions differed very
        early. The minds of the Jews of the 1st century were especially occupied with
        their national Law, and those of the Christians with their Founder and Head.
        The Judaic-Christians, who, of the two, preferred the Law, and only consented
        to the evangelization of the Gentiles under exceptional circumstances, were
        soon out of the main stream of opinion; in the 2nd century they were classed
        with heretics. Those who allowed the Gentiles a share in the privileges of the
        Gospel, although not on quite equal terms, were soon carried farther; and this
        not so much by the special influence of St Paul, as by the general trend of
        circumstances. They had to admit that to the Christian there was no equality
        between Jesus Christ and Moses; that the foundation is Jesus, and not the
        legislation of Sinai; that it is Faith that saves, and not the observance of
        the Law. The letters of St Paul, when they describe the first Christians, not
        as they were during times of conflict but in their normal state, bear witness
        that this —except in Palestine—was the general position. 
   There
        is no doubt that the personal opinions of the apostle went much farther. But as
        to some of his theories, he does not appear to have been followed, e.g., in his view of the Law as an
        occasion of sin. The Church stopped short of his conception: the Law was
        considered as an abrogated rule, which had had only good effects in its time,
        and it was also acknowledged to have the value of a shadow, enhancing the new
        light of the Gospel, or even that of a figure, an imperfect type, a first
        attempt 
   To
        represent the Christianity of the first Gentile converts as charging blindly
        against the Law (like St Paul in the Epistle to the Galatians), would be to
        misunderstand it very gravely. The greater number of early converts, who were
        what is termed Hellenist-Christians, were deeply dyed with Judaism. St Paul
        himself, we must repeat, is no doubt represented one-sidedly by some of his
        statements; we shall receive a more accurate impression of his ordinary
        attitude by dwelling on that which the Church has retained, rather than by
        attending exclusively to what the Church has either allowed to drop, or
        interpreted in her own way. 
   Thus
        the Jewish tradition, the Old Testament, was adopted in its entirety by
        Christianity. From this fact, a very important advantage accrued to the new
        converts. The Bible gave them a history, and what a history! This book carried
        them back much farther than any of the Greek traditions—any tradition, that is,
        based on a rational foundation, and not confusing men with gods. The Bible took
        them back far behind the Macedonians, the Persians, the Jews themselves as a
        nation, and finally touched the most ancient period of Egyptian and Chaldean
        archaeology. 
   What
        is infinitely more important, is that it goes back to the very origin of
        things. It shows the world issuing from the creative hand of God, the
        introduction of evil by the abuse of liberty, the first propagation of mankind,
        and the foundation of the earliest human institutions. 
   But
        besides these magnificent stories, the Bible furnished many others, of a charm
        and utility which soon became apparent. A glance at the monuments of primitive
        Christian art is enough to show what glowing impressions sprang from tales like
        those of Job, Jonah, Daniel, Susanna, and the three young Jews in the fiery
        furnace. The prophetic books bore witness to the expectation of the people of
        God, they disclosed all the characteristics of the Messiah and His kingdom, and
        justified the cessation of sacrifices and other Mosaic rites. Even the Wisdom
        literature, side by side with precepts of common and continual use, furnished
        valuable insight into Uncreated Wisdom. Of the value of Psalter there is hardly
        need to speak; its admirable prayers have ever been on the lips of Christians,
        and are the corner-stone of their liturgy. 
   Of
        course, in accepting, or rather in retaining, books of such ancient date, and
        of such diverse character, the primitive Christian Church also accepted, or
        retained, the method in which these books were used both formerly and at that
        time. Whether at public readings in religious assemblies, as food for
        edification, or as a weapon in controversy, the Holy Scriptures always required
        interpretation. The character of these interpretations would vary according to
        the surroundings in which they were made, or the books to which they referred,
        but practically all interpretations agreed in assigning to the text a meaning
        applicable to the time then present, whether this meaning were or were not
        identical with that accepted when it first appeared. All those books are
        divine; the things which they tell us are the teaching of God Himself. This
        general principle, often proclaimed in the Church, is the very foundation of
        the religion of the Holy Scriptures, as practiced by the first Christians, and
        as it had been practiced by the Jews before them. 
   The
        traditions of Israel did not, however, only provide the Christian with food for
        meditation on the past; they turned his mind also towards the future, towards
        the region of hope. Here too much distinction must not be drawn between the
        books of the Old Testament and those of the New, or between the canonical and
        apocryphal books. All accentuate one point, the end of all things is at hand;
        God will shortly avenge Himself; His Messiah will come, or will return. And in
        spite of certain isolated traits which show that St Paul was occasionally free
        from this obsession, there is no doubt it overshadowed the minds of the first
        Christians. 
   But
        the thoughts of the faithful were always brought back, from the origin of all
        things or from their final end, to their religious state in the actual present.
        They were Christians through Jesus Christ, because a Man called Jesus, whom
        most of them had never seen, had called them to Himself. This Man had died; He
        had risen again; he was seated now at the right hand of God. He would soon
        reappear in glory, and fight a decisive battle against evil. Who was He? Whence
        originated this conception of religious Leader, of powerful Representative of
        God, of Judge of all mankind? As the Jewish Messiah, He had a history behind
        Him ; He had been predestinated by God, foretold and
        described by the prophets. One of His highest titles was that of Son of God.
        But on this most essential point there was no question of keeping within the
        Jewish tradition; the declarations of St Paul, St John, and the author of the Epistle
        to the Hebrews, manifestly surpassed it. And their declarations only expanded
        the common belief, which, though at that time still wanting in power of
        expression, was deep and unyielding. Jesus, although He belonged, through the
        reality of His manhood, to the realm of visible creation, belonged also, in the
        very depth of His being, to the Godhead. How that could be was to be made clear
        by degrees. But the essence of this belief was in the souls of Christians from
        the first. The New Testament reveals it in its earliest as in its latest books;
        following the New Testament, the early Christian books, whether orthodox or
        gnostic, all take this fundamental belief for granted, as universally accepted
        and firmly rooted in tradition. 
   And
        here considerable stress must be laid on the Jewish education, through which
        Christian thought had passed. Among pagans there were many ways of being
        divine; the old gods of Olympus were gods by birth, their genealogies were well
        known ; others, however, were merely deified heroes. The Macedonian and Moorish
        kings, like many others, had been worshipped; so were the Roman emperors still.
        One god more or less was of no consequence to the polytheistic conscience. 
   It
        was quite otherwise with a conscience formed by the religion of Israel.
  "Hear O Israel! thy God, the God of Israel, is One." This credo is
        that of the modern, as of the ancient Jew, and expresses what is both most
        profound and most obvious in their religion. To admit that Jesus Christ and the
        Holy Spirit are God, is to admit that they participate in the very essence of
        the One God, that they are, each of them, identical with Him, yet without being
        deprived of certain special characteristics. 
   This
        is the Christian doctrine of the Trinity ; not certainly, as it was formulated
        later, in opposition to transient heresies, but as it appealed to the general
        conscience of the early Christians, and claimed the homage of their faith. The
        generality of Christians in the 1st century, even in apostolic days, stood here
        almost exactly at the same point as present-day Christians. Theologians knew,
        or at any rate said, far more about it. Our subject, however, is religion, and
        not the schools. 
   But
        Jesus is not only the Messiah and the Son of God, He is also the Saviour. If He welcomes all His faithful followers into
        the Kingdom of Heaven, it is that they are His; and if they are His, it is not
        only because they believe in Him, or have joined the fellowship of His Church,
        it is because He has bought them from spiritual slavery. He is their Redeemer,
        and it is by His death on the Cross that He has won His rights over them. We
        must not think that this conception, upon which St Paul insists so often and so
        strongly, is merely the result of his own personal reflections, nor even, as
        might be more easily allowed, that it is the result of a special inspiration to
        him. The moment that the Christian society was opened to pagans and
        Samaritans—and it was not St Paul who began this movement—it had to be conceded
        that the essential thing in the work of salvation, was not the Law, but Faith;
        that discipleship of Moses was not only of no avail without discipleship of
        Jesus, but further, that it could be dispensed with, and was only of secondary
        importance. It matters very little whether this view supported faith in
        redemption, or was inspired by it. St Paul tells us1 that, finding himself at
        Jerusalem after his first mission, he communicated to the leaders of the
        Church, to Peter, James, and John, as well as to others, the Gospel which he
        had taught the Gentiles, in order, he says, not to "run in vain." We
        may wonder what he could have communicated to them, if he had passed over so
        important a point and one holding so prominent a place in his preaching. As his
        statement was not disputed, we must conclude that the redeeming efficacy of the
        Lord's death was from that time acknowledged by the apostles. Again, when Paul
        discusses the value of the Law with Judaizing adversaries, what is his chief
        argument? “If righteousness come by the Law, then Christ is dead in vain.” What
        would have been the point of such an argument if the Judaizers had not shared his belief in Redemption? 
   Thus,
        the education of the first generation of Christians included, side by side with
        many features derived from Jewish tradition, other quite characteristic
        doctrines of its own, which could not fail, as they developed, to result in a
        great difference between the two religions. 
   And
        what was true of education was true of all Christian institutions. Look at the
        organization and life of the Christian society as it grew up throughout almost
        the whole Greek world, in consequence of the preaching of the apostles. The
        letters of St Paul give us here most valuable data. 
   To
        become a Christian was a very momentous step. On many points it was necessary
        for a man to separate himself entirely from ordinary life. For instance, the
        theatres, and, speaking generally, the public games, were schools of
        immorality, and foremost among the works of Satan which had to be renounced. So
        with sins of the flesh. The new Christian had of course to break with idolatry;
        but this was not always easy for him, for the private life of the ancients was
        saturated with religion. Marriage, birth, seed-time, and harvest, the
        inauguration and functions of the magistracy, and family festivals—all were
        occasions requiring sacrifices, with oblations and incense and banquets. Paul
        permitted some concessions as to these last. He strictly forbade all participation
        in the religious feasts celebrated in temples; but the fact that any particular
        piece of meat had formed part of a sacrificial victim was not, in his eyes, a
        reason for refusing it, provided nobody was scandalized. Here he showed himself
        more indulgent than they were at Jerusalem in 51 A.D.,
        or than the synagogues were to their proselytes. 
   Separated
        as they were from paganism, it was necessary that the faithful should live
        together. Each Church formed in itself a complete society, the members of
        which, though they were bound, of course, by the fiscal or other laws of their
        city and the empire, were yet told to avoid carrying their differences before
        any other court than that of their own community. Christians intermarried with
        Christians. If one of the parties in a heathen marriage was converted, the
        marriage was only dissolved at the request of the one who remained a pagan.
        But, with this exception, divorce was absolutely forbidden. Absolute virginity
        was praised and even recommended, in view of the near approach of the Last Day;
        but it was in no way enforced. In ordinary life, the Christian was to be
        submissive to the authorities, as to his master if he were a slave; idleness
        was a disgrace; uprightness and modesty, courtesy in social intercourse the
        cheerfulness of a single heart, charity, and especially hospitality, were all
        strongly inculcated. 
   The
        religious life was very like that of the synagogue. The faithful met to pray,
        and to read the Scriptures, in which the great examples of righteous men of old
        were specially studied. The specifically Christian elements of this primitive
        worship were the Eucharist and the charismata, or extraordinary gifts of the
        Holy Spirit. The Eucharist was celebrated in the evening, after a frugal meal
        (agape) taken in common. The Lord’s Supper on the eve of His Passion was thus
        repeated. As to the manifestations of the Holy Spirit, these appeared under
        various forms; sometimes there were miraculous cures or other wonderful
        manifestations; sometimes visions; sometimes an illumination of mind which
        manifested itself in a discourse on the mysteries of the Faith, or on the
        obligations of conscience. The most remarkable of these manifestations were
        prophecy and glossolalia (the gift of tongues). Prophecy was the gift of
        knowing hidden things, especially “the secrets of the heart.” This last gift,
        which was entirely temporary, must not be confused with another form of
        prophecy, possessed by certain persons in the apostolic age, such as Judas Barsabbas, Silas, Agabus, and
        even, in the next generation, by the daughters of Philip, by Ammia, by Quadratus,
        and others to whom we shall refer later. In like manner, the gift of tongues,
        which, on the Day of Pentecost enabled the apostles to make themselves
        understood by people of different nationalities, had nothing in common with
        this other gift of glossolalia, described by St Paul in his first Epistle to
        the Corinthians. Neither the speaker with tongues himself, nor those present
        understood what he said; communication could not be established between them
        (or rather, between those present and the Holy Spirit), except by means of an inspired
        interpreter. Yet, even if such an interpreter were not present, it was possible
        to distinguish in the strange sounds uttered by the speaker, the accents of
        prayer, praise, or thanksgiving. 
   Such
        spiritual phenomena were well calculated to arrest the minds and to sustain the
        enthusiasm of the first Christians. But abuses followed hard on the use of
        them, and the use itself might have its drawbacks, if not wisely regulated. The
        Church at Corinth had only existed four years, and already St Paul is obliged
        to intervene and to regulate the inspiration of his converts. Even in the
        celebration of the Eucharist, it was not long before abuses began to creep in.
        The common meal, which was the first part of it, had to be made as simple as
        possible. Later on it was separated from the liturgy, and finally it was more
        or less completely suppressed. The ecclesiastical homily took the place of the
        primitive manifestations of the Lógos Sofías. Visions,
        prophecies, and miraculous cures were not indeed destined to disappear
        entirely, but as they were not compatible with the regular order of the
        liturgical service, they soon dropped out of it. 
   No
        details of the rites of initiation into Christianity are found in the apostolic
        epistles, but nevertheless they very early assumed fixed and significant forms.
        For these ceremonies Paul relied on the practical help of his fellow-labourers. Some of the faithful, not content with being
        baptized themselves, tried to be baptized also for their dead relations and
        friends. 
   Among
        the charismata those should be specially noticed which pertained to the
        internal ministry of the community. St Paul speaks of those members of the
        society who worked for it, presiding and exhorting, and of the duties of the
        faithful towards them; he mentions the “gifts of governments, helps,” etc. Soon
        the terms bishops, priests, and deacons make their appearance. But, in the
        beginning, the real or principal authority naturally remained in the hands of
        the missionaries, the founders. Their position was quite different from that of
        the neophytes who assisted them, at the moment in the practical details of the
        corporate life. 
   The
        meetings were held in private houses, chiefly in those large rooms on the upper storey, which have, at all times, been common in the
        East. In those countries people excel in the art of crowding themselves into a
        small space. The assemblies took place in the evening, and often lasted till
        far into the night. And, alongside of the Jewish Sabbath, Sunday was early
        devoted to divine worship. 
   A
        question has often been raised as to whether the first Christian communities,
        in Greek countries, were modelled on the pagan
        religious associations. There are some analogies, as, for instance, in the
        method of obtaining converts. The thiasi, the crani,
        and religious congregations of all kinds, like the Christian Churches,
        admitted, without distinction, foreigners, slaves, and women; the initiation
        was dignified by ritual which became very imposing; sacred feasts were
        celebrated. But these analogies do not go very far. Even apart from the
        differences of faith and morals, and of worship—which latter amongst the Pagans
        always involved a temple, an idol, and a sacrifice—there exists a radical
        contrast in the conception and distribution of authority. The heads of the
        pagan associations were always temporary and generally elected annually, whilst
        the Christian priests and deacons held office for life. The pagan leaders
        derived their powers from the community which had nominated them, of which they
        were only the agents; the Christian priests, on the contrary, spoke, acted, and
        governed, in the name of God and the apostles, whose auxiliaries and
        representatives they were. 
   A
        very little historic sense will, moreover, suffice to make clear to us that the
        first churches, being composed of converts from the synagogue, would tend to
        model themselves on that pattern; and that the missionary apostles, who had
        lived for a longer or a shorter time in the Christian communities at Jerusalem
        or Antioch, brought with them customs and traditions already well defined. They
        had no reason to turn to pagan institutions for a type of organization which
        they already possessed. And, moreover, the profound horror they felt for
        paganism told against any imitation of that kind. 
   On
        the whole, the Christian communities formed themselves on almost the same lines
        as the Jewish synagogues. Like the latter, they were religious societies,
        founded on a common faith and hope, though a faith and hope which knew no
        longer any barriers of race or nation. Like the synagogues, they tried to
        suppress any dangerous contact with pagan institutions ; they offered their
        members a social life which was both very intense and very peaceful, and also a
        nearly complete organization which necessitated common funds, courts of
        justice, and charitable relief. Even in worship the resemblance is very great.
        In the synagogue as in the church, they prayed, they read the Bible, they
        expounded it; but the Church had, in addition, the Eucharist and the exercise
        of spiritual gifts. And in these primitive times, the analogy went even
        farther. Just as the Jews of all countries considered themselves brothers in
        Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, so the Christian communities had a lively sense of
        their common brotherhood in Jesus Christ. Both look towards Jerusalem, which at
        this period is still the heart of Christianity, as of Judaism. But, whilst the
        eyes of the Jew turn towards the Temple as the centre of his memories and the pole-star of his hopes, the Christian meditates upon
        the spot where the cross of his Master once stood, where the witnesses of His
        resurrection still live, and whence came to them the apostolic chiefs whose
        words had gathered in from all parts the people of the New Covenant. 
     
         CHAPTER V
         The Origin of the Roman Church 
           
           
         The
        Jewish princes of the Asmonaean house had dealings in very early times with Rome. Hence originated no doubt the
        Jewish community there. It received a sudden and important increase after the
        taking of Jerusalem by Pompey (63 BC). The conqueror threw upon the Roman
        slave-market an immense number of prisoners of war. From the days of Augustus
        onwards, or even earlier, these Jewish prisoners, bought as slaves, and
        subsequently freed, formed a considerable colony, situated in Trastevere. This colony was not protected, at any rate
        directly, by any such special privileges as those granted, by the ancient
        Macedonian kings and by Roman generals, to various Jewish colonies in the
        Hellenic or Hellenized East. Tiberius violated no engagement, therefore, when
        he expelled the Jews from Rome (19 A.D.); they were then so numerous that it
        was possible to send 4000 of them to fight the barbarians of Sardinia. This
        ordinance, the pretext for which was a conversion much too advantageous to the
        Jewish community, was inspired by Sejanus. Less severity was shown after the
        fall of that minister (31 A.D.), and when Philo came to Rome (40 A.D.) to plead
        the cause of the Alexandrian Jews before Caligula, the Roman Jews had regained
        their former position. Either the next year (41 A.D.) or soon after, Claudius
        granted them an edict of toleration; but later he seems to have deemed
        repressive measures necessary. 
   It
        is at this time that the Gospel first appears in the history of the Jewish
        community in Rome. The Acts of the Apostles and Suetonius agree in saying that
        the Jews were driven from the capital. According to Dion Cassius, it had been
        found so difficult to carry out the threat of total expulsion that the
        authorities confined themselves to forbidding all meetings. But certainly there
        were some expulsions: St Paul found at Corinth (52 A.D.) a Jew, Aquila, with
        his wife Priscilla, who had migrated there in consequence of the edict of
        Claudius. Aquila was a native of Pontus; he and his wife already professed
        Christianity. This is quite in accordance with what Suetonius says as to the
        motive of the Jewish expulsion. 
   It
        is evident, therefore, that the preaching of the Gospel had given rise to
        disturbances similar to those which the Acts of the Apostles so often describe
        in Jerusalem, in Asia Minor, Thessalonica, Berea, Corinth, and Ephesus.
        According to the Acts, Aquila and Priscilla, when they received St Paul at
        Corinth, had quite recently come from Italy; this edict of proscription and the
        troubles which occasioned it should therefore be ascribed to 51 or 52 A.D. 
   Here,
        then, we have the first ascertained fact, the first assignable date, in the
        history of the Roman Church. To judge by what we know of the sequence of events
        elsewhere, the first preaching of the Gospel in Rome cannot have been much
        earlier: the Acts always describe serious disturbances in a Jewish community as
        following, as an immediate consequence, on the first efforts at evangelization.
        When St Paul wrote his Epistle to the Romans (58 A.D. at the latest), their
        church had already been in existence, and he had been wishing to visit it, for
        several years. 
   Whose
        hands had sown the Divine seed in this ground, where it was to bring forth such
        a prodigious harvest? We shall never know. Conjectures, built upon foundations
        too insecure to be sanctioned by history, take the Apostle Peter to Rome during
        the first years of Claudius (42 A.D.), or even under Caligula (39). There is
        nothing to prove that the Roman Jews, present at the first Pentecost, were
        converted; still less that they became missionaries. The centurion Cornelius,
        converted by St Peter at Caesarea, was not necessarily a Roman of Rome; and we
        know nothing of the effect on the spread of Christianity of the conversion of Sergius Paulus, the proconsul of Cyprus. 
   We
        will, therefore, dwell no longer on the mystery of its first origin, but merely
        state that when St Paul wrote to the Roman Church (58 A.D.), it was not only
        safely over the crisis which had attended its birth, but was well established,
        large, and well known, or even renowned, for faith and good works. 
   At
        this time, it had such a position that the Apostle of the Gentiles did not
        propose to take its place and labour in its stead
        for the evangelization of Rome, though that was naturally the most important,
        most tempting of fields for his zeal. His only desire was that whenever he
        carried his missionary journeys as far as Spain, he should profit by
        intercourse with it on the way, and should also contribute something to the
        instruction already received by the Roman Christians. The ideas which he put
        before them (which seem to have been immediately communicated to other
        churches), his way of presenting them, and the practical exhortations by which
        he accompanied them, all give a clue to the elements composing the young
        community. Like most of the other churches, it had originated in a split in the
        local Jewish community. A number of born Jews, and probably a greater number of
        half-converted pagan proselytes had been drawn away, and they constituted a new
        group in which they lived together amicably. There was little prospect that the
        Jewish section would grow much: the future of the Church lay with the other
        party. 
   This
        was a field of work just similar to that on which St Paul had been engaged for
        twelve years. If we except the transitory episode between Peter and Paul, the
        conditions in the Roman Church were those of the Church in Antioch, and also of
        the Churches in Galatia, Macedonia, Greece, and Asia, before the opposing
        Jewish mission came to breed dissension. It is impossible to estimate exactly
        the proportion of Jewish Christians and pagan Christians, to be found at any
        given moment, in the Roman community. One thing, however, is certain, and that
        is, that directly it was divorced from the synagogue, the prospects of
        evangelization among the pagans became more favourable,
        far more favourable. There had not yet, however,
        been any struggle between the two parties. The fanatics of Jerusalem had not
        appeared on the scene; the difficulties they had raised in Galatia and
        elsewhere had not yet come to the front in Rome. 
   What
        happened in the following years? Paul, arrested in Jerusalem and detained two
        years in Palestine, had to defer his projected journey into Spain. When he came
        to Italy (61 A.D.), under escort, and as a prisoner accused before the Imperial
        tribunal, he found Christians at Puteoli, who gave
        him a warm welcome. And the Roman Christians went out to meet him on the Appian
        Way. As soon as he was settled, he arranged an interview with the chief Jews in
        Rome and began to expound to them the Gospel, as if they had never heard it
        before. As might have been expected, the result was that a few new conversions
        were effected, but a very strong opposition was raised by the leaders. 
   Paul's
        captivity lasted two years. One only of his writings of that date, the Epistle
        to the Philippians, throws any light on what was happening around him. The Judaizers had at last found their way also to Rome; and
        the Gospel was preached, not only by friends of the Apostle, but also by his
        enemies. He himself had made a sensation in the "Praetorium."
        Indeed, his presence in Rome was advantageous to the spread of Christianity;
        the Christians seemed confident rather than downcast. This gain diminished the grief
        he felt at the Jewish opposition, which dogged his steps, and was not even
        disarmed by the chains he bore for the common faith. 
   His
        case was at length brought to trial. Like the procurators Felix and Festus, and
        King Agrippa II, the Imperial tribunal found that Paul had done nothing worthy
        of death or imprisonment. 
   Set
        free, he no doubt took the opportunity to go to Spain, where the first
        beginnings of Christianity seem to be connected with him. He also revisited his
        Christian colonies on the Aegean. Important traces of this last journey are to
        be found in his pastoral epistles to Titus and Timothy. 
   Several
        members of the primitive Church in Rome are known to us, at least by name. Even
        before he came to Rome, Paul had many friends there; at the end of his Epistle
        to the Romans, he sends greetings to twenty-four persons by name: Aquila and
        Priscilla he had already met at Corinth and in Asia, where they had done him
        great service, they now in Rome formed the centre of
        a little Christian group, a kind of household Church; Epaenetus, the earliest believer in Asia; Mary, who
        had laboured much for the faith in Rome; Andronicus
        and Junias, well-known apostles, who "were in
        Christ" before Paul himself; Amplias, Urbanus, Stachys, Apelles, Herodion; Tryphaena, Tryphosa, Persis, three
        good women who laboured for the Gospel; Rufus and
        his mother; Asyncritus, Phlegon,
        Hermes, Patrobas, Hermas,
        who also, with others, formed a special group; Philologus,
        Julia, Nereus and his sister, Olympas,
        and those with them; and finally two more groups, one of the household of Aristobulus, the other of the household of Narcissus. The
        latter is no doubt the celebrated freedman of Claudius, and Aristobulus is the grandson of Herod the Great, who was
        then living in Rome, on very good terms with the same emperor. The expression
        St Paul uses, "those of the household of Aristobulus,
        . . . and of Narcissus", leads to the belief that these groups were drawn
        from amongst the clients or household servants of these rich men. Writing from
        Rome to the Philippians, Paul sends, amongst other greetings, one from the
        faithful of "Caesar's household." Later, at the end of his second
        Epistle to Timothy, he gives the names of four other Roman Christians—Eubulus, Pudens, Linus, and
        Claudia. 
   This
        Linus must be the same whose name heads the list of bishops of Rome. The
        legends in which the names of Pudens and Priscilla
        occur are of no authority. But a church of Pudens,
        and one of Prisca or Priscilla, existed in Rome from
        the 4th century onwards. The cemetery of Priscilla was the most ancient in
        Rome, and in it the tombs of a Pudens and a
        Priscilla were preserved. A Christian funereal crypt, which bears the name of Ampliatus, has been discovered
        on the Via Ardeatina,
        ornamented with paintings of the time of Antoninus,
        if not of an even earlier period. 
   About
        the time when St Paul regained his liberty, St Peter came to Rome. He had,
        perhaps, been there before : this is possible, but it cannot be proved. And we
        have no information whatever as to his apostolic work in Rome. The writings
        which have come down to us bearing his name, whether canonical or not, contain
        no information on this point. 
   But
        the mere fact of his being in Rome at all, has entailed such consequences, and
        given rise to such important controversies, that it is well worthwhile to go
        carefully into all the evidence. 
   After
        the middle of the 2nd century a precise and universal tradition clearly existed
        as to St Peter's visit to Rome. Dionysius of Corinth in Greece, Irenaeus in
        Gaul, Clement and Origen in Alexandria, and Tertullian in Africa, all refer to
        it. And in Rome itself, Caius, about 200 A.D., points out the tombs of the
        apostles. By the 3rd century, we find the Popes building on their title of
        successors of St Peter, and their right to this title is nowhere denied. As
        soon as attention was directed to apostolic traditions, and the privileges
        connected with them, the Church of Rome is known to the whole of Christendom as
        the Church of St Peter : it was there that he died and left his chair. It is
        very remarkable that a position entailing consequences of such crucial importance
        never was questioned in any of the controversies between the East and Rome. 
   But
        the evidence goes back further than the end or even the middle of the 2nd
        century. In his letter to the Romans, St Ignatius of Antioch alludes to their
        apostolic traditions, and thus shows that these traditions were already known
        and accepted in Asia and Syria. After adjuring the Roman Christians not to
        oppose his martyrdom, he continues: "I do not command you, as Peter and
        Paul did: they were apostles, I am only a condemned criminal." These words
        do not amount to the assertion, "Peter came to Rome," but supposing
        he did come, Ignatius would not have spoken otherwise; whereas if he had not,
        there would have been no point in Ignatius' argument. 
   Besides,
        we must not think that the death of St Peter was shrouded in darkness and
        quickly forgotten by the Church. Without speaking of the allusions to it which
        it has been thought possible to trace in the Apocalypse and the Epistle to the
        Hebrews, the last chapter of the fourth Gospel contains an extremely clear
        allusion to the way in which St Peter met his death. Whoever the writer was, he
        lived certainly in Trajan's time, or very shortly after. 
   In
        Rome itself, naturally, memories were still more distinct. St Clement, in the
        celebrated passage on Nero’s persecution, connects the apostles Peter and Paul,
        with the Danaides, the Dirces, and other victims who
        suffered as a result of the burning of Rome. They are all represented as one
        group, and together they gave to the Romans, and among them, a notable example
        of courage. 
   There
        is no one, even including St Peter himself, but records his sojourn in Rome.
        His letter to the Christians in Asia Minor finishes with a greeting which he
        sends them in the name of the Church of Babylon, that is, the Church of Rome.
        (This symbolic expression is well known, if only from the Apocalypse.) 
   During
        the summer of 64 A.D., a terrible fire destroyed the chief part of Rome. It may
        have been accidental, but public opinion, with one voice, accused Nero of
        having kindled, or at least promoted, the conflagration. To avert suspicion,
        the emperor accused the Christians. A great number were arrested, summarily
        judged, and executed. Nero conceived the idea of turning their sufferings into
        a spectacle. In his gardens at the Vatican he gave night entertainments, where
        these unhappy victims, coated with pitch, flamed with an awful light over the
        games of the arena. Tacitus, who gives us these details, speaks of an immense
        multitude. His statements show clearly that no one attributed the fire to the
        Christians; nevertheless, the Christians had a very bad reputation; they were
        called "enemies of the human race"; everyone spoke of their infamies,
        and Nero must have been very much detested, before anyone could go so far as to
        express pity for them, as men did. 
   This
        was the verdict of Tacitus, who here displays towards the Christians the
        injustice and contempt which he loves to heap upon the Jews. But the facts
        remain, both as to the horrible scenes in the Vatican, and as to the witness
        borne to their faith by a multitude of both sexes, for women were not spared.
        The Apostle Peter’s execution would appear to have been among these gruesome
        deeds; his tomb was at the Vatican, close to the circus of Nero, and, however
        far back we go, the tradition as to the place of his martyrdom always points to
        that spot as the scene of his sufferings. We must, therefore, place it in the
        year 64 A.D. The same cannot be said of St Paul. He
        also laid down his life in Rome by a martyr’s death. But nothing points to his
        being condemned in consequence of the burning of Rome. Yet tradition, which
        soon forgot the crowd of martyrs of the year 64, united the two apostles, and
        had it that they died, not only in the same year, but on the same day. 
   However
        this may be, when the remnants of the Roman community were able to meet and to
        reorganize, the infant Church was consecrated by the hatred of Nero, the blood
        of the martyrs, and the memory of the two great apostles. Even during their
        lifetime, the Roman Church was much esteemed by the faithful in Christ. Paul,
        who never spared his Corinthian friends, and who found so much to blame in
        those of Galatia and Asia, had only praise for the Romans. The letter which he
        wrote to them, and which heads his Epistles, is a tribute to their virtues. As
        to Peter, the fact that they were his last direct disciples brought the Romans
        much prestige. Almost immediately after the scenes at the Vatican (66 A.D.),
        occurred the catastrophe at Jerusalem. The Christians in the Holy City only
        escaped the fate of their nation by dispersing. For some time the Church of
        Jerusalem was still spoken of, but it was no longer in Jerusalem. The name now
        stood only for a series of groups of Christians, scattered through all
        Palestine, especially to the east of the Jordan, isolated from the other
        Christian communities, and more and more shut in by their Semitic tongue and
        their uncompromising legalism. Christianity lost its primitive centre, just at the moment when the Church of Rome was
        ripe for the succession. The capital of the empire soon became the metropolis
        of all Christians.
   
         CHAPTER VI 
         The First Heresies 
           
         The
        first Epistles of St Paul show how unfettered was the early spread of the
        Gospel. The missionaries went wherever the Spirit led them—now where the Gospel
        had not yet been preached, now where Christian communities were already in
        existence, though from this St Paul abstained; his rule was never to sow in
        another's field. He made indeed rather a long stay in Rome, but against his
        will. All, however, had not the same scruples, so dissensions soon arose
        between individuals, between authorities, and even over doctrine. The doctrine
        taught at first was naturally very simple; as I have tried to show, it was all
        included in the religious education of the Israelite. But the zeal of the first
        Christians was too intense to remain inactive. In the intellectual sphere this fervour expressed itself in an incessant eagerness to
        know. The return of Christ and its date, conditions, and consequences, together
        with the form, duration, and almost the topography of His Kingdom, all roused
        the most eager curiosity, and produced the state of tension portrayed in the
        Epistles to the Thessalonians. When men had finished discoursing on the
        obligations of the Law, and the relations of ancient Israel to the infant
        Church, then the personality of their Founder, in its turn, exercised their
        minds. Under what conditions had He existed, before His Incarnation? What was
        His place among Divine beings? And what had been and what was His connection
        with those mysterious powers, interposed by Biblical tradition, but more
        especially by the speculations of the Jewish schools, between our world and the
        infinitely perfect Being. 
   On
        these and many other points, interpretations founded on the primitive Gospel
        teaching and supplementing it might be legitimate. This St Paul called the “building
        on”, from which proceeds higher knowledge. This advance in religious teaching
        he sanctions, and even promotes himself, very effectively. But he does not
        disguise that there is more than one way of developing primitive teaching, and
        that under cover of perfecting it, it is very easy to pervert it. 
   And
        this was just what occurred in the communities of the province of Asia, as we
        see in his letters to them during his Roman captivity. I refer specially to the
        Epistles to the Ephesians and Colossians. The first seems to have been a sort
        of circular letter, copies of which were sent to different communities. It has
        no local touches. The Epistle to the Colossians is different: it was evidently
        written specially for those to whom it was addressed. Enclosed with it was a
        short note, the Epistle to Philemon. 
   These
        letters transport us to the border-country between Phrygia and the ancient
        regions of Lydia and Caria. Three important towns, Hierapolis, Laodicea, and
        Colossae, lay at a short distance from each other, in the valley of the Lycus. Though Paul had not himself evangelized this part
        of the province of Asia, yet they looked to him as their master in spiritual
        things. No doubt he had sent one of his fellow-workers to them. During his
        captivity Epaphras, one of the chief religious
        leaders of those communities, visited him, and what he told him of their
        internal condition decided Paul to write the two letters referred to. I quote
        those passages which throw light on the doctrinal crisis then agitating the
        minds of the Christians of Asia. 
   Colossians
        I. 15-20: “He (Jesus Christ) is the image of the invisible God, the first-born
        of every creature: for by Him were all things created, that are in heaven, and
        that are in earth, visible and invisible, even Thrones, Dominions,
        Principalities, Powers; all things were created by Him, and for Him: And he is
        before all things, and in Him all things consist. And He is the head of the
        body, the Church: He is the beginning, the first-born of the dead; that in all
        things He might have the pre-eminence. For it pleased God that in Him should
        all fullness dwell; and God willed to reconcile all beings through the blood of
        His cross, by Him, I say, all that earth and heaven contains”
   Colossians
        II: “I would that ye should know what terrible anxiety I have for you, and for
        them at Laodicea, and for as many as have not seen my face in the flesh; I
        would comfort their hearts and knit them together in love, and endow them with
        all the riches of full understanding, I would lead them to the fuller knowledge
        of the mystery of God, that is of Christ, in Whom are hid all the treasures of
        wisdom and knowledge. And this I say to you, lest any man should beguile you
        from the true path with falsely enticing words. For if I be absent in the
        flesh, yet, at least, am I with you in the spirit, joying and beholding your
        order, and the steadfastness of your faith in Christ. As ye have received
        Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye therefore in Him : rooted and solidly built
        up and established in the faith, as it has been taught you abounding therein
        with thanksgiving. Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain
        deceit derived from the tradition of men, conformably to the rudiments of the
        world, and not to Christ. For in Him dwelled bodily all the fullness of the
        Godhead. And in Him ye enjoy this completeness, He is the head over each
        Principality and each Power in Whom also ye are circumcised with circumcision
        made without hands, you have put off the body of the flesh by this circumcision
        of Christ: ye have been buried with Him in baptism, ye are risen with Him,
        through faith in the power of God, who raised Him from the dead. And you were
        dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your
        flesh; he quickened you together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses;
        he has blotted out the ordinance of our condemnation, He took it away by
        nailing it to the Cross; He conquered Principalities and Powers, He showed
        their weakness openly by His triumph over them. 
   “Let
        no man therefore judge you in the matter of meat, or of drink, or in respect of
        an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbaths: All these are the shadow
        of things to come, of the future which, being present, is of Jesus Christ. Let
        no man condemn your efforts, troubling you in the worshipping of angels, and
        impressing and awing you by visions, puffed up as these men are, by the vain
        pride of the flesh. They do not hold fast to the Head, to which all the body is
        bound, and from which it draws its life and increase according to God. With
        Christ ye are dead to the rudiments of the world, why then as though ye were
        alive and in the world, do you thus dogmatize. Touch not; taste not; handle not
        even those things of which the use contaminates, for it is unfitting. Which
        things are commandments and doctrines of men. They have, no doubt, a show of
        wisdom in their method of superstition and humility of mind and of severity to
        the body; but at root have nothing honorable, nothing
        leading to the satisfying of the flesh.” 
   These
        words lead us to conclude that the adversaries whom St Paul was combating were
        trying to introduce : 1st, the observance of feasts, new moons, and Sabbaths;
        2nd, abstinence from certain food, and practices of humiliation; 3rd, the
        worship of angels. Perhaps the question of circumcision was still under
        discussion (II. 11): it seems rather to be indicated in the term humiliation.
        Though this has all a Jewish flavour, yet the days
        of the controversy in the Epistle to the Galatians are over. The discussion no
        longer turns on the opposition between Faith and the Law, but rather on special
        ceremonies, corresponding with special doctrines, which they thought to
        establish on the apostolic foundations. 
   Behind
        these ceremonies is discernible a special line of teaching, of which the
        characteristic feature is the excessive importance attributed to the angels. St
        Paul does not go into details; he rather expounds his own doctrine, than analyzes that of his adversaries. But the way he insists
        that everything was created by Jesus Christ, and for Him, that He holds the
        first place in the work of creation and in that of redemption, shows that the
        teachers of Colossae had tried to detract from the position of the Saviour in the minds of the Phrygians. Later heretical
        systems, as we shall see, set up the angels over against God, attributing to
        them the creation of the world, and the responsibility for evil, both moral and
        physical. But here the relations between God and the angels are entirely
        different. The angels are not the enemies of God, for they are worshipped, and
        they complete the work of salvation, left unfinished by the Christ. Yet all
        these characteristics, these intermediaries between God and the world, these
        distinctions as to food, these humiliations o the
        flesh, these all show the connection between the Judaic gnosticism,1 and the
        false doctrines St Paul opposed at Colossae. 
   Now
        the epígnosis,
        inculcated by the Apostle is of this kind. Progress in objective faith means
        progress in the conception of Christ. Note that the expressions used in these
        Epistles do not touch the relations between Christ and His heavenly Father. The
        expression, the Word, does not occur at all. Paul had no need for it, he was
        dealing only with the relation between Christ and creatures. An attempt was
        being made to reduce Him to the level of the angels; St Paul extols Him above
        every creature, and he does not only accord to Him the first place, but also
        makes Him the raison d’être, the principle of life, the end, even the Author of
        creation. 
   From
        this high conception of Christ, his theory of the Church is derived. The Church
        is the aggregate of all created beings touched by the work of salvation. God
        has extended salvation to men of every race, Greeks, Jews, Barbarians,
        Scythians, bond and free; and this, by a free gift. The Church, thus recruited,
        owes all to Jesus Christ; He is its raison d'être, its vital principle, its
        Head, its Chief. He came down from heaven to form it, by accomplishing the work
        of salvation upon the Cross. Since His Ascension, He still carries on, in His
        Church, the development and the perfecting of His work. He instituted the
        different degrees of ecclesiastical ministry, apostles, prophets, evangelists,
        pastors, and teachers, that He might fit the saints for their part in the
        corporate work, in that holy building which is the Body of Christ. By Christ's
        work, transmitted through these His instruments, we all grow in one faith, and
        in one knowledge, a faith and knowledge, having always the Son of God as their
        objective—and thus we attain the end of our calling, that complete manhood,
        which is the possession of Christ in all fullness. 
   Thus,
        in the Church, all doctrinal life comes from Jesus Christ; all progress in
        knowledge proceeds from Him, and leads to a more perfect apprehension of Him,
        and of that Pleroma, that Divine fullness, which
        dwells in Him. The whole Christian life comes from Him and leads to Him. Later
        on, St John expressed this great thought under the image of the Alpha and the
        Omega. 
   But
        this development of doctrine is attended with danger, due to false teaching, as
        variable as the wind or the chances of a game, which arising from the
        forwardness of man, craftily leads into error minds not yet fully established
        in the true faith. Paul even suggests that these systems, straying from
        orthodox tradition, would culminate in a justification of sensual corruption. 
   The
        course of events more than justified the fears of the Apostle. The documents
        available for the understanding of these first phases of heresy, certainly
        carry us a long way from the time when St Paul wrote to the Colossians. They
        are, moreover, rather polemical than descriptive. But they make it clear, that
        long before the famous gnostic schools of Hadrian’s reign, similar teaching to
        theirs insinuated itself everywhere, dividing the faithful laity, perverting
        the Gospel, and tending to transform it into an apology for human frailty. 
   Such
        is the situation revealed in the so-called pastoral letters, two of which,
        addressed to Timothy, apparently refer to some crisis in the province of Asia.
        The preachers of heresy are no longer alluded to vaguely as in the Epistle to
        the Colossians; their names are given: Hymenaeus, Philetus, Alexander. They pose as teachers of the Law;
        their teachings are Jewish fables; they address themselves to weak minds, full
        of curiosity, tormented with “itching ears,” and St Paul says, especially to
        women, filling their minds with questions as silly as they were subtle, with
        fables and endless genealogies. As to practice they inculcated abstinence from
        marriage, and from certain kinds of food. The resurrection was regarded as
        already past, i.e., there is no resurrection but that from sin. And, over and
        above the danger to faith involved by intercourse with these false teachers, it
        gave rise to controversies which strained the bonds of Christian charity. 
   The
        pastoral epistles show us St Paul much grieved to find so many tares in his apostolic harvest.
        Other documents, which allude to heresies and to the anxiety they cause the
        heads of the Church, exhibit not only grief but indignation, e.g., the Epistle
        of St Jude, the Second Epistle of St Peter, the Apocalypse of St John. Heretics
        are denounced as teachers of immorality, who degrade the grace of God, the
        Gospel, to the service of sensuality; for them Divine justice reserves the most
        terrible punishments. Here also we hear of cunningly devised fables; other
        things are condemned, but with more energy than precision. 
   St
        John also, in the seven letters with which his Apocalypse opens, shows himself
        much provoked. In the churches of Asia, a propaganda of immoral tendencies was
        raging. It allowed fornication, and meats offered in pagan sacrifice. The
        teaching on which this lax moral standard was grafted, is nowhere described; it
        is characterized, however, by a strong term : the “depths of Satan”. The false
        teachers claim to be apostles, and are not; they pretend to be Jews, and are of
        the synagogue of the devil. Twice they are mentioned by name; they are Nicolaitans. 
   
         HERESY OF CERINTHUS
             
         From
        all this certainly no clear conception results of the errors prevalent in Asia
        at the time of the Apocalypse. Nor does tradition throw any light on them. St
        Irenaeus only knew the heresy of the Nicolaitans from the words of St John; he sums them up in the words indiscrete vivunt. Clement of
        Alexandria knows no more. Nevertheless, both connect the sect of the Nicolaitanes with the deacon Nicolas, mentioned in the
        Acts of the Apostles. No such connection, however, has been proved. 
   The Nicolaitanes are not the only heretics with whom St
        John met. Polycarp used to tell how John, the disciple of the Lord, on entering
        the baths at Ephesus, saw there a certain Cerinthus,
        and immediately left, saying, “Let us fly; the house may fall, for it shelters Cerinthus, the enemy of the truth.” St Irenaeus, who
        preserved this story of Polycarp's, gives details on the doctrine of Cerinthus, and St Hippolytus adds to his account. From
        them we learn that Cerinthus was in fact a Jewish
        teacher, an advocate of Sabbath observance, circumcision, and other rites. Like
        the Ebionites of Palestine, he taught that Jesus was
        the son of Joseph and Mary. God is too far above this world to concern himself
        with it at all, except through intermediaries. An angel created the universe;
        another, who gave the Law, is the God of the Jews. They are both too far below
        the Supreme Being to have any knowledge of Him. When Jesus was baptized a
        divine power, the Christ (Irenaeus) or the Holy Spirit (Hippolytus) proceeding
        from the Supreme God, descended upon Him, and dwelt within Him, but only until
        His Passion. 
   About
        twenty years after the date of the Apocalypse, Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch,
        condemned to death as a Christian, and destined to be thrown to the wild beasts
        at Rome, passed rapidly through the province of Asia. In the letters which he
        had occasion to write to certain churches there, he also discusses the
        doctrinal situation, and warns the faithful against the heresies being sown in
        their midst. 
   And
        what strikes him above all is the tendency to split into sects and schisms. He
        had seen with his own eyes, at Philadelphia, heretical assemblies. 
   “Some
        tried to deceive me according to the flesh, but the Spirit is not deceived, for
        it is of God. The Spirit knows whence it comes, and whither it goes, and
        reveals hidden things. I cried out in the midst of their speeches, I cried with
        a loud voice : 'Hold fast to the bishop, to the presbytery and to the
        deacons'—Some of them imagined that I spoke thus, because I knew of their
        separation; but He, for Whom I bear these chains, is my witness, that it was
        not the flesh, nor was it any man who had told me of this. It was the Holy
        Spirit, Who proclaims this precept: do nothing without the Bishop; keep your
        bodies as the temple of God; love union, flee from division; be imitators of
        Jesus Christ, as He is of His Father.”
   Those
        who promoted these assemblies were wandering preachers, who went from town to
        town sowing their tares. They were not always successful. Thus, on the road
        from Philadelphia to Smyrna, Ignatius met heretical preachers coming from
        Ephesus, where they had had no success. Ignatius probably knew these heretics
        before coming to Asia, and wished to forewarn the churches there against an
        enemy, strange to them, though well known to him. 
   The
        doctrine taught in these conventicles was, above all, permeated with Judaism.
        It was no longer, of course, simply a question of the Jewish law, but of
        speculations combining three elements : the Mosaic ritual, the Gospel, and
        visionary dreams, foreign to both. The Jewish rites, having been excluded as a
        means of salvation, were now used to recommend and to give shape to rather
        peculiar religious systems. Ignatius often recurs to the Sabbath, circumcision,
        and other observances, which he characterizes as out of date. He insists upon
        the authority of the New Testament and of the Prophets, whom he connects with
        the Gospel as indirectly opposed to the Law. 
   The
        Christology of the heretics, the only clearly defined part of their system, is
        a Docetic Christology: “Become deaf, when anyone
        speaks to you apart from Jesus Christ, the descendant of David, the son of
        Mary, who was truly born, did eat and drink, and who was truly persecuted under
        Pontius Pilate, and truly crucified; who truly died in the sight of heaven,
        earth, and hell, who was truly raised from the dead by the power of His Father.
        If some who are atheists—that is to say, unbelievers—pretend He suffered only
        in appearance, they themselves living only in appearance, why then am I bound
        with these chains? Why do I desire to fight with beasts? Then do I die in vain”.
        These expressions do not apply only to the reality of the death and
        resurrection of the Saviour; they cover the whole of
        His earthly life. They are not aimed at the imperfect Docetism of Cerinthus, but at a real Docetism, like that of Saturnilas and of Marcion, according to whom Jesus Christ had only the
        appearance of a body. 
   Eschatology
        (i.e., the doctrine of the last things) is not touched on; but the
        insistence with which Ignatius dwells upon the reality of Christ's
        resurrection, and upon the hope of individual resurrection, suggests that these
        heretics also denied the resurrection of the body. This would deprive morality
        of its strongest motive. The words of the letter to the Philadelphians: “Keep
        your body as the temple of God” seem to indicate that the new doctrines led to
        immorality. This, however, is merely hinted at. It was not on account of their
        misconduct, but rather of their sectarian spirit, that the new heretics were a
        danger to the Church. 
   This
        illicit preaching St Ignatius met by doctrine, indicated but vaguely in his
        letters. The religious dispensation of the Old Testament, though formerly
        sanctioned, was imperfect; it is now abolished. The martyr does not allegorize
        it, he sees in it the preface to the Gospel. His Christology presents several
        remarkable features. Jesus Christ is truly man and truly God; “Our God, Jesus
        Christ, was conceived in the womb of Mary, according to the Divine
        dispensation, of the seed of David, and by the Holy Spirit, he was born, he was
        baptized, that by the virtue of His Passion, water might be purified.” His
        pre-existence before the Incarnation is strongly asserted: “There is only one
        physician of flesh and of spirit, born and not born, God manifest in the flesh,
        true life in death, son of Mary, and Son of God, first passible and then
        impassible, Jesus Christ our Lord.” Ignatius knew the doctrine of the Word: “There
        is only one God, who has manifested himself in Jesus Christ, His Son, who is
        His Word, uttered after silence, and who in all things was well pleasing to Him
        that sent Him.” This coming forth in time does not prevent Jesus Christ from
        being above time, and outside time, and from having existed before time, in the
        Bosom of His Father. 
   Heresy,
        in these remote days, always springs from a Jewish or Mosaic root. The false
        teachers are always teachers of the Law, advocating the Sabbath, circumcision,
        and other rites. But they do not teach only the Law, and are not to be
        confounded with the good scribes of Jerusalem, and their Pharisee disciples,
        absorbed in the canonical Law and its commentaries. They are real theologians,
        who taking advantage of the comparative indifference of their co-religionists
        to all but the worship of the Law, devote themselves to doctrinal speculation.
        And they did not stop there. To the already sufficiently minute observances of
        the Mosaic Law they added a very definite asceticism, celibacy, vegetarianism,
        and abstinence from wine. Those amongst them who accepted Christianity,
        combined with the new doctrines of the Gospel their "Jewish fables,"
        and tried to impose them, together with their austere rule of life, upon new
        converts. They were, in fact, Judaizing gnostics,
        who in the primitive churches heralded the inroads of philosophic Gnosticism. 
   
         CHAPTER VII
         The Episcopate 
           
           
         THE
        greater number of documents quoted thus far have all been connected with the
        churches of the province of Asia; but nothing precludes the supposition that
        things were everywhere practically the same. The crisis was serious. A
        principle of great importance was at stake. Would Christianity remain faithful
        to the Gospel? Or would the simple preaching of primitive days be submerged by
        a torrent of strange doctrines? Was this pure religion—derived from all that
        was best in Israel—this healthy morality, this calm and confident piety, was it
        all to be at the mercy of hawkers of strange doctrines and immoral impostors?
        Many such men were appearing in various guises ; in the guise of apostles and
        prophets, they hurried from church to church, appealing to Jewish tradition and
        evangelistic authority, and accentuating abstruse points of philosophy,
        calculated to puzzle simple souls. 
   How
        could they be got rid of? In these early days the Church had not yet acquired
        either a definite canon of scripture, or a universally recognized creed. It had
        not even well-established ecclesiastical authorities, confident of themselves,
        and supported by solid Church tradition. 
   The
        right to speak was as easy to obtain in the Christian assemblies as in the
        synagogues. If an address took an undesirable turn, it was no doubt open to the
        presidents of the assembly to stop the speaker. But if the speaker refused to
        obey, and discussion ensued, how were they to deal with men who quoted the
        great Apostles of the East, or learned doctors of the Law, or who even claimed
        the inspiration of the Holy Spirit? 
   We
        have seen the difficulty St Paul had in regulating the inspiration of the
        Corinthians. And how was the spread of false doctrine outside the general
        assembly of the faithful to be stopped? Or the formation of religious coteries
        which, even apart from perverting doctrine, destroyed the brotherly unity of
        the first days? 
   There
        was but one way of escape; and that was to strengthen in the local community
        the influences making for unity and control. Thus, it is not astonishing that
        the most ancient documents on heresy should be also the earliest witnesses to
        the progress of ecclesiastical organization. The pastoral epistles lay great
        stress on the choice of priests or bishops, their duties and their fitness to fulfill them. This is also the all but exclusive subject of
        the letters of St Ignatius. The time has come, therefore, to consider more
        closely the first beginnings of hierarchical government in the Christian
        society. 
   We
        have seen that the primitive community in Jerusalem lived at first under the
        direction of the twelve apostles, presided over by St Peter. A council “elders”
        (presbyteri,
        priests) and a college of seven deacons completed this organization. Later on,
        a “brother of the Lord,” James, takes his place beside the apostles, sharing
        their superior authority. When the apostles dispersed, he took their place
        alone and assumed the position of head of the local church. 
   Upon
        his death (61 A.D.) a successor was appointed, also a kinsman of the Lord,
        Simeon, who lived till about 110 A.D. This Jerusalem hierarchy presents exactly
        the grades of rank which, later on, became universal. 
   We
        have less information as to the second community, that of Antioch. We see, at
        first, a group of apostolic, or inspired men at its head; then darkness
        descends, and we must await the time of Trajan. Then we find the Church of
        Antioch governed in the same manner as the Church of Jerusalem. Ignatius, the
        bishop, was the counterpart of Simeon at Jerusalem. Sometimes he calls himself
        bishop, not of Antioch, but of Syria, which suggests that as yet there were
        only two distinct churches in that region, the Church of Jerusalem for the
        Jewish Christians in Palestine, and that of Antioch for the Hellenist
        congregations of Syria. The Syrian Bishop was assisted, as was the Bishop of
        Jerusalem, by priests and deacons. Tradition has preserved the name of a
        predecessor of Ignatius, Enodius;
        through him, the hierarchy was carried back to apostolic days. 
   In
        his missions, St Paul could not but give his Christian communities the
        rudiments of ecclesiastical organization. And this the author of the Acts
        describes when he represents the Apostle as appointing presbyteri (priests) in each city.
        Nevertheless, these local heads are rarely mentioned in his letters. The
        earliest of his epistles speak rather of actions performed, than of official
        functions, or, if functions are mentioned they appear to be rather those of the
        itinerant, ecumenical Apostolate, than of the local government. Thus the
        Epistle to the Ephesians enumerates at the same time, apostles, prophets,
        evangelists, pastors, and teachers; these are not all technical terms, and the
        three first have nothing to do with the local organization of the Church.
        Moreover, in these groups of neophytes, the local dignitaries would hardly have
        stood much above the rest, in the eyes of the apostles. All were converts of
        recent date, scarcely free from paganism. The real heads of the Church were
        still those who had been the direct cause of their evangelization. And yet,
        holders of hierarchical office did exist already. They are even designated by
        the terms that still remain in use. In the title of his Epistle to the
        Philippians, written about 63 A.D., St Paul addresses himself “to the saints in
        Christ which are at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons.” Some years before,
        when on his way to Jerusalem, he had summoned the “priests” of Ephesus and
        commended to their care the infant Church, of which, he said, the Holy Ghost
        had made them “bishops.” Here already appears an absence of clear distinction
        between priests and bishops and the collegiate government of the Church. Like
        the Church of Philippi, the Church of Ephesus was governed by a group of
        persons who were both priests and bishops. 
   This
        state of things, or if we prefer it, this mode of designation, continued for a
        long time. In the Epistles of St Peter and St James, the local church is
        governed by “priests.” In the pastoral epistles, where the selection and duties
        of the heads of the Church are brought so prominently forward, they are spoken
        of sometimes as priests, sometimes as bishops. The letter of St Clement (about
        97 A.D.  is of great importance in this
        connection — being written in consequence of a dispute about the ecclesiastical
        hierarchy : it represents the local church as governed by bishops and deacons.
        It is the same in the recently published Teaching of the Apostles, where we
        have the terminology of the Epistle to the Philippians. The Church of Philippi
        received, about 115 A.D., a letter from Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna; he only
        speaks of priests and deacons. Hermas speaks in like
        manner of the Roman Church of his time; and so does the writer of the Second
        Epistle of Clement, a Roman or Corinthian document of the time of Hermas. 
   These
        last-mentioned writings bring us very near to the middle of the 2nd century. 
   There
        has been much discussion over these documents and over the manner in which they
        appear to conflict with the received tradition that the system of government by
        a single bishop dates from the earliest days of the Church, and embodies in
        Church organization the apostolic succession. To me it seems, that if we look
        at the matter dispassionately and in no contentious or party spirit, we shall
        see that tradition gives a less prejudiced account than is sometimes supposed.
        The view that the episcopate represents the apostolic succession, is in
        accordance with the sum-total of facts as we know them. The first Christian
        communities were governed at the outset by apostles of various degrees, to whom
        they owed their foundation, and by other members of the evangelizing staff. But
        in the nature of things, this staff was ambulatory and unsettled, and the
        founders soon entrusted specially instructed and trustworthy neophytes with the
        permanent duties which were necessary to the daily life of the community : such
        as the celebration of the Eucharist, preaching, preparation for baptism, the
        presidency in assemblies, and temporal administration. Sooner or later the
        missionaries were obliged to leave these young communities to themselves, and
        the entire direction of affairs fell into the hands of the leaders who had
        formed part of the local community. Whether they had one bishop at their head,
        or whether they had a college of several, the episcopate still carried on the
        apostolic succession. It is equally clear that, through the apostles who had
        instituted it, this hierarchy went back to the very beginning of the Church,
        and derived its authority from those to whom Jesus Christ had entrusted His
        work. 
   But
        we can go further still, and show that if the system of government by a single
        bishop represents in some respects a later stage of the hierarchy, it was not
        so unknown in primitive days as it might appear. To begin with, we could not
        have a better instance than that of the Mother Church at Jerusalem, which from
        the time when the apostles dispersed had a monarchical bishop. We have also
        every reason to believe that in Antioch this form of government was traditional
        from the commencement of the 2nd century, when St Ignatius imparted to it such
        distinction. In his letters, addressed to various churches in Asia, Ignatius
        very earnestly urges them to hold fast to their bishop, the head of the local
        Church, that they might be able to withstand the attacks of heresy. This
        testimony to the existence of the episcopacy is the very reason why his letters
        were so long viewed with suspicion in some quarters. But Ignatius does not
        speak of the monarchical bishop as a new institution; if he exhorts the
        faithful of Asia to rally round their bishop, he does not adopt a less pressing
        tone in speaking of the other grades of the hierarchy. His advice may be summed
        up thus : Rally round your spiritual chiefs! The fact that these chiefs form a
        three-fold rather than a two-fold hierarchy is of secondary importance to his
        argument, he treats that as a matter of fact, uncontested and traditional; and
        has no need to urge its acceptance. 
   Towards
        the middle of the 2nd century, the monarchical episcopate also comes before us
        as an undisputed fact of received tradition, in the Western Christian
        communities of Rome, Lyons, Corinth, Athens, and Crete as well as in more
        Eastern provinces. Nowhere is there a trace of any protest against a sudden and
        revolutionary change, transferring the government from a college of bishops to
        that of a single monarchical ruler. From the 2nd century onward—in some places
        at least—it was possible for them to name the bishops linking them to the
        apostles. Hegesippus, who travelled from church to
        church, made in various places a collection of lists of bishops, or drew them
        up himself from local recollections and documents. The line of succession of
        the bishops of Rome dates back to St Peter and St Paul, and is known to us
        through St Irenaeus; that of Athens, dating back to Dionysius the Areopagite, is given by St Dionysius of Corinth. In Rome,
        the episcopal succession was so well known, and its chronology so clear, that
        it served to fix the date of other events. It was said of different heresies,
        that they appeared under Anicetus, or Pius, or Hyginus. In the discussion as to the observance of Easter,
        Irenaeus fixed a date in the same way, going back farther still, to Telesphorus and to Xystus I,
        that is to the time of Trajan and of St Ignatius. 
   What
        conclusion can be drawn from all this, if not that the system of government by
        a monarchical bishop was already in existence, in countries west of Asia, at
        the time when such books were written as the Shepherd of Hennas or the Second
        Epistle of Clement, the Teaching of the Apostles, and the First Epistle of St
        Clement; and that, therefore, the testimony of these old writers to the
        collegiate episcopate does not preclude the existence of the monarchical
        episcopate? Towards the end of the 2nd century, the author of the Muratorian Canon said of Hermas,
        that he wrote a short time before, under the episcopate of his brother Pius.
        Thus Hermas seems only to know of the collegiate
        episcopate, yet writes under a monarchical bishop, his own brother. About the
        time of Commodus, a Modalist teacher was cited more than once to appear before the ecclesiastical authority
        of Smyrna. Hippolytus, who recounts the event uses the expression “the priests”.
        Yet it is quite certain that Smyrna then had a bishop. Moreover, the collegiate
        episcopate, which was certainly the original system in more places than one,
        was not likely to be the final form : it had to modify itself very soon.
        Government cannot be carried on by commission, unless presided over by a head
        who has it well in hand, who inspires it, guides it, and acts in its name.
        Probably the members of these episcopal colleges in primitive times were rather
        more on an equality with their president, than are canons of our day with their
        bishop. According to the rather confused memories which tradition has
        transmitted to us, they for long retained the power of ordination, which now
        especially characterizes the episcopal dignity. The priests of Alexandria in
        replacing their dead bishop, not only elected, but also consecrated his
        successor. This custom no doubt dated from a time when Egypt had no church but
        that of Alexandria. It would not be surprising to find that the same
        circumstances had led to the same results in Antioch, Rome, and Lyons, and in
        fact, in every place where the local churches had a very wide jurisdiction. 
   We
        are thus able to explain the custom of designating both the president and his counsellors by one phrase. 
   We
        ourselves speak of the clergy, the priests, of a parish, although there is
        considerable difference between the authority of the parish priest and that of
        his curates. In like manner, when they spoke of the priests of Rome, or the
        bishops of Corinth, the term covered both the higher grades of the hierarchy.
        But the natural course of events tended to concentrate the authority in one
        hand, and this change, if change there were, was one of those which come about
        of themselves, insensibly, without anything like a revolution. The president of
        the episcopal council in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, and many other places,
        stood out sufficiently from his colleagues to be separately and easily
        remembered. The Church of God which "dwells in Rome" may have inherited
        the superior authority of its apostolic founders in a diffused form ;
        authority, however, concentrated itself in the priest-bishops as a body, and
        one of them was clothed with it more specially, and exercised it. Between this
        president, and the one monarchical bishop of succeeding centuries, there is no
        practical difference in principle. 
     
         CHAPTER VIII 
         Christianity and the State 
           
           
         The
        first temporal power with which Christianity had dealings was the Jewish
        Government. On the death of Herod the Great (4 B.C.) his kingdom was divided
        between his three sons, Philip, Herod Antipas, and Archelaus.
        The countries between the Jordan and the frontiers of the Nabathean kingdom fell, for the most part, to
        Philip's share. Antipas took the north, Galilee, Decapolis, and Perea, and Archelaus had the centre and the south, Samaria, Judea, and Idumea. Archelaus was soon
        deposed (6 A.D.) and replaced by a Roman procurator. Philip retained his
        tetrarchy, as it was called, until his death (34 A.D.); Antipas survived him,
        but was finally deposed (39 A.D.). Philip's principality was for some years
        united to the province of Syria (34-37) and then given by Caligula (37 A.D.) to
        Herod Agrippa, the grandson of Herod the Great. He also inherited (39 A.D.) the
        tetrarchy of Antipas, and finally (41 A.D.) acquired the province of the
        procurator, including Jerusalem and the adjoining countries. Thus, the kingdom
        of Herod the Great was reconstructed. In the first pages of the history of
        Christianity all these princes are mentioned, though, in fact, they had but
        little connection with the infant Church. Herod Antipas, who beheaded John
        Baptist, plays but a secondary part in the Passion. It does not appear that
        either he, or his brother Philip, interfered with such disciples of the Gospel
        as may have been in their respective principalities. Agrippa himself seems to
        have displayed no hostility until he became king of Jerusalem. There, in
        Jerusalem, lurked the real enemy, the Jewish priesthood, whose influence was
        supreme in the great national council, the Sanhedrim, which resembled the
        Senate in Greek cities. This authority was, however, more or less municipal. It
        had no jurisdiction beyond the borders of the procurator’s province. And it had
        but a moral or religious influence in the little Jewish kingdoms, as, of
        course, in countries which, like Damascus, were under other rulers. Even in its
        own jurisdiction it had not supreme power. Thus, in Judea the procurator alone
        had the ius gladii, and
        would not always use it at the pleasure of malicious priests. So capital
        sentences were few. After Jesus Himself, only St Stephen, James, the son of
        Zebedee, and James the brother of the Lord, are mentioned as suffering the
        extreme penalty. The priests made up for this in scourgings and imprisonments, and other measures of
        less severity than death 
   On
        the death of Agrippa I (44 A.D.) his kingdom had been restored to the
        procurators. But from 50 A.D. his son, Agrippa II, who was a favorite of the Emperor Claudius, obtained not only the
        little principality of Chalcis, in Anti-Lebanon, but also was given power of
        control over the temple, and the privilege of nominating the high priest. Three
        years later, his principality was exchanged for a kingdom beyond the Jordan,
        formed for him out of Philip's late tetrarchy, and part of that of Antipas. The
        Christians had no reason to complain of him. Indeed, during St Paul’s trial
        before the Roman procurator, he showed himself on the whole favorable to the prisoner; and when St James, the brother of the Lord, was stoned by the
        order of Hanan the younger, the high priest,
        Agrippa, in his indignation at once deposed the pontiff. And during the
        insurrection the Christian community took refuge in his domain. This kindly
        prince lived till 100 A.D. 
   But
        the position of Palestinian Christianity is peculiar. It should therefore not
        detain us from a survey of the empire as a whole. Let us see what chances of
        external security the Church is likely to meet with there. 
   In
        the days of antiquity, it was regarded as a fundamental principle that man has
        duties towards the Divinity, and that the citizen of any particular country has
        special obligations to the gods of his native land. A Roman owed an especial
        reverence to the gods of Rome, an Athenian to those of Athens, and so on. On
        the other hand, not only was he free from obligation to the gods of other
        lands, but he was forbidden to worship them. Religion was essentially national.
        It was as incongruous for a man to affiliate himself to any foreign cult as to
        take service in a foreign army, or to devote any fraction of his political
        activity to a foreign state. 
   This
        principle, however, did not forbid foreigners domiciled in the land to practice
        their alien religion. As they were forbidden to join in the national worship of
        their temporary home they would have been cut off from all religion, if they
        could not practice their own peculiar rites. This local contiguity, however,
        involved no blending of the two religions, no weakening of the barriers which
        divided them, and no change in the duties of the citizens towards their
        respective faiths. 
   This
        distinction between religions, being dependent on the separation between
        states, was necessarily disturbed by their fusion. The right of Roman
        citizenship, when extended to the inhabitants, the citizens, of towns once
        independent of Rome, naturally involved the spread of the Roman religion
        itself. Local rites, however, could not be abolished. Neither Fortuna of Praeneste, nor Diana of Aricia could be supposed to have lost her divinity, or her claim to worship, because
        the citizens of Praeneste and of Aricia had become Roman citizens, and had as such incurred
        obligations to Vesta, to Jupiter Capitolinus, and other gods of the sovereign city. And
        just as the gods of Rome became the gods of the new citizens, so also the gods
        of the new citizens became the gods of Rome. When this religious fusion had
        once become a principle of political conduct, grave consequences ensued. The
        annexation of southern Italy to the Roman state brought into the Roman Pantheon
        all the divinities of the various Greek tribes, who had ancient and illustrious
        colonies on Italian soil. 
   This adlectio in divorum ordinem, as it may be
        termed in Roman style, did not take place without certain formalities. We know
        the mode of procedure in the case of Apollo and Aesculapius. In many cases,
        they seem to have gone through a process of identification. Ares was identified
        with Mars, Aphrodite with Venus, and so on. 
   Thus
        the situation created by the annexations in Greece, and the colonization of the
        West could be met. This was so much to the good. But, both in the East and in
        the West, there were people whose national faiths would neither square with
        Greek polytheism, nor with the lines of the Latin religion. 
   The
        rulers of the empire would never have entertained the idea of depriving these
        far-distant subjects of theirs of their own gods; and evidently they carefully
        abstained from the attempt. All they did was to forbid certain customs which
        appeared contrary to morality, such as human sacrifices, castration, and
        circumcision. As to the Celtic religion, Augustus went farther and prohibited
        it to Roman citizens. 
   These
        exotic religions, however, cannot be said to have really blended with the
        religions of the empire. Isis, Astarte, and Mithras were tolerated, as were Teutates and Odin, but they never attained official
        recognition. The Celtic religion almost entirely disappeared, thanks to the
        progress of Roman civilization, or to speak more accurately, thanks to the
        spread of Latin or Roman law. The same may be said of the Iberian, Mauritanian,
        and Illyrian religions, which were brought under the same influences. The
        oriental rites had a more tenacious vitality, and not only held their own in
        their respective homes, but also took root in far off Greece and Italy, and
        even beyond. 
   In
        the beginning, their spread was not welcomed. A Greek, and still more a Roman,
        when attached to his own traditions, shrank from taking part in these exotic
        rites. At last, however, the character of the empire became so mixed that
        repugnance ceased. Romans of the highest rank frequented the oriental rites,
        not only in the East as pilgrims, but even in Rome itself, in the temples set
        up in the vicinity of the Capitol. 
   This
        fusion was facilitated by the utter absence of any exclusiveness on the side of
        the foreign religions. A devotee of Isis never dreamed that his homage might
        not be welcomed by Jupiter Capitolinus. In the 4th
        century, the offices of priest of the Roman and of the oriental religions were
        held simultaneously by representatives of the oldest families in Rome. A man
        might be a member of the college of pontiffs or that of the augurs, without
        being thereby prevented from undergoing the Mithraic rite of the Taurobolia, or even from taking the lead
        in such ceremonies. 
   But
        this did not hold good with the Jewish and the Christian religion. Both of them
        required a separation which was absolute, and founded on something quite
        distinct from any feeling of patriotism. It was an exclusiveness of principle.
        The God of Israel and of the Christians was not a national God, one god amongst
        other gods. He was the One and only God, the God of the whole world, the
        Creator of the universe, the Lawgiver and Judge of the whole human race. Other
        gods were only false gods, defied men, demons, idols. They were of no account.
        Every other form of worship was a sacrilege. The religions of particular
        cities, or nations, or of the empire, were but false religions, diabolical
        errors against which it was the right and the duty of every man to protest. 
   These
        gods, these different rites, included by Jew and Christian under one common
        condemnation, found a bond of union in this very condemnation, and in the
        collective reaction excited by it. Paganism now stood face to face with
        monotheism; and the antagonism which it encountered gave it a certain
        self-conscious existence. 
   And
        not only was paganism now aware of the common foe; it was also aware of its
        ally the State, the common guardian. Although there were in the Pantheon
        degrees of standing, though the Syrian goddess, for instance, was not on an
        equality with Jupiter or Apollo, yet there was a certain fellowship between the
        various cults. If all the gods were not the gods of the home country, yet none
        of them were radically opposed to the central group, that of the Roman gods
        strengthened, under the empire, by the divinities Roma and Augustus. These two
        universally reverenced gods were represented, and as it were incarnated on
        earth in all State officials, and lent additional prestige to the other gods,
        and so accentuated the official side of religion. Anyone not acknowledging them
        was clearly outside the national religion, as far as the empire had one : such
        men were without a god, atheists. 
   
         ROME AND JUDAISM
             
         As
        long as the Jews had a national existence, their colonies would be considered
        as connected with the Palestinian centre, and their
        national worship as a foreign rite, legal, and even binding on all of Jewish
        birth, wherever they might be domiciled. The successors of Alexander befriended
        these Jewish colonies. They not only tolerated, but protected and encouraged
        them. At the time of the Roman conquest, the Jews could show the proconsuls
        charters, in which their existence was recognized, and various privileges
        specially accorded them, as to Sabbath observance, oaths, and military service.
        The Romans recognized all this. And even in places where such charters were
        non-existent, particularly in Rome, they adhered to the generally accepted
        procedure as to alien rites, and left the Jews unmolested. Yet, if it happened,
        and it frequently did happen, that Jews were Roman citizens, then complications
        arose. In the 1st century of our era, many undoubted Jews attained positions of
        high dignity in the empire; but under Tiberius, a far greater number were
        pressed into the unhealthy army of Sardinia, or turned out of Italy. They, or
        their parents, had once been slaves, whose emancipation had made them Roman
        citizens. Another case in point was that of the proselytes to Judaism. As long
        as it was only a question of accepting monotheism, and the Jewish moral code,
        and even of certain observances (such as that of the Sabbath, and of abstaining
        from swine's flesh), little difficulty arose, especially of course in the case of
        unimportant folk, and of those outside Rome. But in the case of a proselyte of
        the upper classes, or of an aristocratic family, if the conversion were so
        thorough as to involve circumcision, or any other rite implying complete
        incorporation into the Jewish community, the convert was considered to have
        thereby renounced his allegiance to the city of Rome; he was an apostate, a
        traitor. 
   Thus
        real proselytes appear to have been very rare, even before Hadrian prohibited
        circumcision, or Severus enacted his edict against conversions to Judaism. 
   In
        theory, the destruction of the sanctuary at Jerusalem ought to have entailed
        the suppression, or prohibition, of Jewish rites. But in practice it did not.
        Vespasian, as a man of the world, clearly discerned that more was involved than
        nationality, and that Judaism would survive the Jewish State and even the
        Temple. He contented himself with diverting to Jupiter Capitolinus the tribute of the didrachma, formerly paid by the
        children of Israel to Jahvé and his sanctuary. The
        Jews, thus involuntarily transformed into clients of the great Roman god, had
        no reason to complain of him, or the State under his aegis. They retained the
        liberty and even the privileges they had enjoyed. Thus, Judaism continued to be
        an authorized religion (religio licita).
        Christianity, on the other hand, became a proscribed religion (religio illicita),
        as soon as the Romans grasped the characteristics which differentiated it from
        Judaism. 
   This
        did not occur immediately. The Roman governors, being practical men, did not
        care to be drawn into sectarian squabbles. As they had not given the subject
        any close attention, they had at first some difficulty in distinguishing
        Christians from Jews, and in understanding why the Christians were so unpopular
        with the Jews. The perplexities which beset Pilate again beset Gallio, the proconsul of Achaia, when Paul fell out with
        the Jews of Corinth, and also the procurators Felix and Festus, when the Jewish
        high-priest prosecuted St Paul before them. And before this even, the
        authorities in Rome, observing that the Jews were perpetually quarrelling over
        a certain Chrestus,
        settled the matter by expelling both parties. 
   This
        ambiguity could not continue. The Jews were not likely to permit an abhorred
        sect to profit by their privileges, nor to allow themselves to be compromised
        by the imprudence of Christian evangelists. They were not long in opening the
        eyes of the authorities. From the time of Trajan it was forbidden to profess
        Christianity. Pliny, appointed governor of Bithynia, 112 A.D., had never, until
        he assumed that office, taken any part in proceedings against Christians; but
        he knew that they did occur, and involved heavy penalties. There must, however,
        have been a definite moment when the supreme authority in such matters decided
        that to be a Christian was a penal offence. At what time did this occur? It is
        very difficult to ascertain. Before Trajan, two persecutions are generally
        supposed to have taken place, that of Nero, and that of Domitian. But the
        details related of these persecutions—the martyrdom of Roman Christians falsely
        charged with the conflagration in 64 A.D., and the death of a certain number of
        men of high rank, whom Domitian put out of the way as atheists—are peculiar
        occurrences easily accounted for quite apart from any official prohibition of
        Christianity, and may have taken place before the existence of any proscriptive
        law. They do not therefore throw much light on the question. 
   St
        Peter in his epistle thus adjures the faithful:—“Let none of you suffer as a
        murderer, or as a thief, or as an evil-doer, or a busy-body in other men’s
        matters. Yet if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed”. The
        apostle here speaks of punishments which would be indicted by the authorities
        appointed to suppress theft, murder, etc., that is by the ordinary courts of
        justice. It seems improbable that these words would be written before the
        courts had been specially empowered to take action against Christians, as such.
        If the date of this epistle could but be fixed with accuracy and certainty, it
        would help considerably to clear up the point. 
   The
        supreme authorities of the empire had at this time, however, several
        opportunities of informing themselves on the position of the Christian
        communities with regard to Judaism, and to the laws then in force. It is
        unlikely that the trial of St Paul, for instance, would have failed to direct
        their attention to such points. The same may be said of the burning of Rome,
        and the consequent persecution of those “commonly called Christians.” 
   We
        are told, though indeed, on rather late authority, that Titus had grasped the
        difference between the two religions, and that when he decided to burn the
        Temple at Jerusalem, he hoped to exterminate both parties. Domitian set himself
        to augment the amount brought in by the didrachma.
        He required its payment, not only by Jews registered as such, but also by those
        who attempted to conceal their origin, and by any living according to Jewish
        custom, even though they were not Jews by birth, and did not enroll their names. This decision was very rigidly enforced
        and necessarily entailed a close investigation into the inter-relationship of
        the Jewish and Christian creeds. And beside these instances which we know, we
        may be sure others would arise which would claim the attention of the
        law-givers, and induce them to take a decided line. 
   When
        once the religion was proscribed, a private individual might institute
        proceedings against a Christian by denouncing him before the proper tribunal;
        or else by pointing him out to the authorities, and setting to work the
        magistrates, in Rome the prefect, in the provinces the governor and his
        subordinates. The crime being a capital offence, it was almost alway1 before
        the governors that the case finally came; they, at any rate, invariably figure
        in the stories of the martyrs. 
   Many,
        beside Tertullian, have tried to determine what was the exact crime committed
        by professing Christianity. It is, I think, a mere question of terms. The
        judicial terminology of the Romans had no equivalent for apostasy from the
        national religion. The expression crimen laesae Romanae religionis, which occurs once in Tertullian,
        gives us the right idea, but then it was not a term in general use. The crimen laesae maiestatis (high
        treason) was, on the contrary, well defined by the law. At the time under consideration,
        and in the conditions existing when the difficulty arose, there was little
        difference between the two. An accuser, who wished to take proceedings in
        proper form, might perhaps have brought an action against a Christian on a
        charge of high treason. Whether such a case ever actually occurred I know not. 
   
         PROSECUTION OF CHRISTIANS
             
         As
        a matter of fact, Christians were denounced, hunted out, judged, and condemned,
        simply as Christians. Public opinion might charge them with horrors of all
        sorts, but they were never condemned for magic, or infanticide, or incest, or
        sacrilege, or high treason. Tertullian, who like all the apologists writes at
        length on these calumnies and their absurdity, expressly declares that such
        crimes never came in as a cause for the sentences passed on Christians: “Your
        sentences are aimed at nothing but the avowal of Christianity; no crime is even
        mentioned; the only crime is the name of Christian.” He quotes the formula of
        these sentences : “Finally, what is it that you read from your tablets? Such a
        one, a Christian. Why do you not add : and a murderer?” 
   Pliny
        did not know, he said, whether the Christian was prosecuted as such, or for the
        crimes which the name implied. Trajan's reply makes no direct reference to the
        perplexity; but it indicates clearly that it was the name alone which was
        proscribed, and this also is the upshot of all the documents, apologies,
        stories of martyrdoms, etc. Moreover, two features in the imperial reply go to
        show that the crime of Christianity was not like other crimes. The magistrate,
        says the emperor, must not seek out Christians, but must restrict himself to
        punishing them (evidently with the death penalty), if they are denounced and
        condemned. Also, if they abjure Christianity, and prove their sincerity by
        sacrificing to the gods, their repentance must secure pardon. If the Christians
        had been what calumny accused them of being, why should their crimes not have
        been tried and punished? It is not the duty of criminal courts to pronounce on
        the frame of mind of the culprit when under trial, but on the reality of the
        misdeeds he is accused of. The advice not to seek out Christians is just as
        singular. If they were guilty and dangerous persons, the authorities were in
        duty bound to hunt them out. 
   This
        rescript of Trajan gives valuable evidence of the false position in which the
        government found itself, in face of the spread of Christianity. According to
        its principles and traditions, as we have seen, its duty was to stop this
        progress. Nero and Domitian were bad emperors; to them personally and to the
        worst points in their character are due the cruelties which the Christians,
        with many others, suffered under their regime. And Christian polemical writers
        are right in pointing out these monsters as heading the procession of
        persecutors. But it is nevertheless true that the suppression of Christian
        propaganda, which appears to have been determined on in the imperial councils
        of that time, was inspired both by traditional principles and by necessities of
        State. 
   It
        is still, however, an open question whether the State did not overshoot the
        mark in awarding the death penalty for the mere avowal of Christianity. Such
        laws are easy to make; but how are they to be applied? Pliny is dismayed at the
        vast number of persons implicated; there were Christians of all ages and of all
        ranks in the towns, in the villages, and in the country. The temples were
        deserted, the feasts fallen into disuse, and the sacrifices so neglected, that
        the vendors of sacrificial beasts had lost their customers. And the innocence
        of the Christians was even more appalling than their number. The governor had
        verified this himself, by various methods, including of course torture, to
        which he had subjected two deaconesses. Their meetings, their common meals,
        were in all respects blameless; their mutual pledges were with no criminal
        intent, but on the contrary they swore never to be guilty of theft, highway
        robbery, or of adultery, nor to break a promise made on oath, and so on. 
   It
        was impossible in these circumstances for a sagacious emperor to avoid being
        perplexed. He could not execute the whole population of Italy and the
        provinces, nor could he persecute people, to whose virtues even the government
        officials bore witness. And so the law was but slackly administered, inquiries
        were not pushed home, and apostates were pardoned. 
   After
        Trajan, other emperors showed themselves fully as much inclined to restrain the
        execution of the law. Hadrian wrote to this effect, to several provincial
        governors, and notably a letter, which has come down to us, to the proconsul of
        Asia, C. Minucius Fundanus. The apologist, Melito,
        cited this letter to Marcus Aurelius, as well as others to the towns of
        Larissa, Thessalonica, and Athens, and one to the assembly of Achaia, from Antoninus. 
   All
        these documents, as far as we know them, betray a predisposition, not indeed to
        good-will but to moderation. We must not suppose, however, that in consequence
        the Christians enjoyed an enviable tranquillity.
        Their writings show that under these good emperors they were accustomed to the
        prospect of martyrdom; several definite and well-attested facts accord with
        this view. The martyrs whose names and histories have come down to us by some
        lucky chance, do not appear to be in any way exceptional men. The fact is, it
        was not solely a matter between the government and the Christians. Local
        feeling had to be reckoned with, and fanatical riots, and pressure might be
        brought to bear on municipal magistrates, and even on provincial governors. The
        good sense of the emperor restrained these influences now and again. But he did
        not always interfere, and even when he did, it was not without regard to what
        was still the law, that law which always had been and still was supported by
        State policy. In fact, if the 2nd century emperors held back from
        extermination, yet they were far from ensuring any security to the Christians.
        That they refrained from the severe measures of Decius and Diocletian was
        doubtless due to their contemptuously indifferent attitude towards these
        sectarian and doctrinal squabbles, or because they relied implicitly on the
        resisting power of other sects, or of the philosophical spirit. In the 3rd
        century, the inadequacy of these bulwarks was proved, and the danger from
        Christianity was more apparent. Then the government acted with more vigour, though only spasmodically and intermittently. It
        was too late: the Church escaped, and it was the Empire that fell. 
   
         CHAPTER IX 
         The end of Judaic-Christianity 
           
           
         Whilst
        St Paul's case was being tried in Rome before the imperial tribunal, the
        Judaic-Christian Church at Jerusalem was passing through a serious crisis.
        Festus the procurator had just died, and it was some time before his successor
        Albinus could reach Palestine. This led to an interval of confusion and
        anarchy. The high-priest at the time was Hanan II,
        the son of the Hanan (Annas)
        of the Passion, and a relative of the Ananias mentioned in the story of St
        Paul. Like them, he detested the “Nazarenes.” Eagerly seizing his opportunity,
        he attacked their local head, James, the “brother of the Lord,” a man who seems
        to have been universally revered in Jerusalem, by Jews as well as Christians.
        His austerities and his protracted prayers in the Temple were long renowned.
        The people named him the Just, the bulwark of the people. But this did not save
        him from the malice of the high-priests. Hanan assembled the Sanhedrim and summoned James, with several others, to appear
        before it, and obtained a sentence of death against them. James and his
        companions were stoned near the Temple. 
   Here
        he was buried, and a hundred years later his monument was still shown. 
   Hanan paid dearly for
        his audacity. The procurator on his arrival from Alexandria was appealed to,
        and also King Agrippa II, who at once deposed the high-priest. 
   This
        was 62 A.D.  Four years later, under the
        procurator Gessius Florus, who succeeded Albinus, the long smouldering revolution broke out at Jerusalem. In the
        autumn of 66 the Roman garrison was massacred, and insurrection spread rapidly
        throughout Judea and the neighboring countries. Cestius Gallus, the legate of Syria, made an ineffectual
        attempt to retake the holy city. In the following year, Vespasian being sent by
        Nero to repress the revolt, restored Galilee to subjection. But the death of
        the emperor (68 A.D.) and the troubles which ensued, arrested the process.
        Jerusalem was a prey to factions, and went through a reign of terror. The
        high-priest Ananias and all the leaders of the sacerdotal aristocracy were
        massacred by the rioters; fanatics and brigands contended for the Temple and
        the fortresses. On all sides anarchy, incendiary fires, and massacre prevailed.
        The Holy City had become the antechamber of hell. 
   The
        Christian leaders received a heaven-sent warning, and the community decided to
        leave the town. They took refuge at Pella, in Decapolis, in the kingdom of
        Agrippa II. Pella was a Hellenic and a pagan town; but they made the best of
        it. Long afterwards Julius Africanus (c. 230)
        reported the existence of other Judaic-Christian communities at Kokhaba beyond the Jordan, and
        also at Nazareth in Galilee. In the 4th century, there was another at Berea
        (Aleppo) in north Syria. The exact time that they migrated, and whether from
        Jerusalem or from Pella, is unknown. 
   
         REVOLT OF BAR-KOCHEBA
               
         This
        dispersion continued after the war. A return to Jerusalem was out of the
        question ; it had been so completely razed to the ground, that it was difficult
        to believe it had ever been inhabited, and for sixty years the camp of the
        tenth legion (leg. X Fretensis)
        was the only sign of life. The Emperor Hadrian decided to found a new city on
        the spot, a pagan city of course, with a temple within the precincts of the
        ancient sanctuary. This profanation, similar to that of Antiochus Epiphanes, was too much for the scattered remnant of
        Israel. Simon-bar-Kocheba headed an insurrection, supported by the celebrated Rabbi Akiba,
        and gave himself out to be the long-expected Messiah of the Jews. The Roman
        legion was driven from its camp; and for some time the Jews held the ruins of
        their holy city. But Jerusalem was no longer of any military importance; and
        the headquarters of the insurgents was at Bether.
        Near there they were finally crushed, but only after three years of a
        sanguinary struggle (132 to 135) which ruined and depopulated Palestine. 
   The
        Judaic-Christians could not accept Bar-Kocheba as the Messiah of Israel; they refused to join the revolt. This, as may be
        imagined, brought misfortune upon them, for the insurgents hunted them down
        remorselessly, till the Roman victory gave them peace, and they resumed their
        obscure existence. Hadrian’s plans were carried out. On the ruins of Jerusalem
        arose the colony of Aelia Capitolina,
        with its theatres and pagan sanctuaries. Jupiter's Capitol and the emperor’s
        statue profaned the Temple Hill. The Christian holy places did not escape; a
        temple of Venus was set up on Calvary. Any Jew found in the new city was doomed
        to death. The Judaic-Christians could but keep away; and they did so. The
        supreme authority in the Judaic-Christian world appears to have long remained
        in the hands of the kinsfolk of the Saviour: James
        was the “brother of the Lord”; Simeon, who succeeded him as head of the Church
        of Jerusalem, and who lived till the time of Trajan, was also a kinsman of
        Christ’s. Two sons of another “brother of the Lord” called Judas, were
        denounced to the authorities in Domitian’s time; they were sent to Rome, and
        examined by the emperor himself. He convinced himself that such feeble folk
        could not be dangerous, and that the Kingdom of Heaven was no menace to the
        Roman Empire. The two sons of David were sent back home to “preside over the
        churches.” Bishop Simeon did not escape so well. Hegesippus reports that he suffered martyrdom under Trajan, Atticus being then (c. 107)
        governor of Palestine. In the days of Julius Africanus,
        well into the 3rd century, there still survived some of these Desposyni (kinsmen of the Lord), highly esteemed amongst
        the Judaic-Christians. A list of the ancient bishops of Jerusalem has been
        preserved by Eusebius, who says that the line of succession continued until the
        Jewish revolt under Hadrian (132 A.D.). The first two are James and Simeon, who
        bring us down to 107 A.D.; the remaining thirteen bishops have therefore to be
        got in to twenty-five years. This is a large number, but if we accept the list,
        and the time-limits given by Eusebius, the natural explanation is that the list
        includes the bishops, not only of Pella but of other colonies from the
        primitive Church of Jerusalem. 
   A
        more interesting relic of these early Christian days would be the Gospel they
        used, if only we had it in a more complete form. It was of course in Hebrew, or
        rather was an Aramaic Gospel, translated at a comparatively early date into
        Greek, when it received the title of Gospel according to the Hebrews. St Jerome
        often alludes to it; the Semitic text, which he knew, he sometimes identifies
        with the original Hebrew of St Matthew. This suggests that the canonical Gospel
        of St Matthew bore a marked resemblance to the Gospel of “the Hebrews.” Judging
        by the fragments preserved, however, the differences between them were rather
        important. This Gospel of the Hebrews appears to have been quite as ancient as
        our Synoptics, and quite independent of them : it
        was probably compiled in the community of Pella. 
   From
        Pella came also Aristo, the author of the dialogue of Papiscus and Jason, an apologetic work now lost. It
        represents a disputation between a Jew and a Judaic-Christian, culminating in
        the conversion of the Jew. Eusebius derived some information on Bar-Kocheba’s revolt from this
        dialogue which appeared soon after that event. 
   The
        Church of Pella, even with its colonies in Palestine and Syria, cannot be taken
        as representing the whole of Judaic-Christianity. To some extent everywhere,
        but more especially in great centres like
        Alexandria, there were Jewish converts to Christianity among the Jews of the
        Dispersion, who did not consider themselves absolved from the observance of the
        Law. They became Christians under shelter of the great doctrinal toleration
        which prevailed in Judaism, but they did not cease to be Jews. Their relations
        with the other Christians, whose existence they certainly acknowledged, must
        have been much the same as those which, to the great vexation of Paul, had been
        authorized by Peter and Barnabas in Antioch. Justin knew Christians of this
        type; he thinks they will be saved, if they do not force Christians of a
        different origin to adopt their mode of life. He acknowledges, however, that
        his is not the universal opinion, and that some would not admit the
        Judaic-Christians to communion. 
   Justin
        speaks only of individuals : he says nothing of Judaic-Christian communities,
        nor of their relations with the representatives of the main body of the Church. Hegesippus, at the close of the 2nd century, goes
        rather more into detail. He describes the “Church,” that is “the Church of
        Jerusalem,” as being, at first, faithful to tradition, but afterwards riddled
        with heresies. The first of these originated with a certain Thebuthis, who was disappointed at not being elected
        bishop. According to Hegesippus, these heresies were
        connected with the different Jewish sects, Essenes, Galileans, Hemero-baptists, Masbotheans,
        Samaritans, Sadducees, and Pharisees. This list includes rather heterogeneous
        elements, but broadly speaking the idea is correct, and is confirmed by facts.
        Like the Judaism from which it sprang, the Judaic-Christian Church attached an
        exaggerated importance to the ordinances of the Law, and was not sufficiently
        on its guard against doctrinal speculations. 
   Hegesippus was himself a Judaic-Christian. That was the impression of Eusebius, who had
        read all he wrote; and it is confirmed by his use of the Gospel of the Hebrews,
        by his language, which is full of Hebrew words, and by his familiarity with the
        history of the Church of Jerusalem. 
   He
        evidently regarded that Church as orthodox and worthy of all respect. But
        nevertheless he did not feel out of his element in the Corinthian or Roman
        communities. He investigated their episcopal succession, and the way they
        preserved primitive traditions. According to him, all their customs were in
        accordance with what the Law, the Prophets, and the Lord had taught. 
   But
        the optimist views of Justin and Hegesippus did not
        affect orthodox tradition. Later, with St Irenaeus and Origen an unfavourable opinion of the Judaic-Christians prevailed.
        These authors regard Judaic-Christianity as but a sect, the sect of the Ebionites or Ebioneans.
        This term, which later was derived from the name of an imaginary founder, Ebion, really signified poor.
        From the beginning, the Judaic- Christians of Syria had been called Nazarenes.
        This name appears in the Acts; it was evidently derived from that of the Lord, “Jesus
        of Nazareth.” Possibly they called themselves so, or others called them Ebionim, without intending any
        disparagement. Does not the Gospel say: “Blessed are the poor!”. Later, the controversalists of the main
        body of the Church, proud of their transcendent Christology, connected the
        notion of poverty of doctrine with the name and used it as a nickname. Origen
        recognized, though it seems to have escaped St Irenaeus' notice, that in their
        case it was not a question of any real heresy, such as those of Cerinthus or Carpocrates, but
        merely of a late survival of an undeveloped primitive Judaic-Christianity. In
        St Irenaeus’ description the Ebionites are
        characterized by their fidelity to the Mosaic ordinances, circumcision, and the
        rest; they hold Jerusalem in great veneration, and turn towards it to pray; and
        their belief that the world was created by God Himself distinguishes them from
        all the gnostic sects. Above all they cling to the Law; the Prophets they treat
        with much subtle explanation. So much for their Judaism. As to their
        Christianity, it was observed that they had but one Gospel, St Matthew, that
        they rejected the epistles of St Paul, whom they regarded as an apostate, and
        that they considered the Saviour as the son of
        Joseph. On this point, however, opinions differed. Origen says the miraculous
        birth was accepted by some, but rejected by others. 
   Thus,
        being shut up in the Law, the Judaic-Christians were led insensibly to separate
        themselves from the main body of the Church. And in spite of the sympathetic
        attitude of some individuals, this separation was already apparent by the close
        of the 2nd century. 
   It
        had even led to controversy. Towards the end of the 2nd century, a certain Symmachus, an Ebionite, known
        by his Greek version of the Old Testament, wrote to defend the position taken
        up by his co-religionists against other Christians. There were Ebionites scattered almost everywhere in the great Jewish
        colonies. In Trajan’s time the Greek version of their Gospel was already known
        in Egypt; and the name given to it, “Gospel according to the Hebrews,” was
        doubtless intended to distinguish it from another Gospel accepted there, “the
        Gospel according to the Egyptians,” used in the Christian community of
        Alexandria. 
   Still
        further off, amongst the peoples of southern Arabia—where Judaism had already
        made, and continued to make, many converts—the preaching of the Gospel had
        taken the Judaic-Christian form. Pantaenus, who
        visited them about the time of Marcus Aurelius, found the Hebrew Gospel in use,
        and was told that the Apostle Bartholomew, the first missionary to these
        distant lands, had brought it to them. 
   Nevertheless,
        the Judaic Church remained small, even when those of the dispersion were
        included. Doubtless it suffered, under Trajan and Hadrian, from the calamities
        which befell the Jewish nation. In the time of Origen, it was of comparatively
        small account. The great commentator rejects the notion that by the 144,000
        elect of Israel, in the Apocalypse, the Judaic-Christians could be meant; the
        number appears to him far too high. Origen wrote after two centuries of
        Christianity, so his estimate would cover five or six generations. He cannot
        have thought the Judaic-Christians very numerous. 
   In
        the 4th century there were still Nazarenes. They are referred to by Eusebius,
        St Epiphanius, above all by St Jerome, chiefly in
        connection with their Gospel. The allusions to their doctrine are not in very favourable
        terms. Now and then traces of the influence of the main Church can be discerned
        amongst them, and even of some attempt at a drawing together. A fusion no doubt
        did take place, but only on the part of individuals. None of the
        Judaic-Christian communities were received as such into the oriental
        patriarchates. Thus Judaic-Christianity died out in misery and in obscurity. As
        the Church developed in the Greco-Roman world she left her cradle behind.
        Emancipation from Judaic-Christianity was as necessary as from pure Judaism. St
        Paul, on his last journey to Jerusalem, suffered both from the brutality of the
        Jews and the malevolence of the Judaic-Christians; he found a refuge and
        comparative safety amongst the Romans. This is symbolic of the whole situation.
   
         ELKESAITES
             
         But
        St Paul had not only had to deal with legalist Jews. He also encountered a
        subtilized form of Judaism which had added peculiar rites and ascetic practices
        to the Mosaic ordinances, whilst it supplemented the simple faith of Israel
        with high-flown religious and philosophic speculations. The Essenes in
        Palestine, and Philo, and others of his type, among the Dispersion, represent
        different aspects of this tendency to develop received tradition. The same
        tendency affected the primitive Christian communities. The teachers whom St
        Paul opposed in his Asiatic letters were connected with this sublimated form of
        Judaism—as were also those with whom St Ignatius had dealings later on. It
        finds its special expression in the doctrines of Cerinthus.
        In the 2nd century, it appears that this movement had abated a little; at any
        rate it is not discernible amidst the din of the Gnostic sects. A hundred years
        after Cerinthus and St Ignatius, there was a revival
        of this type of Judaic-Christian preaching. In the time of Pope Callistus (217-222 A.D.) a certain Alcibiades, coming from Apamea, in Syria, represented the movement in Rome.
        He brought with him a mysterious book, said to have been given in the mythical
        land of Seres to a good man named Elkesai, about the third year of
        Trajan’s reign (100 A.D.). Elkesai had received it from an angel thirty leagues high, called the Son of God;
        beside whom was a female being of the same dimensions, called the Holy Spirit.
        This revelation was nothing but a preaching of repentance, or rather of
        purification by baptism, incessantly renewed. The initiate immersed himself in
        the water, invoking the seven witnesses, that is, Heaven, Water, the Holy
        Spirits, and the Angels of Prayer, Oil, Salt, and Earth. This ceremony not only
        purified from sin, but cured madness and other diseases. The prescribed
        formulas were composed of Syriac words, said
        backwards. 
   This
        sect does not appear to have met with much success outside the country of its
        origin, where it had more than one form no doubt, for St Epiphanius knew several varieties of it, described as Ossenes, Ebionites, and Sampsaeans. In his day it was
        confined to the countries lying east of the Dead Sea and the Jordan. Two women
        still remained of the family of Elkesai, Marthus and Marthana, whom their co-religionists held in great
        veneration. 
   These
        sectarians observed the Jewish rites, but had views of their own on the
        Scripture canon. They repudiated the Prophets and eliminated from the Law all
        reference to sacrifice. They scouted the Apostle Paul and rejected his letters.
        Their New Testament opened with a Gospel, of which St Epiphanius has preserved fragments. The text claimed to have been compiled by St Matthew,
        in the name of the twelve Apostles. There were also stories about the apostles,
        contained in special books, such as the Kerygma of Peter, from which the Clementines were derived, and the “Ascensions of James”
        quoted by St Epiphanius. The teaching of all these
        writings is strongly ascetic, especially as to vegetarian food and an
        abhorrence of wine. Even in the Eucharist, water replaced wine. Their
        Christology resembled that of the Ebionites and Cerinthus: Jesus, the Son of Joseph and Mary, became
        Divine at his baptism, by union with the aeon Christ. This aeon was by some
        identified with the Holy Spirit, by others with Adam, or with one of the higher
        angels, created before all other creatures, who had previously been incarnate
        in Adam, and in other Old Testament personages. On the connection of this
        Christ with the angel called the Son of God they do not enlighten us. 
   These
        doctrines and practices were not really anything new. They were but a revival
        of the old “Jewish fables” of St Paul's day, tricked out as a fresh revelation,
        and bolstered up by new writings specially composed for the purpose. 
   
         CHAPTER X 
         The Christian books 
           
         Between
        the time when the record of the Acts ends and the middle of the 2nd century,
        there are too few documents on the history of Christianity, and those few too
        difficult of classification, or even of interpretation, to provide a basis for
        a consecutive narrative. The leading features have already been indicated,
        viz., the growing success of Christian evangelization; the way it absorbed the
        results of Jewish proselytism; the accentuation of
        the universalist side of the new teaching; the mutual divergence of the Jewish
        and Christian communities; the dawn of rash speculations foreshadowing the
        heresies of the future; the crystallization of Church tradition under the
        shelter of the local hierarchy which everywhere was strengthened and defined in
        its prerogatives; and the external dangers to which the absence of all legal
        status exposed the primitive Church. 
   These,
        the principal features of the situation, grew quite naturally out of the
        conditions in which Christianity spread and took root. We must now discuss
        another matter of universal import and of the very first consequence, namely,
        the appearance of a Christian literature. 
   We
        have already dealt with the letters of St Paul, which, as a whole, are the most
        ancient written Christian evidences. St Paul's epistles all fall within the
        years 53 and 62 A.D. except the Pastoral letters, which, at least in their
        present state, are of a rather later date. Although addressed to widely
        dispersed groups of Christians, yet they were collected very early, and both
        Clement and Polycarp appear to have had access to them in their collected form. 
   The
        history of the Gospels is far more complex : and also far more obscure. I will endeavour to sum up what little is known about it. 
   The
        first disciples, as we have seen, did not all continue to live at Jerusalem.
        Long before the siege, many had dispersed, either on account of local
        persecutions, or in response to the claims of the work of evangelization. The
        apostles were all gone; together with many other important people like Silas,
        who followed St Paul, on his second mission. The war in Judaea would hasten
        this exodus, and transport to distant lands many of the witnesses of early
        events. Those who left Palestine would naturally be those whose ideas were the
        broadest, people who were not afraid to live far from home, amidst the heathen.
        Some went to Asia. Amongst them was Philip the Evangelist, one of the Seven of
        Jerusalem. On his last journey (58 A.D.) St Paul had found him settled at
        Caesarea, and had enjoyed his hospitality. Philip had then four daughters,
        virgin-prophetesses. This family afterwards migrated into Phrygia, to the city
        of Hierapolis, famous, as its name indicates, for its pagan sanctuaries. Papias, the Bishop of Hierapolis in the first half of the
        2nd century, knew these prophetesses, and collected their sayings. Towards the
        end of the 2nd century Polycrates, Bishop of Ephesus, records that two of them
        had died as virgins at an advanced age, and were buried with their father at
        Hierapolis ; another was laid to rest at Ephesus. 
   From
        his words it is evident that Philip of Hierapolis, in the province of Asia, had
        already become confused with the apostle of that name, one of the Twelve. This
        confusion took root and spread. Tradition has preserved not only the memory of
        Philip and his daughters, but also the names of a certain Aristion,
        to whom a recently discovered manuscript attributes the final (deutero-canonical) verses of the
        Gospel of St Mark, and of John surnamed by way of distinction “the Elder”. Both
        of these had been disciples of the Lord. They lived to so great an age, that Papias was able during their lifetime to record several of
        their sayings. 
   Above
        all these indistinct images towers the figure of John the Apostle, the son of
        Zebedee, to whom tradition attributes the Apocalypse, the fourth Gospel, and
        three of the Catholic Epistles. The question whether he really was the author
        of all of them, is much debated at present; it has even been questioned whether
        he ever lived in Asia. We must now examine the chief data connected with these
        problems, though without attempting to discuss them in detail. 
   Without
        doubt the Apocalypse is the work of a prophet John, who there lays claim to considerable authority in the
        churches of Asia and Phrygia. His book was written in the little isle of
        Patmos, where the author was in banishment for the Faith. He refers to himself
        in various ways, but never assumes the title of Apostle. On the contrary, the
        manner in which he speaks of the "twelve Apostles of the Lamb", would
        give the impression that he was not one of that revered company. Nevertheless,
        St Justin, the earliest writer to discuss the Apocalypse, attributes it,
        without hesitation, to John the Apostle. Later writers do so also, save a few
        who appear to be animated by doctrinal prejudice, rather than by the
        consciousness of a counter tradition. St Justin made a long stay at Ephesus, c.
        135 A.D., forty years or so after the date usually assigned to the Apocalypse. 
   If
        the tradition, of which St Justin is the most ancient exponent, is accepted,
        there can be no doubt that St John was in Asia; but it would still remain to be
        proved whether he wrote the Gospel, and this few critics in the present stage
        of the discussion seem disposed to admit. 
   But
        it is not the silence of the Apocalypse alone which is set against the
        tradition. There is also the silence of Papias, who
        speaks of St John as of any other apostle, without seeming to be aware that he
        had any special connection with the province of Asia. And finally, there is the
        still more significant silence of St Ignatius. St Ignatius not only does not
        say one word about St John in his letters to the churches of Asia, but when he
        wishes to accentuate the apostolic traditions of the Ephesian Church, he
        alludes expressly and exclusively to St Paul. Polycarp, in his letter to the
        Philippians, is equally silent. 
   In
        Rome the apostolic tradition is based on very different evidence. We have the
        first Epistle of Peter, and the letter of Clement, both 1st century documents.
        Ignatius, to whom it does not occur to remind the Christians of Ephesus of the
        Apostle John, recalls their special connection with Peter and Paul most vividly
        to the memory of those in Rome. 
   Yet,
        setting aside the Apocalypse, I do not see any reason to make too much of the
        silence of Ignatius and Polycarp. It may be surprising that their letters say
        nothing of the Apostle John. But do they say more of the Apocalypse and its
        author? Now, the author of the Apocalypse, whether we regard him as the son of
        Zebedee or not, was certainly a religious authority of the highest importance
        in the churches of Asia. One would have expected that, in the exhortations
        addressed to the churches of Ephesus, Smyrna, and other towns in Asia, so soon
        after St John's death, St Ignatius would make some allusion to his personality,
        his visions, and his letters. Nevertheless he says nothing about them. 
   And
        this is not all. In the middle of the 4th century, when the fact that John the
        Apostle had lived in Asia was universally acknowledged,—the biographer of St
        Polycarp recounts the early history of the churches in Asia, from St Paul to St
        Polycarp, and describes at length the consecration of that famous Bishop of
        Smyrna, and yet he does not say one word about the Apostle John. And this, in a
        book, the hero of which had been long represented by St Irenaeus and by
        Eusebius, as a disciple of the son of Zebedee. Is not this silence also rather
        surprising? Yet would it lead one to conclude that in the 4th century, the Smyrnaeans had not yet heard that St John had been in
        Asia? 
   The
        silence of Ignatius, or of Polycarp, does not therefore prove much. Nor is the
        silence of Papias more conclusive, for we have only
        a few phrases of his, and no one can say that his ideas on the authorship of
        the Apocalypse differed from those of his contemporary, Justin. 
   There
        still remains the silence of the Apocalypse to account for. But is it really
        justifiable, in dealing with a book of so unusual a character as the
        Apocalypse, to attach much weight to the fact that its author assumed, or did
        not assume, certain special characteristics? He does not here set out to speak
        as an apostle, nor as a witness to the story, or good news, of the Gospel, but
        as the mouthpiece of the glorified Saviour, who
        still lives in heaven, and thence guides His faithful flock, and reminds them
        of His speedy return. Why should he, we may ask, assume a character having no
        connection with the ministerial task which he discharged in declaring his
        visions? 
   It
        appears, then, that amongst all the many possible explanations of the silence
        of these different witnesses, there are some which do not run counter to an
        early and well-attested tradition. That being once established, the wise course
        is to continue to accept that tradition as authentic, though without disguising
        that it is not amongst the traditions which have most evidence to back them. 
   Those
        who abandon the tradition are driven to regard "John the Elder" of Papias as the author of the Apocalypse. It is not
        unnatural to think he is the author of the two little Epistles of St John, for
        he simply alludes to himself as an “elder,” and indeed as “the elder” par
          excellence, a description which tallies exactly with that of Papias. 
   As
        to the Gospel and the first Epistle of St John, which are very closely allied,
        there is no internal evidence of any connection with the province of Asia. If
        St John had never set foot in Asia, he might still have written them. I do not,
        however, wish to go into the questions this point has raised. It is enough to
        repeat, that references to the Gospel can be traced as far back as the writings
        of Justin, Papias, Polycarp, and Ignatius, and that Papias and Polycarp also knew St John's first epistle. We
        may take it, therefore, that Apocalypse, Gospel, and epistles were all known in
        Asia, from the first years of the 2nd century. These early witnesses, however,
        are all silent as to their authorship. The voice of tradition first speaks on
        this subject through Tatian and St Irenaeus. But
        from that time it is quite clear and very decided. 
   
         DIFERENT STANDARDS
               
         This
        does not mean that there was no counter-tradition. The authenticity of the
        Gospel of St John, like that of the Apocalypse, had to be defended against
        criticisms, and by arguments, which both remain substantially unaltered in the
        present day. Discussion will doubtless continue over its lack of resemblance to
        the other Gospels, and as to the likelihood that an intimate companion of
        Christ's would thus represent his master, ^ would attribute to Him this or that
        discourse, and over the improbability of the philosophical development implied
        in the assumption that a Palestinian fisherman could be cognizant of Philo's
        doctrine of the Logos. 
   But
        the Logos doctrine is found also in the Apocalypse, that is in a book as far as
        possible from having an Alexandrian turn. The development about which people
        hesitate with regard to the Apostle John, they cannot avoid accepting, if they
        attribute the Apocalypse to John the Elder, whose circumstances were identical.
        As to what is possible, or impossible, in the history of the Gospels it is well
        to remember that the synoptics also contain
        discrepancies not always easy to explain. It is, besides, not easy to lay down,
        a priori, rules for such unique conditions. Certainly, in those early days, the
        same importance was not attached, as at present, to exactitude as to facts and
        to precision of detail. We have no right to expect the biblical writers to
        conform to our modern standards as well as to their own. 
   But
        setting aside this controversy—and even granting some points as yet
        unproved—one important fact remains, viz., that John, a “disciple of the Lord”
        from Palestine, did live long in Asia, and that the churches there regarded his
        authority as paramount. His guidance, and even his rebukes were welcomed, and
        he was revered on account of his great age, his virtues, and his association
        with the first days. He lived so long, that men began to say he would not die.
        And though he died, a vivid memory of him lived. Those who had known him prided
        themselves on the honor,
        and loved to repeat his sayings. St Irenaeus speaks of the presbyteri who, according to Papias, had lived with John, the disciple of the Lord; he
        treasured their sayings, with signal respect. One of them was Polycarp, whom
        the Bishop of Lyons had known in his childhood. The tomb of John at Ephesus was
        known and honored. Around
        such a memory, legend of course soon embroidered. Polycrates, the Bishop of
        Ephesus, at the end of the 2nd century described John as a priest, bearing on
        his brow the plate of gold, which shows that he regarded him as a Jewish
        high-priest. Clement at Alexandria preserved a beautiful tale of how the old
        apostle went out to seek a prodigal youth; whilst Tertullian already knows that
        in Rome he was plunged into a cauldron of boiling oil. His life, his miracles,
        and his death, or rather, his mysterious trance, were related in one of the
        oldest apostolical romances.
    
         THE MILLENIUM
               
         These
        early teachers of Asia, whose sayings Papias and
        Irenaeus treasured, were the last links with oral tradition. It is clear that
        oral tradition was what men lived by at the outset, when the New Testament had
        not yet taken shape, and when the Gospels in particular were either not
        written, or were not widely known. Such a position was not without its danger,
        for tradition becomes easily debased, when not fixed by writing. The deposit
        entrusted only to the living memory is liable to be affected by men’s
        imagination, and also by the force of their eloquence. According to tales
        current in the days of Papias, the Lord lived to a
        great age and Judas, instead of hanging himself, as the Gospel records, lived
        to see his body attain such proportions that he could not even pass along
        streets where carriages passed easily, and his eyes disappeared from sight
        between his eyelids, . . . and, when finally he died, the place he lived in had
        to be abandoned, owing to the offensiveness of the remains, which still
        poisoned the locality at the time the tale was told. 
   The
        Apocalypse foretold that the saints would reign a thousand years, before the
        general resurrection. This statement was very considerably enlarged. In the
        kingdom of the millennium it was said vines would be seen, each bearing ten
        thousand branches, and each branch ten thousand twigs, and each twig ten
        thousand bunches, and each bunch ten thousand grapes; and each grape yielding
        twenty-five measures of wine. As regards corn, the harvest would be on the same
        scale. And these predictions were given as statements made by Christ Himself.
        Judas, secretly an unbeliever before he became a traitor, presumed to object,
        and asked how God could produce such luxuriance. “They who shall enter into the
        Kingdom will know, replied the Lord.” 
   It
        was indeed high time to limit belief to authorized written Gospels. On the
        compilation and first appearance of these venerable books, and the welcome
        which they at first received, we have but very imperfect information. Beyond
        the broad fact, that the Gospels were given to the Church by the apostles or
        their immediate disciples, the results of the best informed, the most acute,
        and even the boldest criticism, are so vague and conjectural that they can
        command but a cautious and qualified assent. The most ancient external evidence
        we can command on this particular point is a discourse of John the Elder’s
        reported by Papias, on the Gospels of Mark and
        Matthew. “Mark, the interpreter of Peter, wrote all that he remembered of the
        words and deeds of Christ carefully but not in order. He had not himself heard
        the Lord, nor been of His company; he was a follower of Peter. Peter taught
        according to the necessities of the case, without intending to follow the order
        of the Lord's discourses. Therefore it is no reproach to Mark that he wrote as
        he remembered. He had but one care: to omit nothing he had heard, and to relate
        nothing but the truth.” And drawing apparently on the same source, Papias says: "Matthew transcribed in Hebrew the Logia
        (words of the Lord); each interpreted them as best he could." It is
        regrettable that we should know nothing of what John the Elder said on the
        third Gospel. His apologetic estimate of Mark appears to imply that someone had criticised this Gospel. John disposes of the
        criticism, but he seems to feel nevertheless that Mark does not represent
        perfection, and that a narrative from the pen of one who had not merely heard
        the apostle's account, but who could speak as an eye-witness, and whose record
        was complete and more exact as to sequence, might have advantages over the
        second Gospel. His ideal was hardly fulfilled by St Matthew, for with him the
        sequence was practically that of St Mark, and its Greek text did not appear to
        him to have reached its final form. Luke is excluded, as he was no more a
        direct disciple than was Mark. There remains but John. Have we not here an
        indirect testimony to the fourth Gospel ? 
   This
        all falls into line with a notion which emerges two or three generations later,
        viz., that the fourth Evangelist, whilst more or less endorsing the work of the
        three others, endeavoured to complete it by a statement written from a
        different point of view.
         
         SYNOPTIC GOSPELS
               
         To
        go back behind the words of John the Elder, is to enter the realm of
        speculation. 
   No
        Christian evangelization is conceivable without some presentment of the life of
        the Founder. From the first days, the apostles must have told of their Master,
        recalling His memory to those who had known Him, and making Him known to those
        who had never seen Him. From this necessarily varying oral Gospel must have
        early originated transcripts, varying and incomplete likewise, which, by a
        process of combination and of transmission through various intermediaries, at
        last took shape in the three Gospels which we call Synoptic, and also in some
        others not accepted by the Church, but of very early date. I refer especially
        to the Gospel of the Hebrews, and the Gospel of the Egyptians. The first,
        written in Aramaic, was accepted by the Judaic-Christian Church in Palestine,
        then being translated into Greek it spread amongst the daughter churches,
        especially in Egypt. Here, it came in contact with another text, adopted by the
        non-Judaizing Christians, the Gospel of the Egyptians. Such, at least, are the
        most probable theories which have been put forward as to the origin and history
        of these versions. 
   It
        is possible that our Synoptic Gospels may, at the outset, have been used
        locally like those of the Hebrews and Egyptians, but the names they bore would
        ensure them acceptance everywhere. Luke and Mark may have first been read in
        Rome or in Corinth, Matthew elsewhere; but they all soon penetrated far beyond
        the place of their origin. We have seen that they were early known in Asia,
        where the fourth Gospel appears to have been written. Once set side by side, the Gospels could not but invite
        comparison. Written with only relative attention to correctness of detail and
        precision of chronology, and coloured by preconceptions which were not always
        identical, they presented many variations which could not fail to arrest
        attention. Consequently various attempts were made to complete or correct them,
        by each other, or even to blend their narratives into a kind of harmony.
        Fragments of these combinations are imbedded in manuscripts still extant, and
        in quotations from ancient authors : some of them date back to very remote
        antiquity. Others impress us by their genuine appearance, though they lack the
        same authentication. Here, however, we dare not be too precise. It is wisest
        not to peer too far into the darkness, where we strain our eyes without any
        appreciable result. 
   Moreover,
        in the history of the growth of Christianity it is not what might be called the
        prehistoric period of the Gospels that matters most, but their influence upon
        the religious life of the Church. 
   There
        are other books claiming to be by the apostles themselves, or other important
        people, which originated in the same early days as the Gospels, or in the next
        generation, and were held in very high esteem. Several take the form of letters
        : all are books of instruction, or of religious exhortation. Perhaps some of
        them were originally homilies, delivered to a Christian assembly. They were
        read during the services of the Church, after or with the Holy Scriptures. When
        first an effort was made to compile a Christian Bible, a New Testament, several
        such writings found place in it. Thus the Epistle to the Hebrews, which at
        first was anonymous, and subsequently was attributed either to Barnabas or to
        St Paul, came to be appended to the Pauline books. Another group was that of
        the Catholic Epistles, so called because they were addressed to the entire
        Church ; the number of epistles contained in this group remained undetermined a
        long time, and varied in different places. Seven of them finally retained their
        position. They are the three Epistles of St John alluded to already, the two
        Epistles of St Peter, the Epistle of St Jude, and finally, the Epistle of St
        James. 
   
         THE DIDACHE
               
         But
        besides these writings, which the Church recognized as divinely inspired, and
        judged worthy of a place amongst the canonical Scriptures, there are others
        which bear witness to the attitude of our spiritual ancestors. In their minds
        the prestige of the apostles grew ever greater as their number diminished, and
        they finally all passed away. They alone seem to be entitled to speak to the
        Church. Even after death, they continue to instruct and edify. A very early
        little book, not later, at any rate, than Trajan, was called the Teaching of
        the Apostles, and supposed to be written by them. It contains, in concise form,
        precepts of general morality, instructions on the organization of communities,
        and the celebration of the liturgy. This is the venerable prototype of all the
        later collections of Constitutions, or apostolic Canons, with which
        ecclesiastical law in the East and in the West began. There was long in
        circulation an originally anonymous instruction, later attributed to Barnabas,
        which on its moral side is closely allied to the “Teaching.” The “Teaching” and
        this Epistle of Barnabas both seem to be drawn from, or based on, an earlier
        document, in which the rules of morality were set forth by a description of the
        Two Ways, the Way of Good and the Way of Evil. But the pseudo-Barnabas does not
        confine himself exclusively to moral teaching; he has a doctrine, or rather, a
        controversy of his own, anti-Judaism. In its service he goes much too far.
        According to him, the Old Testament was solely intended for Christians and was
        never meant for the Israelites, who, deceived by Satan, never understood it.
        This extraordinary statement is proved from Scripture by a most distorted
        allegorical interpretation. 
   Various
        other writings are attributed to St Peter, in addition to his two canonical
        epistles; the Teaching of Peter, the Apocalypse of Peter, the Gospel of Peter.
        Of these only a few fragments have been preserved. The first of these books is
        the oldest. What remains gives the impression of a Christian instruction of an
        ordinary type, unbiassed by prejudice on one side or
        the other; a few characteristic features confirm what we already know as to the
        great antiquity of the document. The Apocalypse (of Peter), making the most of
        what we are told about the descent of Christ into hell, describes, for the
        benefit of the living, the punishment reserved for the wicked in another world.
        The Gospel (of Peter) is evidently of later date than the four canonical Gospels
        though still very early (c. no to 130). It presents some very marked
        peculiarities. In the circles from which it emanated, the Gospel story was
        beginning to disintegrate under the influence of Docetism. The traditional
        outlines were followed more or less, but filled in with tales colored or debased by imagination, or even by theological
        prejudice. 
   The
        books above described were all regarded, in some churches at least, as sacred
        books; they were all read publicly in Christian assemblies. 
   So
        also was the epistle from the Church of Rome to that of Corinth, drawn up by
        Bishop Clement (c. 97 A.D.). Another document, not a letter, but a
        homily delivered no one knows where (in Rome, Corinth, or may be elsewhere),
        was appended to this epistle, and so shared the prestige which the latter
        derived from the name of Clement. He was thus credited with two epistles.
        Clement was considered, not without reason, as a disciple of the apostles, an
        apostolic man. The prestige of the apostles extended to him. Another Roman
        work, the Shepherd of Hermas, was also read publicly
        in many churches. This claimed distinctly to be inspired. Even the romance on
        St Paul (Acta Pauli), composed towards the end of
        the 2nd century, was included, here and there, among the sacred books. 
   But
        other writings as ancient, or even more ancient than those last, did not attain
        the same position. I refer specially to the seven Epistles of St Ignatius, and
        the Epistle of St Polycarp, which were of Trajan’s time and both by men held in
        high veneration. As much may be said of the lost book of Papias of Hierapolis, “Exposition of the Oracles of the Lord.” 
   These
        books, whatever was their circulation and authority, have this in common, that
        they were all written for the Church, and that the Church recognized in them
        the inspiration from which she herself proceeds. They are all esoteric books,
        spiritual books, fitted to strengthen faith, and to keep alive Christian
        devotion. It is not surprising, therefore, as they were all of the same
        character, that men were not concerned at first to lay down those exact lines
        of demarcation, which later on led to the formation of the various canons of
        the New Testament, and eventually of the canon now received, throughout
        Christendom. Very early, before the end of the 1st century, the Church possessed a certain number of books of its own, not
        inherited from the Synagogue, setting forth its special traditions, its
        principal claims and its fundamental assumptions, and disclosing the essential
        lines of its doctrinal development, and of its institutions. This fact is of
        the highest importance; and whatever view we take of controverted details, it
        is a fact beyond dispute. 
     
         CHAPTER XI 
         Gnosticism 
           
           
         Heresy,
        we have seen, is as old as the Gospels themselves. The field of the householder
        was hardly sown before tares showed themselves among the wheat. And so the
        early Christian leaders were tormented with anxiety, perpetually betrayed in
        the Epistles of St Paul, the Pastoral Epistles, the Apocalypse, the Epistles of
        St Peter, of St Jude, and of St Ignatius. The teaching they had to guard
        against, so far as these documents disclose it, may be summed up as follows :— 
   1st.
        Neither Nature nor Law, whether Mosaic or natural, emanates from God the
        Father, the Supreme and True God, but they are the work of inferior spirits. 
   2nd.
        This Supreme God manifests Himself in Jesus Christ. 
   3rd.
        The true Christian can and must free himself from the influence of the creative
        and ruling powers, if he would draw near to God the Father. 
   These
        doctrines must not be regarded as simple perversions of apostolic teaching.
        They contain indeed Christian elements. But exclude from them the position
        assigned to Jesus Christ and His work, and the rest is complete in itself, and
        is easily accounted for by the evolution of Jewish thought, stimulated by Greek
        philosophic speculation. This is clear if we recall the characteristics of
        Philo's doctrine. God, Infinite Being, is not only far above all imperfection,
        but also above all perfection, and even beyond definition. Matter stands apart
        from the Supreme Being and does not emanate from Him, and he acts upon it by
        manifold Powers; the chief of these is the Word. These Powers, and the Word
        Himself, are represented now as being immanent in God, now as distinct
        hypostases; they correspond to the ideas “of Plato”, or the “efficient causes”
        of the Stoic, or again to the angels of the Bible and the demons of the Greeks.
        They shaped the world out of already existing material elements. Some of these
        powers are imprisoned in human forms, and it is from the incompatibility of
        their divine nature with the tangible body in which they are enveloped, that
        the moral conflict between duty and desire arises. The aim of moral life is to
        defeat the influence of body on mind. Asceticism is the best means to this end,
        but knowledge and well-regulated activity avail also, with the help of God.
        Thus the soul draws nearer God; in the next life, it will attain to Him, and
        even here it may, in ecstasy, attain to momentary union with Him. 
   Thus
        God stands apart from the world, and has no connection with it except through
        intermediaries emanating from Himself; in humanity, divine elements subsist,
        imprisoned, as it were in matter, from which they struggle to get free. 
   This
        is the basis of Gnosticism. If now we add to it the personality of Jesus and
        His redemptive work, ever drawing back to God the Divine elements which have
        strayed here below, we shall have the very doctrines controverted by the
        earliest Christian writers. Another step, however, must be taken before true
        Gnosticism is reached : the antagonism postulated between God and matter must
        be transferred to the Divine entity; the creator must be represented as being
        the more or less avowed enemy of the Supreme God, and—in the scheme of
        salvation—as the enemy of redemption. 
   This
        involves a complete break with the religious traditions of Israel. Neither
        Philo with his great respect for his own religion, nor the teachers of the Law,
        whose "Jewish fables" the apostles opposed, could have entertained
        the thought of including the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob amongst the
        spirits of evil. 
     
         1. Simon and popular Gnosticism 
         But
        it is quite possible to imagine conditions where men's knowledge of the Bible
        was sufficient to provide a basis for theological speculation, but not such as
        to hamper with scruples about the treatment of the God of Jerusalem. These
        conditions are not imaginary; they actually existed in the Samaritan world. And
        when the Fathers of the Church unravel the history of the heresies, it is
        precisely Samaria that they all agree to be their common starting point, and
        Simon of Gitta, surnamed Magus, whom they indicate
        as their author. This, of course, must be accepted with reservations. Neither Ebion, nor Cerinthus,
        can be considered as spiritual descendants of Simon. 
   It
        was then in Samaria, the ancient rival of Jerusalem, that Gnosticism proper
        first appeared in Christian history. Simon was already preaching his special
        doctrines in this his native land when Philip brought the Gospel there. “He
        used sorcery, and bewitched the people of Samaria, giving out that himself was
        some great one: to whom they all gave heed, from the least to the greatest,
        saying: This man is the Power of God, the great Power.” His attitude was like a
        Samaritan reproduction of that of Jesus, in Galilee and Judea. According to the
        account in the Acts, Simon embraced Christianity as preached by Philip, and
        then by the apostles Peter and John, and was baptized. Astounded by the effects
        of inspiration upon the neophytes, he did his utmost—by offers of money—to
        induce the apostles to confer on him the power of working such miracles. His
        expectations were not fulfilled. Nevertheless, in Samaria, where he was upon
        his own ground, it was given him to prevail against the Holy Spirit. St Justin,
        who was a native of the same country, relates that in his time almost all
        Samaria honoured Simon as a god, as the Supreme God, high over all the other
        powers. And they adored not only Simon himself, but also his Thought (Ennoia) incarnate like himself,
        in a woman named Helen. St Irenaeus gives more details of Simon's doctrine : “There
        is”, he says, “a Supreme Power, sublimissima Virtus, and
        a corresponding feminine power. This Thought (Ennoia) proceeded from her father, and produced the
        angels, who, in their turn, created the world. But as the angels were unwilling
        to appear to be what they were, that is creatures of Ennoia, they detained her, and put insults on her,
        and even confined her in a human body, and for ages she passed on into other
        female bodies. She was that Helen, the wife of Menelaus; ultimately she became
        a prostitute at Tyre. The Supreme Power manifested himself to the Jews as Son,
        in the person of Jesus; in Samaria, as Father, in the person of Simon; in other
        lands as the Holy Spirit.” This intervention of God in the world is explained,
        first by the necessity of delivering Ennoia,
        and then by the maladministration of the angels. The prophets, it seemed, might
        be ignored, being inspired but by angels. Those who believed in Simon could, by
        magic arts, exercise dominion over the spirits who ruled the world. Actions are
        of no importance; it is the grace of God which saves; the Law, the work of the
        angels, merely enslaved those who heard it. Irenaeus says that Simon and Helen
        were worshipped in the sect, and images erected to them, in the forms
        respectively of Jupiter and Minerva. 
   As
        to Christology, Simon taught that the Supreme Power, to avoid recognition
        during his journey through this world, took the form of different varieties of
        angels, successively, and finally assumed a human form in Jesus. Thus he
        appeared amongst men in the semblance of a man, without in fact being one; in
        Judea, he assumed the appearance of suffering without really suffering. 
   It
        is possible that some features of Irenaeus' account, here given, belong to a
        later development of the doctrine. But, as a whole, it tallies with Justin's
        story, and with that given in the Acts. The strong biblical colouring, even
        where the authority of the Bible was not recognized; the mixture of dualistic
        ideas and Hellenic rites; the practice of magic, all are quite characteristic
        of Samaria, the holy land of religious syncretism. Gnosticism, which was
        destined to attain a fuller development elsewhere, already displays its special
        features : i.e., an abstract God; the world, the work of inferior celestial
        beings; the Divinity partially lost in humanity and released by redemption.
        Even the male and female pairs (syzygies) of the Valentinian system, are here outlined in the Supreme Power and the First Thought (Simon and
        Helen). 
   One
        notable feature is that the founder of this religious movement claimed to be an
        incarnation of the Divinity. This is evidently an imitation of the Gospel
        story. 
   
         EARLY GNOSTICS
               
         Ancient
        writers connect the sect of Simon with that of another Samaritan, Menander of Capparatea; they also mention a
        certain Dositheus, perhaps earlier than either Simon
        or Christianity, and a certain Cleobius.
        Menander taught at Antioch. The founders of all these sects seem, like Simon,
        to have claimed a Divine origin. Their successors were less pretentious. 
   One
        of the earliest mentioned is Saturninus of Antioch,
        who gained some notoriety about the time of Trajan. He taught that there was a
        God the Father unspeakable, unknowable, Creator of the angels, archangels,
        powers, etc. The visible world was the work of seven angels. They created man
        after the likeness of a brilliant vision, which had appeared to them for a
        fleeting moment from the Supreme God; but at first their work was imperfect.
        Primitive man crawled on the ground, unable to stand erect. God took compassion
        on him, because He recognized his likeness to Himself: He sent, therefore, a
        spark of life which completed his creation. After man's death, this spark of
        life is set free, and returns to its primary cause. 
   The
        God of the Jews is one of the creator angels. By them the prophets were
        inspired; some of them even by Satan their enemy. These creator angels are in
        revolt against God; it was to conquer them, and especially to destroy the power
        of the God of the Jews, that the Saviour came. The Saviour emanated from the Supreme God; He had no human
        birth or human body. Besides coming to defeat the God of the Jews and his
        companions, the Saviour aimed at the salvation of
        man, or rather of those men who, in their spark of life, have something of the
        Divine element and are susceptible of salvation. 
   The
        sect considered marriage and the procreation of children the work of Satan.
        Most of the followers of Saturninus abstained from
        animal food of all kinds, and this austerity won for them much admiration. 
   Here
        again, in spite of hostility to Judaism, we have the biblical notion of angels.
        But there are here no celestial syzygies; the founder of the sect lays no claim
        to Divinity; and lastly, the morality is ascetic. These features distinguish
        the Gnosticism of Saturninus from that of Simon. His
        strongly defined docetism—his Saviour with the mere semblance of humanity—accords
        with the prejudices already observed in St Ignatius, who himself was a native
        of Antioch, and like Saturninus, contemporary with
        Trajan. 
   These
        primitive heresies do not seem to have spread much beyond their place of
        origin. St Justin, who says that the Samaritans of the time of Antoninus Pius were nearly all disciples of Simon, adds
        that this sect had very few adherents elsewhere. Trusting to a misunderstood
        inscription, he believed that the State honoured Simon by erecting a statue to
        him in Rome. But it is hardly likely that the Magician’s influence would have
        spread so far from home. All the stories of his visit to Rome, and his
        controversy with St Peter, are now considered purely legendary. Menander had
        assured his disciples that they would never die. There were some still left in
        the time of St Justin. 
   The
        success of Simon by no means exhausts the victories of Gnosticism in Syria, for
        an extraordinary multitude of sects—due either to development or to
        imitation—sprang up on Syrian soil. St Irenaeus, comparing them to mushrooms,
        connects them all with Simonism.
        Irenaeus gives them all one common name, that of Gnostics, and describes some
        varieties. They are often denominated ophite sects,
        serpent sects, a name which seems rightly only to belong to those in which the
        serpent of the Bible played a prominent part. The names of the celestial aeons, the combinations of metaphysical fancies and of
        biblical history, vary more or less in the different systems. But sovereign
        over all stands always an Ineffable Being, with a Supreme Thought (Ennoia, Barbelo,
        etc.), from whom proceed the Ogdoads and the
        Hebdomads; and there is also always an aeon (Prounicos, Sophia, etc.) to whom occurs a
        misfortune, causing sparks from the Divine fire to fall into the lower regions.
        The appearance of the Demiurge, often called Ialdabaoth, is connected with this celestial
        catastrophe. The Demiurge knows of no celestial world above him; he believes
        himself to be the true and only God, and says so freely in the Bible, which he
        had inspired. But the Divine sparks had to be recovered from the lower world.
        Therefore the Aeon Christ, who was one of the foremost in the Pleroma—comes down to unite himself for a time with the
        man Jesus, and in him inaugurates the work of salvation. 
     
         2. Valentinus, Basilides, Carpocrates.
         
         It
        was not long after its first period of feverish activity in Syria, that
        Samaritan Gnosticism made its way to Egypt. Some of its varieties took deep
        root there, and still existed at least as late as the 4th century. Celsus knew this species of "Gnostics"; and even
        their literature. Origen during his childhood, spent some time with a teacher
        from Antioch, named Paul, who was very prominent amongst the heretics of
        Alexandria. Some fragments of their literature are being brought to light now
        in Coptic manuscripts and papyrus leaves. But their greatest success was
        acquired indirectly, by means of the far more celebrated gnosis associated with
        the names of the Alexandrians, Basilides, Valentinus, and Carpocrates. 
   According
        to ancient authors these heresies appeared under Hadrian (117-138 A.D.). The
        system of Valentinus, described in detail, and
        refuted by St Irenaeus, is the best known of the three, and was no doubt the
        most widespread. I will give an outline of it. 
   At
        the head of all things invisible and ineffable, is the Supreme Being, the
        Father, the unbegotten Abyss with his consort Sige (Silence). When it pleased the Father to produce
        other beings, he impregnates Sige, who presents him
        with a being like himself, the Intellect (Nou?)) and
        also a female, who is to the Intellect what Sige is
        to the Abyss. This consort of the Intellect is the Truth. The Abyss and Sige, the Intellect and the Truth, form the first four aeons, the first Tetrad. From Intellect and Truth were
        born the Word and the Life; and from these again Man and the Church. Thus was
        completed the Ogdoad, the company of eight higher aeons. 
   But
        the generation of the aeons does not stop here. The
        last two couples gave birth, one to five, the other to six other pairs, which
        make in all thirty aeons, fifteen males and fifteen
        females, divided into three groups, the Ogdoad, the Decad, and the Dodecad. These three groups
        constitute the Pleroma—the perfect society of
        ineffable beings. 
   So
        far, we are in the region of the abstract; the passage thence to the visible
        world involved a disturbance of the harmony of the aeons,
        a disorder, a sort of original sin. 
   The
        last in the Dodecad and
        the lowest of the whole Pleroma are the couple
        formed by Will and Wisdom. Wisdom is suddenly fired with an uncontrollable
        desire to know the mysterious Father, the Abyss. But the First Cause can only
        be known by his first-born Son, the Intellect. This desire of Wisdom is
        therefore an irregular desire, a passion. This unsatisfied passion proves the
        ruin of the being who conceived it. Wisdom, in danger of dissolution, is on the
        point of being absorbed into infinity, when she encounters the opos, the Term of thing ;
        a sort of boundary placed by the Father around the Pleroma.
        Stopped by him, she recovers herself and returns to her original sphere. But
        under the influence of her previous passion she has conceived, without the
        co-operation of her consort, and given birth to an illegitimate being,
        shapeless and imperfect in its very essence. This being, called in Valentinian language, Hachamoth,
        or the Desire of Wisdom, is expelled from the Pleroma. 
   In
        order that the disorder, which Wisdom in an uncontrolled moment had introduced
        into the Pleroma, may not reappear, the second pair
        of aeons, Intellect and Truth, produce a sixteenth
        pair of aeons, Christ and the Holy Spirit, this last
        takes the female part, in the syzygy. These two new aeons teach the others to respect the limitations of their nature, and not to attempt
        to comprehend the incomprehensible. The aeons being
        deeply impressed, the unity of the Pleroma is thus
        strengthened and its harmony perfected. Then, in a burst of gratitude to the
        Supreme Father, all the aeons combine their powers
        and perfections to produce the thirty-third aeon, Jesus, the Saviour. 
   Nevertheless, Hachamoth, the Desire of Wisdom, was still outside
        the divine Pleroma, which sent her two successive
        visitors. The first of these, the Christ, imparted to this species of
        Aristotelian matter, form and substance and a rudimentary conscience. She
        realizes her inferiority, and passes through a whole series of passions, sadness,
        fear, despair, ignorance. Her second visitor, the aeon Jesus, frees her from
        these passions. Hence resulted material inanimate substance and psychic animate
        substance , the first emanating from the passions of Hachamoth,
        the second, from her state of greater perfection, after her passions had been
        eliminated. In this higher state, she was able to conceive. From the mere sight
        of the angels, who attended the Saviour, she
        conceives and gives birth to the third substance, which is pneumatic or
        spiritual existence. 
   So
        far, we are still in the ante-chambers of the inferior world, the Kenoma which is opposed to the Pleroma.
        The concrete world has yet to be made; only, the three substances, material,
        psychic, and pneumatic (or spiritual) of which it was to be composed, are as
        yet in existence. The Creator now at last appears. But he is scarcely a
        creator, in the strict sense of the word, for the elements of his work exist
        before him. Hachamoth cannot form him out of the
        spiritual (pneumatic) substance, over which she exercises no control; she forms
        him out of animated (psychical) substance. Thus produced, the Creator or
        Demiurge forms in his turn all animate (psychic) or material (hylic) beings which exist. He is
        the father of the first, the creator of the rest, the king of both. Among the
        beings thus produced, we must mention specially the seven heavens, which are
        angels, but not pure spirits. The Demiurge works blindly; unconsciously he
        reproduces the Pleroma in the inferior sphere of his
        activity. Hachamoth, in the Kenoma,
        corresponds to the Abyss, and the Demiurge to the first-born Intellect, the
        angels or heavens to the other aeons. Knowing
        nothing of all that is above him, the Demiurge believes himself to be the sole
        author and master of the universe. It is he who said through the Prophets:
  "I am God, and there are no other Gods beside me." He made man, but
        only material man, and animal (psychic) man. Certain men are superior to the
        others : these are pneumatic or spiritual men. They are not the work of the
        Demiurge exclusively : a spark of the spiritual substance, brought forth by Hachamoth, has entered into them; and by the infusion of
        this superior element, they constitute the “elect” of the human race.
   
         VALENTINUS
               
         We
        will now examine the Gnostic system of salvation. Of the three kinds of men,
        some, the material men, are incapable of salvation. They must inevitably
        perish, with the matter of which they are formed. The spiritual (pneumatic) men
        have no need of salvation; they are elect by their very nature. Between these
        two are the psychic men, who are capable of salvation, but incapable of
        attaining it, without help from on high. The scheme of Redemption is intended
        for them. The Redeemer is formed of four elements. The first, without being
        actually material, has the semblance of matter; the semblance is sufficient, as
        matter docs not need salvation. The second element is psychic, the third
        pneumatic, the fourth divine: this is Jesus, the last aeon. These three last
        elements then proceed respectively from the Demiurge, Hachamoth,
        and from the Pleroma. The aeon Jesus did not,
        however, descend into the Redeemer until the moment of his baptism; at the
        moment of his being brought before Pilate, he returned to the Pleroma, taking with him the pneumatic or spiritual
        element, and leaving the psychic element, clothed with his material semblance,
        to suffer. 
   When
        the creative power of the Demiurge is exhausted, humanity will come to an end. Hachamoth, at last transformed into a celestial neon, will
        take her place in the Pleroma and become the spouse
        of Jesus the Saviour. The spiritual (pneumatic) men
        will pass into the Pleroma with her; they will marry
        the Saviour’s attendant angels. The Demiurge will
        take the place of Hachamoth, and thus mount one step
        higher on the ladder of being. He will be followed by those among the psychic
        men who have attained their aim; the rest, as well as material men, will perish
        in a general conflagration, which will destroy all matter. 
   In
        ordinary phraseology, these three kinds of men arc Valentinians,
        ordinary Christians, and non-Christians. the Abyss, Hachamoth,
        the Demiurge; three kinds of beings, the divine abstractions, the inferior
        abstractions (matter, soul, spirit), and the concrete world. 
   The
        first are irrevocably predestined to eternal life, and the last to
        annihilation. A Valentinian has nothing to do but to
        let himself live; his acts, whatever they may be, cannot touch the spiritual
        nature of his being: his spirit is quite independent of his flesh, and is not
        responsible for it. The moral consequences of this are evident. 
   Valentinus is an accommodating heretic. No doubt he grants his followers a great deal of
        liberty in this world, and reserves for them, in the other world, all the
        advantages of deification. But then he allows that members of the main body of
        the Church, ordinary Christians, may by practising virtue attain a fairly comfortable felicity. Even the Demiurge himself, the
        responsible author of Creation, whom the other sects condemned pretty severely,
        has a very respectable career arranged for him. 
   
         BASILIDES
               
         The Valentinian Gnosis is throughout a nuptial
        Gnosticism. From the first abstract aeons to the
        end, there are perpetual syzygies, marriages, and generations. In this, as in
        its morality, it recalls rather the Simonian system
        than that of Saturninus. Basilides,
        on the contrary, resembles Saturninus, in that he
        symbolizes the long process of evolution from the abstract to the concrete
        otherwise than by imagery connected with sex. His aeons,
        like the angels of Saturninus, are celibates. But
        his whole system is not less complicated than that of Valentinus. 
   From
        the unbegotten Father proceeds Nous; from Nous,
        Logos; from Logos, Phronesis; from Phronesis, Sophia and Dunamis;
        who, in their turn bring forth Virtues, Powers, Angels. In this manner the
        first heaven is populated. There are no less than 365 heavens; that which we
        see is the last of them. It is inhabited by the creating angels, of whom the
        chief is the God of the Jews. He claimed to bring all other peoples into
        subjection to the nation he favoured, which gave
        rise to a struggle between him and his companions. In order to restore peace,
        and deliver man from the tyranny of the demiurges, the Supreme Father sends
        down Nous, who takes upon him, in Jesus, the semblance of humanity. At the time
        of his passion, the Redeemer transferred his own form to Simon the Cyrenian, who was crucified in
        his place. There was, therefore, no reason to honour the crucified, and
        certainly none to suffer martyrdom for his name’s sake. Salvation consisted in
        a knowledge of the truth, as taught by Basilides. 
   The
        Old Testament is rejected as having been inspired by the creator angels. Magic,
        by which men acquire the mastery over these evil spirits, was much esteemed by
        the Basilidians. They made
        use of mystic words; the best known being Abraxas or Abrasa ; the letters of
        this word in Greek notation give the number 365, that of the heavenly worlds.
        Their morality is as determinist as that of the Valentinians.
        Faith is a matter of temperament, not of will. The Passions have a sort of
        independent existence. They are called appendices, and are animal natures
        connected with the rational being, who thus finds himself burdened with the
        abnormal instincts of the wolf or the ape, the lion, the goat, and so on.
        Without being essentially injured by the mistakes into which its passions lead
        it, the spiritual soul must nevertheless suffer from the consequences of such
        mistakes: each sin indeed must be expiated by suffering, if not in this life
        then in another, for metempsychosis formed a part of the system. 
   In
        practical life it seems that originally the Basilidians accepted the rules of ordinary
        morality. Clement of Alexandria tells us that Basilides and his son Isodore allowed marriage and denounced immorality; but in his day the Basilidians were, as to this,
        not true to the teaching of their master. By the end of the 2nd century, they
        had a well-established reputation for immorality. 
   This
        sect, like that of Valentinus, was primarily a
        school of thought. 
   This
        was also the case with the Gnosticism of Carpocrates.
        Like Valentinus and Basilides he was an Alexandrian. His wife, Alexandria, was a native of the island of
        Cephalonia; and their son Epiphanes, an infant
        prodigy, died at the age of seventeen, having already written a book On
        Justice. Epiphanes was worshipped as a god at
        Cephalonia, like Simon in Samaria. In the town of Same the Cephalonians erected a temple and a museum, where
        with sacrifices and literary festivals they celebrated his apotheosis. 
   Carpocrates was a Platonic philosopher, more or less touched with Gnostic Christianity. He
        believed in one God, from whom emanated a whole hierarchy of angels. The
        visible world is their work. The souls of men first moved around the
        Father-God; then they fell into the power of matter, from which they have to be
        released to go back to their original state. Jesus, the son of Joseph,
        naturally born like other men, and subject as they are to metempsychosis, was
        able, by a remembrance of what he had known in his first existence, and by
        power sent from above, to obtain dominion over the rulers of this world, and to
        re-ascend to the Father. It is in the power of all men by following his
        example, and by the method he used, to despise the creators of this world and
        to escape from them. They can achieve this equally well, or even better, than
        he did. This scheme of deliverance is consistent with all conditions of life,
        and with every kind of act. 
   If
        this deliverance is not attained in this life, as it usually is, successive
        transmigrations will complete what is lacking. Moreover, all actions are in
        themselves indifferent; it is only human opinion which makes them good or evil.
        The justice, taught by Epiphanes, was
        essentially community of goods. All property, including women, is to be common
        to all, exactly as is the light of day. 
   In
        many of these particulars, we recognize the influence of Plato. The myth of
        Phaedrus is grafted upon the Gospel. 
   Magic
        was much esteemed by the Carpocratians. Their
        worship had clearly marked Hellenic features. We have already seen how they honoured
        the founders of the sect. They also had painted, or sculptured, images of Jesus
        Christ, reproduced, it was said, from a portrait of Him taken by Pilate's
        order; they crowned these with flowers, as also those of Pythagoras, Plato,
        Aristotle, and other wise men. 
   St
        Irenaeus refuses to believe that these heretics carried their moral teaching to
        its extreme limits, or that they went so far as to give themselves up to the
        abominations which it would authorize. But he acknowledges their moral
        perversion and the scandal caused thereby. He reproaches the Carpocratians for degrading Christianity, and asks how
        they can dare claim to belong to Jesus, who, in the Gospel, inculcates such a
        very different moral code. 
   The Carpocratians had an answer to this. They declared
        that the true teaching of Jesus was given secretly to the disciples, and by
        them communicated only to those worthy of it. 
     
         3. Gnostic Teaching
         
         It
        is unnecessary to go farther with the description of the various Gnostic
        systems. Certain common and fundamental conceptions are easily discernible
        under their diversity. 
   1.
        God, the Creator and Lawgiver of the Old Testament, is not the True God. Above
        him, at an infinite distance, is the Father-God, the supreme First Cause of all
        being 
   2. The
        God of the Old Testament knew not the True God, and in this ignorance the world
        shared, until the appearance of Jesus Christ, who did indeed proceed from the
        True God. 
   3. Between
        the True God and creation is interposed a most complicated series of beings,
        divine in their origin; at some point or other in this series, occurs a
        catastrophe, which destroys the harmony of the whole. The visible world—often
        including its creator—originates in this primal disorder. 
   4. In
        humanity there are some elements capable of redemption, having come in one way
        or another from the celestial world above the Demiurge. Jesus Christ came into
        the world to deliver them from it. 
   5. As
        the incarnation could not really amount to a true union between divinity and
        matter, the accursed, the Gospel story is explained as a moral and transitory
        union between a divine aeon and the concrete personality of Jesus, or again, by
        a simple semblance of humanity. 
   6. Neither
        the passion nor the resurrection of Christ is therefore real; the future of the predestinated does not permit of the resurrection of
        the body. 
   7. The
        divine element which has strayed into humanity, that is, the predestinated soul, has no solidarity with the flesh which
        oppresses it. Either the flesh must be annihilated by asceticism (rigorism), or at least the responsibility of the soul for
        the weaknesses of the flesh must be denied (libertinism). 
     
         PTOLEMY’S LETTER
               
         Such
        conceptions could certainly not appeal to the authority of the Old Testament.
        The Old Testament was absolutely repudiated as the inspiration of the Creator.
        The main body of the Church held to the Israelite Bible, and found a way by
        which Yahweh could be identified with the Heavenly Father. That the Gnostics
        never did. The letter of Ptolemy to Flora, shows us how the Valentinians practiced biblical interpretation. There, the
        Mosaic Law, as an inference from certain texts in the Gospels, is attributed to
        three different authors : Moses, the Elders of Israel, and God. In that which
        is of God, a distinction is drawn between the laws that are good—those of the
        Decalogue and of natural morality— which the Saviour did not abolish, but fulfilled; and the laws that are unrighteous, such as that
        of retaliation (lex talionis),
        abrogated by the Saviour; and lastly, those laws
        which had but the value of shadows, or symbols, such as the ceremonial laws.
        But it is clear that this sacred Law, composed as it is of good and bad
        precepts, could not be attributed to the infinitely perfect Being, any more
        than to the enemy of all good. It is therefore the work of an intermediate God,
        of the Creator. “Flora,” says the teacher, concluding his argument, “must not
        be disturbed to hear that the spirit of evil, and the intermediate spirit (the
        Creator) both emanate from the Being who is supremely perfect”. “You will learn
        this,” he says, “God helping you, by means of the apostolic tradition, which to
        us also has been transmitted, along with the custom of judging all doctrines,
        by the rule of the Saviour’s teaching.” 
   This
          exegetical attitude is, in fact, easy to understand. The religious thinkers of
          the 2nd century felt, as we do, a perpetual temptation to criticize Nature and
          the Law. Man may well complain of the brutality of the forces of Nature, not
          only on his own account, but for the sake of all creatures; in other words, man
          from his very circumscribed point of view, is naturally inclined to maintain
          that the world is ill-arranged. So likewise, the Law being laid down for the
          general run of cases, ignores, and cannot but ignore, a thousand particular
          instances, and in consequence it often appears to be absurd and unjust. But the
          heart of man dimly discerns that, above this world with its miseries, there is
          an Infinite Goodness, manifesting itself in love, and not in simple justice.
          Suppose that a highly cultivated Greek, in this mood, had the Bible put into
          his hands. The Old Testament confronts him with an awful God, who creates man,
          it is true, but almost immediately punishes the whole human race for the sin committed
          by the original human pair He created; who then repents Him of having permitted
          the propagation of the human race, and destroys all but one family, with most
          of the animals, who assuredly were quite innocent of the misdeeds of which man
          is accused; who then befriends a company of adventurers, protects them against
          all other nations, sends them on conquering, pillaging raids, shares their
          spoils, and takes a leading part in the massacre of the vanquished; who endows
          them with a Law, containing by the side of many equitable provisions many
          others which are strange and most impracticable. Enlightened Jews and
          Christians explained these difficulties by ingenious allegories. We cannot do
          this; but we have got out of the difficulty nevertheless, by denying the
          objectivity of these tares in the Lord's field, and regarding them as an
          expression, in the sacred text, of a progressive purification of the conception
          of God, in the minds of the men of old. But no such explanation was within the
          reach of the earlier thinkers. The Gnostic philosophers did not make the use of
          allegory which the orthodox did. And as they had to make someone responsible
          for Nature and the Law, they fell back on the God of Israel. The Gospel, on the
          contrary, where they thought a different note was struck, seemed to them a
          revelation of the supreme Goodness and of absolute Perfection. 
             This
          arrangement might seem ingenious; but in reality, it only put the difficulty
          further back. The Demiurge might explain Nature and the Law. But then how was
          the Demiurge to be explained? Marcion, as it will be
          seen, never attempted to solve the enigma. The others only succeeded by
          interposing, between the Supreme God and the Demiurge, a whole series of aeons, whose perfection gradually diminished as they
          receded from the first Being, so that at last confusion was possible, and did
          indeed arise amongst them. This arbitrary and inadequate solution could not but
          excite trenchant criticism,
           
           GNOSTIC GOSPELS
                 
           It
          evident that the only possible justification for these systems would have to be
          sought in the Gospel of Jesus, and it was therefore amplified by written
          documents—amongst which appeared at an early date our four canonical
          Gospels—and also by special written and oral traditions. These traditions
          claimed to reproduce, not the Gospel story known to all, but secret
          conversations, occurring as a rule after the resurrection, in which the Saviour explained to His apostles, to Mary Magdalene and
          the other women of His company, the most profound mysteries of Gnosticism. Thus
          originated the gospels of Thomas, of Philip, of Judas, the greater and lesser
          questions of Mary, the Gospel of Perfection. Other books, supposed to have been
          written by the holy men of old, Elias, Moses, Abraham, Adam, Eve, and
          especially Seth, played a very important part in some circles. As in the main
          body of the Church, so also among the sects, there were inspired prophets,
          whose words were preserved and formed another class of sacred books; such were
          the prophets Martiades and Marsianus amongst the
          "Archontics." 
             The Basilidians relied on the
          tradition of a certain Glaucias,
          an alleged interpreter of St Peter. There existed also a Gospel of Basilides, to form which St Matthew’s and St Luke’s
          Gospels had been made use of, and the prophets Barkabbas and Barkoph, on whose books Isidore,
          the son of Basilides, wrote a commentary. The
          founder of the sect had himself written twenty-four books of Exegetics on his own gospel. Valentinus also made use of the
          name of a disciple of the apostles, Theodas,
          who was said to have been a disciple of St Paul, and his sect boasted of a Gospel
            of Truth
               These
          were their authorities. The teaching spread from one to another, and culminated
          in the formation of little groups of initiates, who, as a rule, first tried to
          combine their esoteric doctrines with the ordinary religious life of the
          Christian community. But they were soon discovered, and they then formed
          autonomous associations, where they developed their systems, extended their
          initiations, and celebrated their mysterious rites freely. External forms
          possessed considerable importance in their eyes, and they habitually appealed
          to the senses, and strove to excite the imagination. They were given to using
          exotic terms, Hebrew words repeated or pronounced backwards, and all the
          customary paraphernalia of sorcery. Thus they acquired an influence over weak
          and restless minds, eagerly receptive of occult science, initiations, and
          mysteries; and over those attracted by ophism and oriental cults. 
             The
          three schools, of Valentinus, Basilides,
          and Carpocrates—especially the two first—appear to
          have been very popular in their native land. Clement of Alexandria often speaks
          of Basilides and Valentinus,
          and he had thoroughly mastered their books. Outside Egypt, the Basilidian sect was not so much
          in vogue as that of Valentinus, who early moved to
          Rome, where under Bishops Hyginus, Pius, and Anicetus he stayed some time. According to Tertullian, he
          there lived at first among the faithful, until his dangerous speculations and
          teaching led to his exclusion from the Christian community, at first for a
          time, but ultimately altogether. 
             This
          did not prevent the Valentinian sect from spreading
          to some extent everywhere. In Tertullian’s time, the school of the Valentinians was the most popular of all the heretical
          associations. The original doctrine of the founder was preserved, but with some
          admixtures, which produced various schools of thought. St Irenaeus and Clement
          of Alexandria have described the most celebrated among their teachers, Heracleon, Ptolemy, Mark, and Theodotus. 
             Carpocrates,
          or at least his heresy, also appeared on the scene in Rome. In the time of Pope Anicetus (about 155 A.D.) a woman of this sect,
          named Marcellina, came to Rome, and gained many
          adherents. 
               
           4. Marcion
                 
           The
          Syrian quacks ceased not to spread their oriental gnosticism, with its strangely-named aeons and all the Semitic glitter of its magic. In
          Alexandria subtle spirits tricked out these absurdities in philosophic garb to
          suit the local taste. But neither accomplished more than the foundation of some
          lodges of initiates of higher or lower degree. Meantime, a man arose who set
          himself to extract, from this heterogeneous conglomeration, a few simple
          notions, in harmony with those of ordinary men, as a basis for a religion,
          which should be Christian, of course, but new, anti-Jewish, and dualist. This
          new religion was no longer to find expression in secret confraternities, but in
          a church. And the man was Marcion. 
             Marcion came from the town of Sinope, a renowned seaport on
          the Black Sea. His father was a bishop; he himself had made a fortune at sea.
          He came to Rome, about 140 A.D., and associated himself at first with the
          congregation of the faithful. He even made a gift to the community of a large sum
          of money, 200 sesterces. 
             This
          gift was perhaps intended to conciliate public opinion, which his language
          began to disturb. In fact he was required by the leaders of the Church to give
          them an account of his faith; he did so, in the form of a letter. Later this
          letter was often quoted by orthodox conversialists. 
             Marcion was a disciple of St Paul. The antithesis between Faith and the Law, between
          Grace and Justice, between the Old Testament and the New Covenant, on which the
          apostle lays stress, was according to Marcion the
          foundation of all religion. Paul had with regret resigned himself to part from
          his brothers in Israel. But Marcion transformed this
          severance into deep-rooted antagonism. According to him, there was no agreement
          possible between the Revelation of Jesus Christ and the teaching of the Old
          Testament. A choice must be made between the infinite love and supreme
          goodness, of which Jesus was the ambassador, and the rigid justice of the God
          of Israel. “You must not,” said he to the Roman presbytery, “pour new wine into
          old bottles, nor sew a new piece upon a worn-out garment.” His real meaning was
          disclosed ever more clearly, by one antithesis after another. The God of the
          Jews, of Creation, and of the Law, could not be identical with the Father of
          Mercy, and must therefore be regarded as inferior to Him. 
             Thus Marcion's doctrine also led up to dualism, like that
          of the Gnostics, although they started from very different premises. He
          troubled himself neither with metaphysics nor with cosmology; he made no
          attempt to bridge the distance between the infinite and the finite by a whole
          series of aeons, nor to discover by what catastrophe
          in the region of the ideal, the disorder of the visible world was to be
          explained. 
             The
          Redeemer, in his eyes, was a manifestation of the true and good God. He saves
          mankind by the revelation of Him from whom he comes, and by the work of the
          Cross. But, as he could not owe anything to the Creator, he had but a semblance
          of humanity. In the 15th year of Tiberius, he manifests himself suddenly in the
          synagogue of Capernaum. Jesus had neither birth, nor growth, nor even the
          semblance of them; the semblance only began with his preaching, and was
          continued during the remainder of the Gospel story, including the Passion. 
             Not
          all men will be saved, but only some. Their duty is to live in the strictest
          asceticism, both as to eating and drinking, and as to relations of sex.
          Marriage is forbidden. Baptism may only be granted to the married if they agree
          to separate. 
             These
          fundamental conceptions of Marcion's are not quite
          consistent. The origin of his God of justice is not clear, nor why the
          sacrifice on the Cross had such value in his eyes when it was only that of a
          phantom. Marcion did not consider it incumbent on
          him to explain everything, nor to offer to speculators a complete system.
          Mystery suited his religious soul. But it is easier to abuse theology than to
          do without it. Marcion's views showed the effects of
          his personal contact with the Gnostics. Tradition says that, in Rome he was
          connected with a Syrian, Cerdon,
          who had preceded him there. It is not easy to discover, from the details we
          have about Cerdon, what
          was his influence on Marcion, nor exactly when his
          school became merged in the sect of that great innovator. Perhaps he induced Marcion to condemn not only the Law, but Creation itself,
          and consequently to reduce the Gospel story to absolute Docetism. 
             However
          this may be, and whatever may be the date of his association with Cerdon, Marcion was in the end convinced that the Roman Church would not follow him in his
          distorted Paulinism. The actual rupture took place
          144 A.D. The sum of money Marcion had handed over to
          the common fund was returned to him, but they kept his profession of faith. A Marcionite community was immediately organized in Rome,
          and quickly prospered. Thus originated a vast movement, which, by its vigorous
          propaganda soon spread throughout Christendom. 
             Marcion's teaching laid claim to no secret tradition or prophetic inspiration. It did not
          seek in any way to accommodate its ideas to those of the Old Testament. Its
          method of exegesis has no touch of the allegorical, but is purely literal. This
          led to an entire repudiation of the Old Testament. Of the New Testament, or
          rather of all the apostolic writings, nothing was retained, except those of St
          Paul and the third Gospel. And even so, the collection of St Paul's letters did
          not include the Pastoral Epistles, and in the ten epistles retained, as well as
          in the text of St Luke, there were omissions. The Galilean apostles were
          considered to have but imperfectly understood the Gospel: they had made the
          mistake of considering Jesus as the envoy of the Creator. This was why the Lord
          had raised up St Paul to rectify their teaching. Even in the letters of Paul,
          passages occur too laudatory of the Creator; these passages could only be
          interpolations. 
             To
          the New Testament, thus cut down, the book of Antitheses, by the founder of the
          sect, was added before long. It was but a list of the contradictions traceable
          between the Old Testament and the Gospel, between the good God and the Creator.
          These sacred books, veneration for Marcion, and the
          practice of his ascetic morality, were common to all Marcionite Churches. 
               
           5. The Church and Gnosticism
                  
           The
          reception given to these doctrines by the Christian communities could scarcely
          be expected to be favourable. 
             The
          solidarity of the two Testaments, the reality of the Gospel story, the
          authority of the common moral code, these were all too deeply rooted in
          tradition and in religious education, to be easily shaken. No Church, as a
          body, allowed itself to be led away. The leaders of the various sects, however,
          did their worst. In Rome, above all, a centre of
          especial importance, many efforts were made, we are told, by Valentinus, Cerdo, and Marcion, to get the control of the Church into their own
          hands. Towards the end of the 2nd century, another Gnostic, Florinus, is seen to be in office among the Roman priests.
          The attitude of Hermas is very interesting. He
          insists strongly upon the divinity of the Creator. The first command given by
          the Shepherd is: “Before all things, believe that God is One, that He has
          created and framed all things, and called them into existence out of nothing,
          and that in Him all things are contained.” Just as decidedly does he proclaim
          the responsibility of the soul for the deeds of the flesh : “Take heed never to
          allow the thought in thy heart that this flesh of thine perishes, and never allow it to be stained with sin. If thou defile thy flesh,
          thou defilest also the
          Holy Spirit. And if thou defile the Holy Spirit, thou shalt not live.” By these
          two precepts, Hermas warns his readers against both
          the theological and the moral danger, dualism and libertinism. In other places,
          he sketches the portraits of heretic preachers as well as of their hearers. 
             “These,”
          he says, “are they who sow strange doctrines, who turn the servants of God from
          the right way, specially sinners, hindering them from conversion, and filling
          their minds with foolish teaching. Nevertheless, there is still room for hope
          that, in the end, they also may be converted. Many of them have come back since
          thou hast declared to them my precepts: others also will be converted.” So much
          for the masters, now for the disciples : “They have believed and have the
          faith, but they are not teachable, they are bold and self-satisfied, seeking to
          know everything, and knowing nothing. Their self-confidence has darkened their
          minds. A rash presumption has entered into them. They boast of their great
          penetration; they readily undertake on their own responsibility to teach
          doctrine; but they have not even common sense ... Audacity and vain presumption
          are great curses: they have been the ruin of many. But others acknowledging
          their error, have returned to a simple faith, and have submitted themselves to
          those who really know. To the others perhaps also may repentance be allowed,
          for they are not so much wicked as foolish.” 
             This
          was written when Valentinus and other renowned
          teachers were spreading their heresies in the Christian society of Rome. If Hermas is alluding to them, he is very optimistic. But,
          whether he had in view the subtle dreams of Valentinus,
          or, as is quite possible, the more common forms of Gnosticism imported from
          Syria and Asia, certainly the sublimated theology of the Gnostics, with its Pleroma, its Ogdoad, its
          Archons, and all its host of celestial aeons, seems
          to have made but little impression on him; he does not even see in it any very
          serious danger. A simple mind and upright heart are, to his thinking,
          impregnable fortresses. 
             He
          was right as far as the generality of mankind were concerned. But, as it has
          been said, philosophical dreams had attractions for some, and the repentance
          preached by Hermas was less convenient than the
          justification of the Gnostics. It is therefore not surprising that the language
          of the ecclesiastical leaders generally betrays more apprehension and
          indignation than does that of the simple-minded prophet. Moreover, he does not
          seem to have known Marcion ; at least he can hardly
          have been cognisant of the great increase of the Marcionite Church, which was a far more formidable rival
          than were the bands of Syrian adventurers and Alexandrian teachers. 
             St
          Polycarp and St Justin take a less optimistic view. The old Bishop of Smyrna,
          who lived to a great age, had known Marcion before
          the latter went to Rome. St Polycarp met him after he had broken with the
          Church, and Marcion having asked if he recognized
          him, Polycarp replied: "I recognise the
          first-born of Satan." Justin did not only include Marcion among the heretics refuted in his Syntagma against
          all Heresies; but he also devoted another Syntagma,
          a special treatise, to Marcion. The first was
          already published when (c. 152 A.D.) he wrote his first Apology, where he twice
          alludes to the heresiarch. “A certain Marcion, from
          Pontus, is even now still preaching of another god, greater than the Creator.
          Thanks to the help of demons, he has persuaded many men, in all countries, to
          blaspheme and deny God, the Author of this universe.... Many listen to him as
          though he alone were the possessor of the truth, and they laugh at us.
          Nevertheless they have no proof of their statements. Like lambs carried off by
          the wolf, they stupidly allow themselves to be devoured by these atheistic
          doctrines, and by devils.” The tone of this shows how deep the wound was, and
          testifies to Marcion's success from the first. 
             The
          Gnostics wrote much. This was to be expected, for they claimed to open the
          secrets of a higher knowledge to the intellectual elite. It is equally obvious
          that with their failure as a religious party their literature would vanish. And
          so, until quite recently, the Gnostic books have been known only from the
          information given by orthodox writers. A few titles, a few scattered
          quotations, some descriptions of the various systems, evidently taken from the
          writings of the sectarians themselves, this is all that has come down in this
          way. There is, however, an exception—the letter from Ptolemy to Flora, already
          quoted—preserved by St Epiphanius, where we see how
          Gnostic teaching was enforced by the authority of the Bible and by Christian
          tradition. 
             But
          some time back the secrets of Egyptian manuscripts began to reveal themselves,
          and Coptic versions of the actual books of the old heretics have come to light.
          Those hitherto discovered are not books of the Alexandrian schools of Basilides, Valentinus, and Carpocrates, but of those sects of Syrian origin described
          by St Irenaeus under the general term Gnostic. One of these documents he
          certainly knew : the chapter he devotes to the Gnostics of the Barbelo type (1. 29) is but an incomplete extract from it. 
             Other
          less ancient documents, of the beginning or end of the 3rd century, witness to
          interesting developments in these same sects. In this strange world, two very
          different moral tendencies early appear, one towards asceticism, the other
          towards the most abominable moral aberrations. The books so far discovered are
          all inspired by asceticism, and are very distinctly opposed to the second
          tendency. 
             To
          confront this heretical literature, a mass of orthodox polemics soon grew up.
          Some attacked one sect in particular. Valentinus and Marcion, especially the latter, roused many
          refutations. Others undertook to draw up a catalogue of the different sects,
          and delighted to expose their oddities in contrast to the sober, universal, and
          traditional teaching of the orthodox Church. This mode of treatment was very
          early in vogue. St Justin had already written Against all Heresies, when he
          published his Apology. Hegesippus also dealt with
          the same subject, not in a special book, but in his Memoirs. Most of this has
          been lost. But we still have the work of St Irenaeus, a most valuable book,
          which though it was specially directed against the Valentinian sect, contains a description of all the principal heresies, up to the time (c.
          185 a.d.) when the author
          wrote. After him, Hippolytus twice composed a catalogue of all the sects, in
          two different forms, and at two different periods of his career. His first
          work, his Syntagma against all Heresies, is now
          lost; but we are able to reconstruct it, thanks to the description given of it
          by Photius, and to the extracts preserved.
          Hippolytus, like Irenaeus, did not confine himself to the Gnostic systems; his
          description includes other heresies as well: of these, the thirty-second and
          last was the Modalist heresy of Noetus. In his
          second book, The Refutation of all Heresies (better known under the title of Philosophumena), he comes down to rather later times. 
             In
          the literature of later date a prominent place must be assigned to the great
          treatise of St Epiphanius, the Panarion. This compilation is open to criticism on
          some points, but the materials for it were derived from most important sources,
          from the Syntagma of Hippolytus, that of St
          Irenaeus, and a number of heretical books, known to the author and examined,
          and quoted by him; not to mention firsthand observations made by himself on
          sects still in existence in his day. Compared with the Panarion, the writings of Philastrius of Brescia, of St Augustine, and of Theodoret, are of but secondary value. 
               
           CHAPTER XII 
           EVANGELIZATION AND APOLOGETICS IN THE SECOND CENTURY 
             
             
           IN
          spite of all the laws for its suppression, Christianity continued to spread.
          About the end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius, i.e., about a century and a half
          after its birth, Christianity had taken root in the most remote provinces.
          There were Christian communities in Spain, Gaul, Germany, Africa, Egypt, and
          even beyond the Euphrates and the Roman frontier. Evangelization had begun with
          the Jewish communities and their proselytes, but it soon turned direct to the
          pagans. In this field, it quickly outstripped and absorbed the rival
          proselytizing movement of the Jews; it presented all the advantages of the
          religion of Israel, with the addition of more facility of adaptation. Greek,
          Roman, and Egyptian polytheism it met by the doctrine of One supreme God ; idolatry,
          by spiritual worship; bloody sacrifices and riotous pageants, by devotional
          exercises of the utmost simplicity, prayers, readings, homilies, and common
          meals ; and the dissolute libertinism, on which the ancient religions imposed
          no check, was encountered by an austere morality, maintained by the restraints
          of the life in common. The universal craving to know the origin of all things,
          and the final destiny of man, found satisfaction in teaching derived from
          ancient and venerable sacred books, which carried far greater weight than the
          fables of the poets. The doctrine of angels and more especially that of devils,
          solved many difficulties as to the origin and power of religious error. Satan
          and his host afforded an explanation of the problem of evil in general, and of
          particular ills, and thus formed a bulwark against the rival propaganda of the
          dualist Mithras worship. 
             The
          Jews had demonstrated the strength of all this before. The Christians imparted
          a new reality to it, by holding up to the love, the gratitude, and the
          adoration of men the person of their Founder, Jesus, Son of God, revealer and saviour, manifested in human form, seated now at the right
          hand of God the Father, and soon to appear as the supreme Judge and King of the
          elect. On Him, on His life portrayed in the new sacred books, and on His coming
          again—the end and aim of all their hopes—their hearts were continually set. Nay more. In some ways Jesus was present with them still.
          In the Eucharist, He lived in and amongst His own. And the marvellous charismata—prophecies, visions, ecstasies, and gifts of healing—were to them
          like a second point of contact with the unseen God. And thence there sprang,
          both in Christian communities and in individuals, a religious concentration
          and enthusiasm which proved a most efficacious and powerful means of
          conversion. Souls surrendered to the attraction of the divine. 
             And
          truly it was necessary that the attraction should be strong, for in those days,
          to aspire to Christianity was to aspire to martyrdom. No one could conceal from
          himself that by becoming a Christian, he became a sort of outlaw. Let but the
          authorities be on the alert, or the neighbours ill-disposed, and the heaviest
          penalties—usually death— ensued. But even martyrdom allured some souls; while
          for many it formed assuredly a very powerful incentive to belief. The fortitude
          of the confessor, the serenity with which he endured torture and met his death,
          the confidence of his upward gaze on the heavenly vision, all this was new,
          striking, and contagious. 
             Another
          magnet, more commonplace perhaps, but not less strong, was the brotherliness,
          the sweet and deep affection which bound together all the members of the
          Christian community. Amongst them, differences of rank, social position, race
          or country were hardly felt. In this atmosphere of concentrated purpose they
          melted away. What did it matter to Jesus whether a man were patrician or
          plebeian, slave or free, Greek or Egyptian? All were brothers, and they called
          each other by that name; their gatherings were often known by the name of agape
          (love); they helped one another, quite simply, without ostentation or pride.
          Between the communities there was a constant interchange of advice,
          information, and practical help. The joy of their membership in “the Church of
          God” at home, did not hinder their rejoicing to form part of the great
          household of God, the Church at large, the Catholic Church, and in their
          destiny as citizens of the fast-approaching Kingdom of God. All this implied a
          warmth and vitality which did not exist in the pagan religious confraternities,
          or burial societies, the only associations at all to be compared to the
          Christian congregations. How many must have said of them : see the purity and
          simplicity of their religion! Their trust in their God, and His promises! Their
          love for one another! And their happiness together! 
             Nevertheless,
          its attractiveness did not touch the mass of mankind, for Christianity was far
          from being disseminated everywhere, and multitudes were hardly, if at all,
          aware of its existence. And many viewed it with profound horror. Besides being
          a new cult, or rather a new way of life imported from a barbarous country, and
          preached at first by men of a despised race, there were rumours current about Christianity, and especially about the Christian assemblies,
          which were as horrible as they appeared well authenticated. Christians were
          atheists, impious; they had no god, or rather they adored a god with an ass's
          head. In their meetings, when no outsiders were present, they indulged in
          infamous debauchery and cannibal feasts. These foolish tales were current
          everywhere, and there is good reason to believe that they originated very
          early. The common people believed them, the world repeated them; they were
          echoed even amongst the wise and serious, who indeed brought still other
          charges against the Christians. They blamed the Christians for the slight
          interest they took in public affairs, for their apartness, their want of
          energy, and their apostasy, so to speak, not only from the religion of Rome,
          but also from ordinary life and common social duties. There is something of all
          this in the accounts given by Tacitus and Suetonius. Tacitus regarded
          Christianity as an abominable superstition, and Christians as atrocious
          criminals, worthy of the severest punishment. Suetonius also talks of it as a
          pernicious superstition. 
             As
          to the rhetoricians and philosophers, Christianity annoyed them to an
          indescribable degree. They saw in it a rival. That empire over the minds of men
          which, in the days of the wise emperors, they looked on as their own special
          prerogative, was passing into the hands of obscure preachers, without
          authority, jurisdiction, or even learning. This new doctrine, with which
          unknown men, nobodies, were leading away women and children, and restless and
          timid souls, made far more impression than did the finest lectures of the State
          orators. And they were unsparing in their objurgations both by word of mouth, like the cynic Crescens, St
          Justin's opponent, or in writing, like Fronto, the
          tutor of Marcus Aurelius, and above all, the philosopher Celsus. Fronto believed in the Thyestean feasts, of which he accused the Christians. His other objections we know but
          partially. Celsus' work, the True Discourse, could
          be almost entirely rewritten from the quotations of Origen, who refuted it
          much later. 
             The
          aim of Celsus in the Discourse, was to convert the
          Christians by shaming them out of their religion. And he at least took the
          trouble to study his subject. He does not repeat the popular calumnies; he had
          read the Bible and many Christian books. He is aware of their divisions, and
          grasps the difference between the Gnostic sects and the main body of the
          Church. First Christianity is refuted from the Jewish point of view, in a
          dialogue in which a Jew sets forth his objections to Jesus Christ. Then Celsus comes forward on his own account with a wholesale
          attack on both the Jewish and the Christian religions; he asserts the striking
          superiority of the religion and philosophy of the Greeks, carps at Bible
          history and the resurrection of Christ, and declares that the apostles and
          their successors had but added to the original absurdities. He is not, however,
          always blindly unjust: he approves of some things, notably of the Gospel
          ethics, and the doctrine of the Logos. He even winds up by an exhortation to the
          Christians to abandon their religious and political isolation, and to conform
          to the common religion, for the sake of the State and the Roman Empire, which
          these divisions weaken. That is his chief anxiety. Celsus was a highly cultivated man of the world, but with a practical turn. Like all
          cultivated people he takes a general interest in philosophy, but is not a
          partisan of any one sect. He supports the established religion, not from any
          deep conviction, but because a well-bred man should have a religion, and
          naturally the received religion of the State. 
             The
          True Discourse, published towards the end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius, does
          not appear to have much impressed those to whom it was addressed. The Christian
          writers of the 2nd century never allude to it. About 246 a.d. it fell by chance into the hands of Origen,
          who till then had never heard either of the book or its author. 
             Nevertheless, Celsus was not quite insignificant. He was a friend
          of Lucian, who dedicated his book on The False Prophet to him. Lucian also
          alludes to the Christians, but only in passing in his usual flippant manner.
          They supplied some features in his celebrated caricature “The death of Peregrinus.” But he can hardly be said to have attacked
          them. On the contrary, his endless gibes against the gods and the religions of
          his day rather told in their favour. In his False
          Prophet, he acknowledges, without bitterness, that they had no more sympathy
          with religious impostors than he had himself. 
             The
          Christians, for their part, were extremely jealous for the good name of their
          religion. They could not tolerate the calumnies on their meetings, though
          indeed against such slanders no defence is possible.
          The foolishness which accepts them is ineradicable. Is not the stupid
          accusation of practicing ritual murder brought against the Jews, again and
          again, even in our own day? It was, however, necessary to protest. And on the
          other hand, it was but natural, that, under the good emperors, Christians
          should wish to come to an understanding with the authorities, and to convince
          them that their persecution of the followers of Christ was undeserved. And when
          the pens of skilled rhetoricians and philosophers gave literary expression to
          the hatred of the Christians, was it not fitting that those
          "brethren" whom God had endowed with intellectual gifts, should use
          them for the common defence? Thus originated the “Apologies,”
          some of which are still extant, whilst others have left traces more or less
          distinct. 
             First
          must be noticed those addressed to the emperors, beginning with Hadrian
          (117-138), to whom Quadratus presented his Apology.
          He appears to be the same person as a certain Quadratus who lived in Asia at that time, and was a distinguished missionary and prophet.
          His work has not come down to us, but was still read in the time of Eusebius,
          who says that Quadratus was induced to compose it,
          by the fact that wicked men were "troubling the brethren." This is a
          little vague, but corresponds well enough with the state of things in the
          province of Asia, revealed by the rescript of Fundanus. In the Apology, Quadratus alluded to people cured, or raised from the dead by the Saviour,
          as being still alive in his time. 
             The
          Apologies of Aristides and of Justin were addressed to the Emperor Antoninus (138-161). Aristides was an Athenian
          philosopher. His address has only recently been discovered. It is of an
          extremely simple character. He compares the notions of the Divinity held by
          barbarians, Greeks, Jews, and Christians, naturally much to the advantage of
          the latter, with a eulogy on their morals and charity. He hints at calumnies,
          but gives no details. Nor is there any protest against legislation entailing
          persecution. The author comes forward himself at once, describes to the prince
          the impression the spectacle of the world made upon him, and the conclusions
          which he drew from it, as to the nature of God, the worship which is His due,
          and that which is in fact rendered to Him, by various classes of men. This
          classification recalls that in the “Preaching of Peter.” For further
          information Aristides refers the emperor to the Christian books. 
             Justin
          is far better known than Aristides. Yet only a part even of his apologetic
          writings are extant. But we have the Apologies, or rather the Apology he
          addressed to the Emperor Antoninus Pius, about 152
          A.D. Like Aristides, Justin was a philosopher, that is a citizen of the world,
          travelling from town to town, with his short cloak and freedom of speech. A
          native of Neapolis in Palestine, in the land of
          Samaria, he passed from one school to another. The Platonists held him for a
          time; but he did not find among them complete rest for his soul. He had
          happened to be present at several martyrdoms which moved him profoundly, and
          led him to reflect on the convictions which led to such constancy. In this
          frame of mind, a conversation with a mysterious old man led to his conversion.
          When he became a Christian, he changed nothing in his outward appearance as a
          philosopher, nor his manner of life; they gave him opportunities for gaining
          the ear of the public, and for proclaiming the Gospel teaching which he at once
          made it his mission to spread and defend. He became a Christian about 133 A.D.,
          no doubt at Ephesus, where shortly afterwards he had (135 A.D.) a dialogue with
          a learned Jew, called Trypho. Afterwards he came to
          Rome, and stayed some time there. He wrote a great deal, not only against
          external enemies, but also against the heretical schools which were then in
          full swing. 
             His
          Apology is addressed to the Emperor Antoninus Augustus, to the princes Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus,
          to the Senate, and to the Roman people : "On behalf of those whom the
          whole human race hates and persecutes, Justin, the son of Priscus,
          and grandson of Bracchius,
          a native of Flavia Neapolis in Syria-Palestine, and one of them, presents this address and petition."
          He protests at once that the Christians ought not to be persecuted for the name
          they bear, but for their crimes, if they have committed any. He then disposes
          of the calumnies against them, and after having shown what they are not, he
          sets forth what they actually are. He depicts Christian morals, and explains
          the meaning of their assemblies, and much calumniated mysteries, baptism and
          the Eucharist. Why, he asks, again and again, why all this hatred, these
          slanders, these persecutions? According to him, it is all the work of malicious
          demons. To them he attributes not only the hostile attitude of public opinion
          and the government, but also the divisions among Christians brought about by
          heretics, like Simon, Menander, and Marcion. Before
          Christ these malignant demons had molested the wise men of old, who, inspired
          by the Word of God, were in some respects Christians themselves, like
          Heraclitus, and above all Socrates. He, like Christ and the Christians, had
          been put to death on a charge of atheism and hostility to the gods of the
          State. 
             He
          writes roughly and incorrectly and without much regard to order, after the
          manner of the philosophers of the day. He is also defective on the critical
          side. Justin, referring to the history of the Septuagint, makes Herod a
          contemporary of Ptolemy Philadelphus, an anachronism
          of two hundred years. He had seen on the island in the Tiber, a dedicatory
          inscription in honour of the god Semo Sancus; from this he inferred
          that Simon Magus, in whom he took special interest, had been in Rome, and that
          the State had accorded him divine honours. 
             To
          his Apology, Justin appended a copy of the rescript of Hadrian to Minucius Fundanus,
          which may have come into his hands at Ephesus. Influenced by the impression
          made by three summary condemnations, which the prefect Urbicus pronounced against Christians, he shortly afterwards wrote what is known as
          his second Apology. He appeals here directly to Roman public opinion,
          protesting anew against unjustifiable severities, and replying to various
          criticisms. 
             Justin
          did not confine himself to writing. He was much given to speaking in places of
          public assembly. He was a mark for the malignant abuse of the philosophers, and
          had no hesitation in repaying them in kind, calling them in his turn gluttons
          and liars. A cynic, named Crescens, who was given to
          railing against Christians, had a special encounter with him. In a public
          discussion between the two, taken down in writing, Crescens did not get the best of it. The simple-minded Justin would have liked the
          emperors to read the report. But Crescens had other
          weapons at his command, and Justin soon perceived that his enemy was aiming at
          his death; an object not difficult to attain. 
             After
          the Apology, Justin wrote his Dialogue with Trypho.
          Here he takes up again and, no doubt, amplifies his discussion with a Jew at
          Ephesus, twenty years back. This work is of great value in the history of
          Christian and Jewish controversy, and of the beginning of Christian theology. 
             A
          few years later, Marcus Aurelius being then sole emperor (169-177), two
          Apologies were addressed to him by the Asiatic bishops, Melito of Sardis and Apollinaris of Hierapolis. Persecution
          had sprung up again in their province; the officials had apparently received
          new and stringent instructions. We have but a few fragments, preserved by
          Eusebius, of the Apology of Melito, in which the
          bishop discusses the idea that Christianity, born under Augustus, was in effect
          contemporaneous with the empire and the peace of Rome, and that only Nero and
          Domitian, bad emperors, enemies to the common weal, had ever sanctioned the
          persecutors of Christianity. The new religion in fact brings good fortune to
          the empire, and Melito almost insinuates that mutual
          understanding would be possible. This was a very optimistic view to take at
          that time. Yet it was that destined to prevail. 
             Of
          the Apology of Apollinaris nothing is known, unless
          the passage from his writings where Eusebius found the reference to the
          Thundering Legion, formed a part of it. 
             A
          third Apology, also the work of an Asiatic, Miltiades, appears to be of this
          time. 
             We
          have, on the other hand, the entire text of a fourth work of a similar nature,
          the Apology of Athenagoras, addressed to the
          Emperors Marcus Aurelius and Commodus (177-180 A.D.). Athenagoras,
          like Aristides, was an Athenian philosopher. He writes on the usual theme of
          the Apologies in a better style, and with more method than does Justin.
          Christians are not what people think them. They reject idolatry and polytheism
          no doubt, but do not the best and wisest philosophers do so also? With their
          reasonable belief in the Unity of God, the doctrine of the Word and the Holy
          Spirit can be easily harmonized. The atrocities imputed to them are abominable
          slanders, their morality on the contrary is pure, even austere. Why should men
          who believe and live thus be subjected to torture and death? 
             In
          fact, matters were becoming very serious for the Christians. There was good
          reason for the multiplication of Apologies under Marcus Aurelius. That wise
          emperor did not understand Christianity. To him it seemed inconceivable that
          such sects could be worth study, or that he could be expected to alter the laws
          of the empire for them. In vain the Christians tried to get the ear of the
          philosopher; they found they were dealing with a statesman who was all the
          more inflexible because he was so conscientious. Besides, the calamities which
          overshadowed this reign added fuel to the hatred of the populace, long
          exasperated by the continued progress of Christianity. Melito speaks of new decrees as causing much suffering in Asia; and Athenagoras bears witness that in Greece also the
          persecution had become intolerable. At this moment, in the last years of Marcus
          Aurelius, with the memorable scenes at Lyons and Carthage (Martyrs of Scilli), we get our first
          glimpse of Christianity in Gaul and Africa. 
             Peace
          returned after the death of Marcus Aurelius. His son Commodus was one of the
          worst emperors Rome had ever known, but at least he did not ill-treat the
          Christians. 
             This,
          however, was no reason why the Christians should interrupt the flow of their
          apologetic literature. Public opinion was far more adverse to them than were
          the emperors; it must be enlightened before it could be modified. And this the
          Christians fully realised. The Apologies addressed
          to the Emperors Hadrian, Antoninus, and Marcus
          Aurelius were far from representing their whole line of defence.
          We have either the texts or biographical lists, of a whole library of treatises
          “To the Greeks”. Even apart from his Apologies Justin was pre-eminent in this
          department. Tatian also, one of his disciples, and
          like him a great traveller, left an "Oration to
          the Greeks." There are also three books of the same kind by Theophilus, Bishop of Antioch, addressed to a certain Autolycus. The treatise of Athenagoras,
          on the resurrection of the body, is but an appendix to his Apology. Melito, Miltiades, and Apollinaris all also devoted their energies to the same end. Other books, all on the same
          subject, have come down either without any author's name, or with spurious
          attributions, like the Epistle to Diognetus,
          and the three treatises, Address to the Greeks, the Exhortation to the
          Greeks; and On the Monarchy, falsely attributed to Justin. 
             Of
          these, we will but notice the Epistle to Diognetus, an admirable example of style, of which
          the charm and conciliatory tone in no way weaken its persuasive warmth; and the
          oration of Tatian, distinguished by very different
          characteristics. Tatian, instead of calling his plea
          an Oration to the Greeks, should have entitled it Invective against
            the Greeks. It betrayed both contempt and anger. Tatian,
          who was born beyond the bounds of the empire, in a land where Syriac was spoken, had indeed been through the schools of
          Greece, and had dabbled in Western culture. But it was to him as a foreign
          land, for which he felt neither respect nor affection. Far from venerating the
          sages of old, like Justin, and seeing analogies in their writings with those of
          the Prophets, Tatian scoffs at Hellenism as a
          whole—worship and doctrines, poets and philosophers. He inaugurated the school
          of virulent apologists, who employ abuse as a means of conversion. A forerunner
          of Tertullian, he, like Tertullian, finally broke with the Church. But this was
          later. When he wrote his "Oration," Justin was still alive, and the
          difference in their views does not appear to have caused any division between
          them. 
             It
          is very difficult to gauge the effect of all this apologetic literature. It
          does not seem to have stopped the application of repressive laws. Possibly it
          may have modified the views of men of letters, here and there. But their
          influence must not be exaggerated, and at the bottom the Church was enabled to
          survive the laws of persecution, and to triumph over indifference, contempt,
          and slander, not by intellect nor by apologetics, but by the spiritual power
          within, visibly shining forth in the virtue, the charity, and the ardent faith
          of Christians of the heroic age. This it was which drew men to Christ; this it
          was that had won the apologists themselves; and this finally drew the Romans to
          adore a crucified Jew, and led Greek minds to accept dogmas like that of the
          resurrection. 
               
           CHAPTER
          XIII 
             THE CHURCH
          IN ROME UNDER NERO AND COMMODUS 
               
             
           THE
          Christian community in Rome soon re-organized itself after the terrible
          experiences of the year 64. And ere long, those who survived the massacre
          witnessed the downfall of the odious persecutor Nero (68 A.D.). The fall of
          Jerusalem, which had risen against the empire, followed two years later, after
          a protracted siege; the Temple was destroyed by fire, and, soon afterwards, the
          spoils of the Holy Places were borne in triumph through the streets of Rome,
          behind the car of the conquerors, Vespasian and Titus. 
             The
          downfall of Israel brought an enormous number of Jewish prisoners to Rome.
          Assuredly no leaning towards Christianity was to be expected from such
          fanatics. Hut even before the end of the war, a new party, a whole group of
          renegade Jews, had formed, whose rich and influential representatives gathered
          round the reigning house. Some of the Herodian family still remained. Berenice
          was long in high favour with Titus. Josephus formed part of this distinguished
          group, when he wrote the history of his nation, presenting it under the aspect
          most congenial to the conquerors. This much increased Jewish influence, not, of
          course, the influence of political Judaism, which had just been finally swept
          away, but of philosophical and religious Judaism. In spite of the late
          insurrection, the suppression of which was commemorated by the Arch of Titus,
          it was no longer considered bad form to show sympathy for the court-favoured
          Jews, to honour their religion, and even to some extent to practise it. Now, as
          formerly, after Pompey’s victory, conquered Judea exercised a compelling
          influence over her conquerors. But not for long, for with the Flavian dynasty,
          and even soon after the death of Titus, the imperial favour passed away from
          these princely or cultivated Jewish magnates. Nevertheless, this passing
          affectation of Jewish ways could not but add to the undermining influence long
          exercised by Eastern monotheism, on the old pagan faiths, in the highest Roman
          society. From this time onward—the statement is justified by several known
          facts—Christianity began to make way among the great patrician families. Not
          only foreigners, insignificant folk, slaves, or officials of the imperial
          household, but members of the families of the Pomponii,
          the Acilii, even of the Flavii,
          less illustrious, but a reigning house, began to turn to Christ. Even under
          Nero a great lady, Pomponia Graecina, had attracted attention by her grave and
          retired life. She was accused of foreign superstition ; but her husband, A. Plautius, claiming as head of the family the right to try
          her, pronounced her innocent, and she lived until Domitian's reign. She was
          probably a Christian. M'. Acilius Glabrio, consul in
          91, and Flavius Clemens, first cousin of Domitian, consul in 95, were also—the
          latter certainly, and the other very probably—members of the Church in Rome.
          The most ancient burying-place devoted exclusively to the use of the Christian
          community in Rome, the cemetery of Priscilla, was in a villa of the Acilii, on the Via Salaria. On the Via Ardeatina,
          the cemetery of Domitilla was on ground belonging to Flavia Domitilla, wife of
          the Consul Clemens. The Christianity of these patricians was therefore not
          merely platonic; they took their part in the practical life of the community,
          and supplied their wants. Before long the patricians also took their place
          among the martyrs. The gloomy and suspicious tyrant Domitian did not persecute
          only philosophers or politicians who still regretted the liberty of old days,
          or retained some regard for their own dignity. This austere censor, and
          vigilant guardian of the old traditions of Roman life, discovered that they
          were seriously threatened by the invasion of Jewish and Christian customs.
          Clemens and his wife, Flavia Domitilla, “were charged with atheism, an
          accusation for which many who affected Jewish ways suffered, some death, others
          confiscation of goods”. 
             The consul
          was executed in the very year of his consulship (95); Flavia Domitilla was
          exiled to the island of Pandataria; another Flavia
          Domitilla, their niece, was interned in the island of Pontia.
          Domitian, however, recognized two of the sons of Clemens as his
          heirs-presumptive, giving them the names of Vespasian and Domitian, and was
          having them educated by the distinguished rhetorician Quintilian, when he
          himself was assassinated (96 A.D.). Thus ended the imperial destiny of the
          Flavian house, which, however, still continued to exist, some of its members
          even holding office. The Christian tradition was kept up in the family of the
          martyred consul. He was a son of Vespasian’s eldest brother Flavius Sabinus,
          who perished in 69, in the conflict between the partisans of his brother and
          those of Vitellius, Prefect of Rome, in Nero’s day. He must have witnessed in
          64 the burning of the city, and the massacre of the Christians. Probably they
          made a lasting impression on him. The gentleness, moderation, and horror of
          bloodshed, for which he was remarkable in his later years, led to his being
          accused of cowardice. 
             The
          Christians of the Flavian family had their burying-place on the Via Ardeatina; the monumental gateway leading to it, and a
          spacious gallery adorned with very ancient frescoes, have been discovered.
          Here, no doubt, were buried the Martyr-Consul, and the earliest members of his
          family. A little farther the Greek epitaph of a Flavius Sabinus and his sister
          Titiana was found, and then a fragment of inscription, which may have indicated
          a general burying-place of the Flavii:  (sepulc) rum (flavi)orum. 
             All that we know of these illustrious converts comes from secular authors,
          confirmed by inscriptions and other monuments in the Catacombs. Written
          testimony from Christian sources is entirely wanting. In those very early
          times, the Christian community in Rome must have contained more than one
          witness of the first days; the authority of these companions or disciples of
          the Apostles was evidently as great as was that of the presbiteri in Asia. They were a
          support to primitive tradition, a shelter to the dawn of the hierarchy. It is
          possible also that some books of the New Testament, such as the Gospels of Mark
          and Luke, the Acts of the Apostles, the first Epistle of St Peter, and the
          Epistle to the Hebrews, may have originated in Rome, either before or after the
          fall of Jerusalem, and St Paul's Epistles may have been first collected there.
          Hut of all this we have no certain evidence. 
             With the letter of St Clement, we emerge
          into the light of day. Towards the end of Domitian’s reign, trouble had arisen
          in the Church of Corinth. A party of the younger Christians set up an
          opposition to the elders of the community; they had turned out several of the
          college of presbyters appointed either "by the Apostles, or by wise men
          after their day with the consent of the whole Church. The noise of these
          dissensions had penetrated beyond the Church, and its good name suffered in
          consequence. The Church of Rome, on hearing of this, thought it right to
          intervene. Sudden and repeated calamities had just befallen it, but as soon as
          possible three envoys were sent to Corinth. Claudius Ephebus, Valerius Bito,
          and Fortunatus, from their youth up to their present advanced age had lived as
          examples to the Roman Church. Christians of such long standing would no doubt
          have known the apostles. They were to testify, at Corinth, to the feelings and
          hopes of the Romans. They were, moreover, entrusted with a letter from the
          Church in Rome. We know who wrote it. It was Clement the Bishop, whose name
          occurs third after the apostles, in the best authenticated episcopal
          catalogues. 
             Clement was
          identified by Origen with the person of the same name, who was associated with
          St Paul in the evangelization of Philippi. He also was certainly old enough to
          have seen and talked with the apostles, as St Irenaeus says. But he could
          hardly have belonged to the family of the consul, Flavius Clemens. He had,
          however, no doubt, a deep regard for everything Roman; he speaks of our princes, the soldiers under our generals; the military discipline filled
          him with admiration. But his familiarity with the Holy Scriptures, with the Old
          Testament, and even with the New (the Epistles of St Paul, St Peter, St James,
          and the Epistle to the Hebrews) rather suggests a Jewish education. Perhaps he
          was a freed-man of the Flavian family. However this may be, his letter is an
          admirable testimony to the wise and practical spirit animating Roman piety,
          even in those remote days. First he dwells on the unseemliness of discord and strife
          (3-6), then he counsels obedience to the Will of God (7-12), points to the
          greatness of the reward promised to simple and righteous souls (23-26) and the
          need for order in the Church. He takes his illustrations from the discipline of
          the Roman armies, and from the sacerdotal hierarchy of the Old Testament
          (37-42). Then turning to the New Covenant, the author points out that the
          Ministry of the Church comes from the apostles and Jesus Christ, that its
          authority is lawful and to be obeyed (42-47). He entreats the Corinthians to
          repent, to return to peace and order, and to submit to salutary chastisement;
          if certain people are an obstacle to peace, they must not shrink from exiling
          them. The Church should pray for those who are seditious (48-58). With rather
          an abrupt transition, he at once adds example to precept, formulating (59-61) a
          long prayer, which has but a remote connection with the Corinthian troubles. We
          may see in it, not perhaps the solemn formula of the Roman liturgy at the end
          of the 1st century, but a specimen of the way Eucharistic prayer was developed
          by the leaders of the Christian assemblies. 
             He ends his letter with a reminder of the exhortations already given, and
          with salutations. From end to end, it is inspired by a fine simplicity of faith
          and pious wisdom. It contains none of the astounding peculiarities of some
          ancient writers, only the common Christianity expressed with perfect good
          sense. There is not even any anxiety as to heresy or schism. In the Roman
          Church, at that moment, perfect peace reigned. 
             The mission
          from Rome apparently met with success. Seventy years later, in the days of
          Bishop Dionysius, the letter of Clement was amongst the books read by the
          Corinthians side by side with the Holy Scriptures, in their Sunday assemblies.
          And, moreover, it was in one of the most ancient manuscripts of the Greek
          Bible, that Clement's letter first became known to us. Only a few years after
          it was written St Polycarp possessed it, and treated it as an apostolical
          letter. 
             Twenty
          years after the Corinthian dissensions and St Clement's letter, the Romans were
          edified by the presence and the martyrdom of St Ignatius of Antioch. On this
          event a letter from the martyr himself, written from Asia to the Romans, is our
          only source of information. The theme of this letter is unique. The Confessor
          for the Faith, condemned to be thrown to the wild beasts, and sent from Syria
          to Rome for the purpose, fears lest his Roman brethren should impede his
          attainment of the object of his journey. He entreats them very earnestly not to
          hinder his martyrdom. It seems that they could have saved him, though we cannot
          very well see how. He says : "Suffer me to be the prey of the beasts;
          through them I shall reach God. I am the wheat of God; suffer me to be ground
          by the teeth of beasts, to become the white bread of Christ. Rather encourage
          the wild beasts that they may be my grave, and leave nothing of my body; and
          thus my burial will be no burden to anyone ... I do not command you like Peter and
          Paul did. They were apostles : I am only a condemned criminal. They were free:
          I am a slave to this hour; but if I die, I become the freeman of Jesus Christ;
          in Him I shall rise again free." 
             This
          pathetic letter not only testifies to the longing for martyrdom which consumed
          Ignatius, but also to the Bishop of Antioch's respect for the great Roman
          Church. It opens with a long and formal salutation, in which, more than in his
          other letters, he piles up complimentary phrases: “The Church which presides in
          the place of the Roman land ... the Church which presides in the Agape (or in
          charity)”. Ignatius evidently regards the Church in Rome as presiding over the
          other churches, and also over the Christian brotherhood. 
             He obtained
          from Rome what he wished, liberty to be a martyr. No doubt, it was in the
          recently erected Coliseum, that the "wheat of God" was ground by the
          wild beasts. But his burial was not left to them. Some of his disciples had
          followed to Rome to see him die; they gathered up the fragments of his body and
          bore them back to Syria. 
             The Romans
          also had a Martyr-Bishop, Telesphorus, who, says St Irenaeus, died gloriously
          under Hadrian, but he gives us no details. 
             The
          contemporaries of Clement, Ignatius, and Telesphorus also knew the prophet
          Hermas, and heard his communication to the congregation of the visions and
          instructions, which he afterwards combined in his celebrated book, the
            Shepherd.
           
           THE SHEPHERD OF HERMAS
                 
           In the book
          of Hermas, so unusual in its form, we have a precious sample of what might be
          termed prophetic literature, such as may have emanated from the prophets of the
          New Testament. It was finished, in its present form, whilst the author's
          brother, Bishop Pius, presided over the See of Rome, i.e. about 140 A.D.
          But it had gone through several editions. The earliest must go back to the time
          of Trajan and the episcopate of Clement. 
             Hermas was a Roman Christian, a freedman and a rural proprietor, married,
          and the father of a rather unsatisfactory family. He was never, however, so
          absorbed by his work in the fields nor his domestic trials so great, but that
          his mind was continually fixed upon the Christian hope, and incessantly
          concerned for his own salvation and that of others. He was a simple soul, of
          limited culture. Like all Christians of his day, he was familiar, up to a
          point, with the Old Testament, and several books of the New. The only book,
          however, which he actually quotes is apocryphal. Urged by some inner force to
          communicate to others his views on moral reform, he expresses them as
          revelations. In the first and earliest part of his book, the Visions, he
          converses with a woman who represents the Church. In the two other parts, the
          Precepts (mandata) and the Parables (similitudines), the Seer is another imaginary
          person, the Shepherd from whom the book takes its definite title. 
             Whether it
          is the Shepherd or the Church which speaks, whether the thought is
          expressed directly, or wrapped in symbolic form, one idea constantly asserts
          itself The faithful, and the author, first of all are far from being what they
          should be, or have promised to be. There is a remedy; repentance. Hermas is
          charged to impress upon the Christian community that God pardons all who
          repent. He therefore preaches post-baptismal repentance as the apostles
          preached repentance, followed by baptism as a consecration. His is a second penitence,
          a second opportunity granted by God, before the final day of reckoning. 
             The
          interest of the book lies less in the main idea, than in the way it is worked
          out. Hermas’ description of particular cases, and of the sinners' different
          circumstances, give us some notion of the inner life of the Roman Church in the
          first half of the 2nd century. 
             At that
          time, under Trajan and Hadrian, the Christian communities were in a very
          precarious condition. In spite of the more lenient rescripts of these emperors,
          the disciples were incessantly harassed, brought up before the magistrates, and
          required to renounce their religion. If they obeyed they were at once released;
          if not, it meant death. 
             Confronted
          by this alternative, some had fallen away, and others were falling away every
          day. Already apostasy was a common scandal. There were degrees of guilt. Some
          simply apostatized for the sake of their worldly interests. Others added
          blasphemy to denial; they were not ashamed publicly to curse their God and
          their brethren. Some even went so far as to betray their fellows and denounce
          them. On the other hand, the Church gloried in many martyrs: not all, however,
          of equal merit. Some trembling at the prospect of suffering, hesitated to
          confess the faith, though at the last the voice of conscience prevailed and
          they shed their blood for their religion. Hermas distinguishes these from the
          more noble- hearted martyrs, whose hearts never failed a moment. Yet all are
          part of the mystical building which represents the Church of God; only the
          apostles come before these martyrs. And besides martyrs, he refers to
          confessors, who had suffered for the Faith, without being called to shed their
          blood. 
             The Christian community, as a whole, led a tolerably upright life. Hut
          still imperfections, and even vices, called for correction. The pervading cliquishness led to dissension, back-biting, and malice. They clung too much also to this
          world's goods. For many, business obligations and social duties involved
          frequent association with the heathen, entailing serious danger. Men forgot the
          brotherhood of the Gospel, and held aloof from the common gatherings, dreading
          contact with the common folk, who, of course, formed the majority in the
          Christian congregation. Then faith suffered, and all but the name of Christian
          was gone. The remembrance of baptism was gradually lost in intercourse with the
          pagan world; the slightest temptation swept away their enfeebled faith, and on
          very flimsy pretexts they would deny it altogether. Some changed their religion
          even without persecution, attracted simply by the ingenious systems of
          philosophy, to which they had lightly lent an ear. 
             Even
          amongst the more steadfast believers, sad moral lapses occurred. The flesh is
          weak. But these momentary failings were not irreparable; penitence might
          expiate them. In the eyes of Hermas, wavering faith was a graver danger; he
          often refers to that spiritual state in which the soul seems torn between
          assent and denial. 
             The clergy
          even were not above reproach. Deacons had proved unfaithful to the secular
          interests in their charge, appropriated to themselves money intended for widows
          and orphans: priests also were prone to unjust judgment, proud, negligent, and
          ambitious. 
             The book of
          Hermas is a great self-examination on the part of the Church in Rome. And all
          these grievous disclosures need not surprise us, for the character of the book
          demands that evil should be more prominent in it than good, the exception
          rather than the rule. But in spite of this, it is clear that, in the eyes of
          Hermas, the exemplary Christians, not the sinners, were in the majority. Thus,
          in Similitude VIII the moral status of each Christian is symbolised by a green
          willow wand which each has received from the angel of the Lord, and which,
          after an interval, has to be given back. Some return it withered, split or
          rotten; some, half withered, half green; some, two-thirds green; and so on.
          These different degrees of preservation correspond to degrees of moral
          delinquency. Now, the majority return their willow wands as green as they
          received them—that is, they had been faithful to their baptismal vows. 
             So also, if
          Hermas dwells, more than once, on dissensions in the presbytery, and on other
          shortcomings of leading ecclesiastics, he also knows many worthy of high
          commendation; he exalts their charity and hospitality; he places them in the
          apostolic company in the highest seats in his mystic tower. 
             In fact,
          the impression derived from this picture is, that though the Church, in these
          very early days, was not composed exclusively of saints, yet they formed the
          great majority. Hermas never alludes to Jews, and very seldom to pagans. His
          book is intended exclusively for the faithful: he has nothing to do with what
          is going on outside the Church. We have already seen his attitude to the
          dawning heresies. He does not look on them as definite systems, still less as
          organised sects, rivals of the main body. He knew only a few prating fools who
          went about sowing strange doctrines, always insisting on their knowledge, but
          having in fact no understanding. Hermas, anxious above all for morality,
          reproaches them with dissuading sinners from repentance. He wonders what will
          be the fate of these misguided teachers. He does not despair of their
          salvation: some have already returned to the right way, have even become
          conspicuous for good deeds; others will also return, at least so he hopes. 
             Repentance,
          as Hermas preaches it, is a means of expiating post-baptismal sin. Some taught
          that after baptism, no remission was possible. This is not his view. Even after
          baptism forgiveness is available for sin, even for the worst of sins; but this
          second conversion must be serious, life must not pass in recurring alternations
          of sin and repentance. Hermas does not mention any of the external forms of
          repentance found in use soon after his time. He speaks neither of confession
          nor absolution. As to works of expiation, he no doubt recognises them, but he
          insists on their futility unless accompanied by sincere conversion of heart. He
          refers to the practice of public fasts, observed by the whole community—the
          stations, as they were called—and he criticises, not the institution itself,
          nor fasting in general, but the vain trust which some men had in this practice.
          A fast demands, first and foremost, moral reform, strict observance of the law
          of God, and then the practice of charity. On fast days he allows bread and
          water alone; the saving on the usual daily disbursement goes to the poor. 
             Hermas with his simple nature, and absorbing care for moral reform, was not
          the man to indulge in theological speculation. But    The Shepherddoes raise a few difficulties of this nature. A glimpse of his conception of the
          Redemption, the Trinity, and the Incarnation is given us in Similitude V, and
          in a curious connection. The prophet is by way of inculcating the value of
          works of supererogation, a subject which would not, on the face of it, appear
          to lead up to metaphysical disquisitions. However, that is what occurs. The Shepherd  begins with a parable. A man has an estate and many servants. Part of his
          land he sets apart as a vineyard, then, choosing out one of his servants, he
          charges him to prop up the vine. The servant does more than he was commanded:
          not only does he fix the props for the vine, but he clears away the weeds. The
          master is much pleased. Having taken counsel with his son and his friends, he
          announces that the good servant shall be admitted to a share of the inheritance
          with his son. The son, having given a feast, sends a share to the good servant,
          who in his turn shares it with his fellow-servants, and thus gains fresh
          praise. 
             So much for
          the parable. Now for the explanation. The estate is the world; the master is
          God, Creator of all; the vineyard is the Church, the company of the elect, in
          all ages; the master's son is the Holy Spirit the servant is Jesus Christ; the
          friends and advisers are the six higher angels. Jesus Christ's work is
          symbolized by three actions—the staking of the vine, the destruction of the
          weeds, and the sharing of the feast. The stakes for the vine are the lower
          angels whom the Saviour has set to guard the Church; the destruction of the
          weeds is redemption, which has rooted out sin; and sharing the food stands for
          preaching the Gospel. 
             Here we
          have, before the Incarnation, but two Divine Persons, God and the Holy Spirit,
          whose relations are represented as those of father and son. The Holy Spirit is
          therefore identified with the Word, the pre-existent Christ. The same idea
          recurs a little further on: "The pre-existent Holy Spirit created all
          things, and God caused it to dwell in a body of flesh chosen by Himself. This
          flesh, in which dwelt the Holy Spirit, served the Spirit well in all purity and
          in all sanctity, without ever inflicting the least stain upon it. After the
          flesh had thus conducted itself so well and chastely, after it had assisted the
          Spirit and worked in all things with it, always showing itself to be strong and
          courageous, God admitted it to share with the Holy Spirit. . . . He therefore
          consulted His son and His glorious angels, in order that this flesh, which had
          served the Spirit without any cause for reproach, might obtain a place of
          habitation, and might not lose the reward of its services. There is a reward
          for all flesh which, through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, shall be found
          without stain." 
             To sum up, the Trinity of Hermas appears to consist of God the Father, of a
          second Divine Person (Son of God, Holy Spirit), and finally of the Saviour,
          who, as the reward of his merits is raised to the Godhead. This view is the
          exact theological counterpart of the curious stories we have come across in the
          old traditionalists of Asia. It is astounding that men like John the Elder and
          his kind could tell such fantastic tales; and not less surprising that the
          Roman prophet should go so far astray in his theology. But still, that part of
          his theory which is questionable is not very prominent. What first attracts
          attention are his dissertations on the value of good works and on moral purity.
          These are based upon the always appropriate example of the Saviour. The
          features, which are not easy to fit in satisfactorily, appear only in the
          background, and seem not to have been noticed in old days. Throughout
          Christendom, in the 2nd century, The Shepherd was accepted as a book of
          high religious authority, and read in the Church assemblies together with the
          Holy Scriptures, though not as on an equality with them. Gradually, however,
          its authority diminished : precisians, like
          Tertullian, found fault with its sympathy for sinners; cultivated men were
          startled by its eccentric style and the strange incidents in the visions. The
          Arians quoted Hermas' celebrated statement of the Divine Unity. But this would
          hardly damage him, and St Athanasius, following Clement of Alexandria and
          Origen, holds The Shepherds in high esteem, and employs it for the moral
          instruction of catechumens. Like Clement, Hermas had the honour of being
          included in manuscript of the Bible, and is found at the end of the celebrated codex
            Sinaiticus. 
               The Shepherd was, as I have already said, finished, and
          published in its final form, when Bishop Pius, brother of Hermas, occupied
          "the see of the city of Rome". Pius was the ninth
          "successor" of the apostles. Of his eight predecessors, whose sequence
          St Irenaeus gives us, Clement alone is known by his letter; Telesphorus by his
          martyrdom. Of Linus and Anacletus, the first two on the list, there is nothing
          to say, except that Linus may be the person of that name mentioned in the
          Second Epistle to Timothy. Clement's successors, Evaristus, Alexander, Xystus,
          are also unknown. After Telesphorus comes Hyginus, the predecessor of Pius. We
          have no other material for a chronological list of these bishops, except a
          catalogue, of which the first edition may date from the time of the Emperor
          Commodus, and Pope Eleutherus, or a little earlier.
          Figures are given after each name. 
             These give
          a total of 125 years. Reckoning back from 189 A.D. when Eleutherus died, these 125 years bring us back exactly to the year 64, the supposed date
          of the martyrdom of St Peter. The chronology of the first popes would
          accordingly stand thus: 
              
               
  
               But these
          figures, even supposing they have been exactly transmitted, must be taken as
          round numbers, arrived at by ignoring all fractions of years whether above or
          below the number given. We cannot therefore depend absolutely on the dates
          obtained from them. In the only instance where we can check the table it is
          erroneous. St Polycarp came to Rome and was received by Pope Anicetus A.D. 154
          at the latest. 
             Whatever be
          the truth respecting this chronological table, the data as to the episcopal
          succession in Rome is of the greatest evidential value. Those successors of the
          apostles must clearly be regarded as assisted, in the government of the Church,
          by a college of priests who shared the rule of the Christian community,
          presided over its Church assemblies, judged disputants, and looked after the
          training and instruction of neophytes. Here, as elsewhere, deacons and
          deaconesses attended specially to the distribution of alms. In the expressions
          of the time, the bishop does not always stand out very prominently from his
          college of assessors, nor were the clergy always differentiated from the rest
          of the congregation. Social life in those days being very intense, all that was
          done or said was the affair of the whole body, rather than of the leaders. 
             Towards the
          end of Hadrian's reign, in the time of Bishop Hyginus, we first hear of
          heresies being brought to Rome. Valentinus of Alexandria, Cerdo, and Marcion
          came and established themselves there, and tried, not only to disseminate their
          views in the congregations, but, as some witnesses testify, to get the
          government of the Church into their own hands. It is most unlikely that some,
          of those inventors of counterfeit religions, who swarmed in Syria and Asia, had
          not come from the East to Rome, long before this time. Hermas seems to have
          known some, and from what he says, their success was but slight. Valentinus
          with his subtle philosophy and method of interpretation, and his tendency to
          compromise, attracted more attention, and succeeded in founding a school. He
          made a long stay in Rome under Pius and Anicetus, the successors of Hyginus.
          Marcion arrived about the same time, and managed to retain his connection with
          the Church for some years, though he had once to produce a written defence of
          his faith. But this position could not be permanent, and 144 A.D. the final
          rupture took place, and a Marcionite community was set up in opposition to the
          main body of the Church. The Marcionites were at first very successful. The
          philosopher Justin was then in Rome, and he who spoke and wrote perpetually
          against the various prevalent heresies, specially attacked Marcion. But Marcion
          managed to hold his own. He was still in Rome, at the time of Anicetus, when
          the venerable Bishop Polycarp of Smyrna appeared there (154 A.D.). The object
          of his journey was to arrange with the Roman Church some thorny questions,
          especially that of Paschal observance, on which Asiatics and Romans were not in accord. It is easy to conceive the pious interest
          awakened by the sight of this famous old man, who had known the eye-witnesses
          of the Gospel, and had been taught by the apostles of Asia. Anicetus welcomed
          him eagerly, and desired Polycarp to preside in his stead, at the assemblies
          for worship. Polycarp's personality was in itself a living embodiment of
          Christian tradition, and his presence made a great impression on the
          schismatics; many, renouncing their heresies, returned to the main Church. One
          day he met Marcion, whom he had seen before in Asia. "Do you recognize
          me?" asked the heretic. "Yes," replied Polycarp, "I
          recognize the first-born of Satan." 
             Anicetus
          could not fall in with Polycarp's views on the Easter question; neither could
          he bring over Polycarp to the Roman use. But they did not fall out on this
          account, and the Asiatics who were settled in Rome,
          continued to receive the Eucharist with the local congregation in spite of this
          slight divergence. This had long been the accepted custom, ever since the
          episcopate of Xystus. Polycarp parted on friendly terms from the Romans and
          their bishop. A few months later they learnt that Polycarp had sealed with his
          blood his long and worthy career. 
             HEGESIPPUS
           There was,
          at this time, a great influx into Rome from all parts. From the Carpocratian
          School of Alexandria came a woman teacher named Marcellina, who gained many
          adherents. Among the followers of Marcion, one of his disciples named Apelles,
          stood out; he afterwards took the lead in a new development of the Marcionite
          doctrine. Justin, the ardent defender of the faith, was joined by another
          philosopher, Tatian, from far-off Assyria, who for awhile fought by his side against the Cynics. From Palestine came Hegesippus, a
          traveller much given to the study of doctrines and traditions. He could
          enlighten the Romans on many interesting details regarding the older Christians
          of his own land; and he, on his side, received from them, not only particulars
          as to the present state of their Church, but also as to earlier times. He seems
          to have carried back from Rome a catalogue of bishops, ending with Anicetus;
          this list he lengthened himself, so as to include Eleutherus,
          in whose pontificate he published his recollections of his journey to Rome,
          where he had known Eleutherus, as a deacon under
          Anicetus. 
             Such was
          the Christian community of Rome at the end of Antoninus' reign. The whole of
          Christendom seemed with one accord to have sent thither its most characteristic
          figures : Polycarp, the patriarch of Asia; Marcion, the rugged sectarian of
          Pontus; Valentinus, the chief exponent of Alexandrian Gnosticism; the woman
          teacher, Marcellina; Hegesippus, the Judaic-Christian of Syria; Justin and
          Tatian, philosophers and apologists. It was a sort of microcosm, an epitome of
          the whole Christianity of the age. As we see them moving freely from place to
          place, discussing, quarrelling, teaching, and praying, it is difficult to
          believe that they were all outlaws. But so it was. They all lived with
          martyrdom hanging over their heads. Hermas and Justin speak of it continually;
          Marcion also; Polycarp and Justin will both die for the Faith. Certainly the
          Roman Empire never knew a better prince than Antoninus, who then reigned;
          nevertheless Christianity was under an interdict, and the magistrates, in Rome
          as elsewhere, continued to enforce the Law. The fine Temple, which the emperor
          had just built, at the foot of the Via Sacra, to his dead wife Faustina, was
          then in all the glory of its new marble. More than one procession of Christians
          must have defiled before it, on their way from the tribunals of the Forum to
          meet a martyr's death. But the only Roman martyrs of this period known to us,
          are those St Justin speaks of in his Apology, Ptolemaeus,
          Lucius, and a third whose name he does not mention, who were all executed by
          order of the prefect Urbicus. 
             Justin
          himself was in great danger: Crescens, the Cynic philosopher whom he handled so
          roughly, never lost sight of him. This was perhaps why he left Rome. At the
          beginning of Marcus Aurelius' reign he returned; and this time, though Crescens
          does not seem to have been actively concerned, Justin fell a victim to his
          zeal. He was arrested with other Christians, some of whom were neophytes
          converted by him. They were brought before the prefect Rusticus (163-167), who,
          having satisfied himself of their Christianity, had them scourged and beheaded.
          It was a motley crew that shared Justin's martyrdom. There was a woman named
          Charito, and five men : a Cappodocian, Euelpistus, a slave of the imperial house; a certain Hierax
          of Iconium; and three others, Chariton, Paeon, and Liberianus. 
             Of all these old generations of the Roman Church, one most precious
          monumental memorial, and one only, remains. It is the primitive upper gallery
          in the catacomb of Priscilla. Their epitaphs may still be read there; they are
          brief, consisting of the names only, with sometimes the greeting Pax tecum.
          Here and there, a few archaic paintings decorate the chambers, where small
          groups may have met in funereal gatherings. Other burying-places of the same
          date are found in the south of Rome; later on they were absorbed in the
          catacombs known by the names of Pretextatus,
          Domitilla, and Callista. But none of them is so large in extent, or so regular,
          as the galleries of Priscilla. The latter evidently represents the first common
          cemetery of the Roman Church. 
             About the
          time that St Justin died for the Faith he had so long defended, the guidance of
          the Roman Church passed from the hands of Anicetus into those of Soter. Of him,
          we know only that, like his predecessor Clement, he wrote a letter to the
          Church of Corinth. But the occasion for this letter was very different. The
          letter of Soter was sent with a gift of money, intended for the relief of the
          poor, and of the confessors condemned to the mines. Rich and charitable, the
          Roman Church gave gladly of her abundance to Christian communities in less easy
          circumstances. This was already a traditional custom, and was kept up even
          through the last persecutions. Soter's letter is not extant; it is known only
          from the reply of Dionysius, Bishop of Corinth. Of this Eusebius has preserved
          some fragments.
             Around the
          main Church, heresy continued to spread. The Valentinian sect took shape. It
          had two famous representatives in Rome, Heracleon and Ptolemaeus, the direct disciples of Valentinus. The
          first of these slightly modified the genesis of the aeons, who, in the early
          system were always grouped in pairs. Heracleon formed
          the Pleroma into a monarchy, placing a single being at its head, without any
          consort. From him alone proceeded the first couple, and consequently all the
          others. Heracleon was a most copious writer. Clement
          of Alexandria and Origen often quote him. His most remarkable work is a
          commentary on the Gospel of St John. As for Ptolemaeus,
          St. Irenaeus specially opposed him and his followers; and the Valentinian
          Gnosticism is best known to us in the form which St. Irenaeus either preserved,
          or gave to it. A certain Mark, who had long been a difficulty in Asia, appears
          in the West, about the time of Marcus Aurelius. From St. Irenaeus, St
          Hippolytus, or Tertullian, we hear of others also : Secundus, Alexander, Colarbasus, and Theotinus; we do
          not know, and it would be of no interest if we did know, what modifications of
          the system they represented. 
             But it was not only as to doctrine that divisions arose; divergent views on
          ritual appeared before long. Ordinary baptism was sufficient for
          "psychics": but for the initiation of the "pneumatics",
          something further was required. This the more sensible opposed, on the ground
          that, Gnosticism being a purely spiritual religion, the regeneration of the
          initiated came simply by knowledge of the mystery. Others again brought the
          candidate, with great solemnity, into a nuptial chamber; a rite quite in
          keeping with the prevalent notions of the celestial Pleroma. The greater
          number, however, preferred a counterfeit of Christian initiation, as practised
          by the main body of the Church. They baptized, therefore, with water,
          pronouncing such formulas as: In the name of the Unknownable Father of all things, of the Truth, which is the mother of all, and of him who
            descended in Jesus (the aeon Christ). They used also Hebrew terms : In
              the name of Hahhamoth, etc. The initiate replied: I am fortified and redeemed; I have redeemed my soul, etc. Those present
          exclaimed : Peace be to all those on whom this name rests. There was
          besides an unction with perfumed oil. Sometimes balm was mixed with the water;
          thus both parts of the sacrament were combined. This ceremony was called Apolytrosis or redemption. There was
          another for the dying, or the dead. They were given formulas, by the use of
          which in the other world they were to triumph over the inferior powers and the
          Demiurge; then abandoning to the first their material elements, and their vital
          soul to the Demiurge, they would rise into the higher regions reserved for the
          spiritual soul.
             Marcion
          must have died about the same time as Polycarp and Justin. His
          fellow-schismatics called him "most holy Master", and regarded him
          with the utmost veneration. They believed him to be with Christ and St Paul in
          heaven; the Saviour having Paul on His right hand, and Marcion on His left. But
          this common consent, in venerating their Master, implied no agreement as to his
          doctrine, which, as we have seen, contained rather incompatible elements. This
          the Master was not much concerned about, but after his death his followers
          tried to reconcile them. Marcionism started with an antithesis between the good
          God and the just God. In the hands of the metaphysicians this led before long
          to two first principles, both essential, and both essentially opposed. This teaching
          was that of Politus and Basilicus,
          two notable Marcionites, under Marcus Aurelius. The school of Syneros and Lucanus, by making the lower god into two, a
          just god and a bad god, ended by acknowledging three first principles. This
          Trinitarian Marcionism eventually proved so successful that it quite eclipsed
          the original dualist form. In the 3rd and 4th centuries, the Marcionites are
          frequently represented as believing in three gods.
             But at this
          moment, the most conspicuous teacher in the sect was a certain Apelles, who
          endeavoured to do away with the latent, or avowed, dualism, and to get back to
          a single first principle. Apelles first lived with Marcion in Rome, and
          subsequently went to Alexandria, whence long after he returned to Rome. Rhodo, who knew him personally, draws a curious portrait of
          him as a venerable old man, of a dignified habit of life. He had with him a clairvoyante named Philomena, whose hallucinations he
          collected in a book of Manifestations. Rhodo, having
          drawn him into a discussion, tried to make him explain how he reconciled his
          doctrines with those of Marcion. But Apelles, soon wearying of a dispute which
          was not turning to his advantage, replied, that it was useless to try to solve
          all these questions, that it was best for each to keep to his own particular
          belief, and that all who had faith in the Crucified would be saved, if they
          lived virtuously. As to proving that there was but one only first principle, he
          gladly renounced the attempt, he was satisfied with being convinced of it
          himself. Nothing was to be learnt from the Prophets, who vied with each other
          in contradictions and lies.
             Apelles'
          system of evolution excited Rhodo's most lively
          interest. "He recognises", says Rhodo, a
          single first principle, as we do". Yet there are differences. Thanks to St
          Epiphanius we have a summary of Apelles' system, which seems to be his own
          work: "There is but one good God, one first principle, one single
          ineffable Power. This one God, this one first principle, is not concerned with
          anything in our world. He created another God, who then created all
          things—heaven, earth, and everything in the world. But this second God was not
          good, and the things made by him were not well made''. From a metaphysical
          point of view, this greatly resembles Arianism, with the addition of the
          Marcionite insistence on goodness as an essential incommunicable attribute of God. 
             Apelles
          also softened down the fundamental Docetism of Marcion. Jesus Christ was no
          phantom; he had a body, not derived from a human mother, but borrowed from the
          four elements. In this body, he was indeed crucified, and really appeared to
          his disciples after the resurrection. When he reascended he restored the
          elements of his body to Nature. Otherwise Apelles held to the teaching of his
          Master. By eliminating Docetism, he got rid of one of the most potent
          objections to Marcionism. As to his representing the author of the world as
          created by the supreme God, clearly that was inevitable, unless, following Politus and Basilicus, the
          existence of two co-eternal first principles was admitted. The relative
          position of the two parties among the Marcionites was very similar to that of
          the partizans of Arianism and consubstantialism,
          later on, in the orthodox Church. In Marcionism, Apelles was a heretic, in the
          same way as Arius was in the Catholic Church. 
             Rhodo, Apelles'
          opponent, was an Asiatic, long established in Rome. There he had made
          acquaintance with Tatian, and became his disciple; but he neither followed him
          in his journeys, nor in his doctrinal eccentricities. Eusebius knew several
          works of his. The most important, dedicated to a certain Callistion,
          was against the Marcionites; this contains his description of Apelles. He also
          wrote on the six days (of Creation). 
             During the
          episcopate of Soter, Rome heard the astounding news that a Roman army,
          commanded by the emperor himself, had been saved by the prayers of a troop of
          Christian soldiers. Such at least was the version of the affair which was
          current in Christian circles. The precarious position of the army is undoubted.
          And we also know, that the Romans in their extremity, invoked all the different
          divine powers whose rites the soldiers affected. But when the column,
          commemorative of the victories of Marcus Aurelius in Germania, was erected in
          the Campus Martius, the miracle was ascribed to the gods of the State. In those
          celebrated bas-reliefs, Jupiter Pluvius is still to be seen with the saving
          torrential rain— which enabled the legions to escape thirst and defeat
          —streaming from his hair, his arms, and his whole person. 
             The column
          of Antoninus was still in course of construction when, about 175 A.D., Pope
          Soter was succeeded by Eleutherus, the deacon of the
          days of Anicetus. In spite of the services of the "thundering
          Legion", persecution was everywhere on the increase. Eleutherus will be found before long in communication with the Martyrs of Lyons, and their
          messenger, St Irenseus. The new prophets of Phrygia
          also made a considerable stir at that time. The Roman Church was asked to take
          up a definite position about them; and we shall see later, which side she
          adopted. 
             MARCIA
           On the
          death of Marcus Aurelius, the power remained exclusively in the hands of his
          son Commodus, who for more than three years had been associated with him in the
          government. He had no intention of conforming to the paternal maxims. Perhaps
          that is why he left the Christians in peace. Moreover, the Christians had
          influential connections in his immediate circle. His favourite Marcia was a
          Christian. Her life—in such surroundings—could scarcely be in strict accord
          with Gospel precepts, but at least she did all in her power to soften, by
          imperial favour, the rigorous laws of proscription. Her former tutor, a eunuch
          named Hyacinthus, then a member of the presbyterial college, kept her up to her
          good intentions in this respect. 
             Marcia was
          not always successful. It was under Commodus that the martyrdom of Apollonius,
          a learned philosopher, took place. He seems, however, to have been treated with
          special consideration. He was judged, not by the Prefect of Rome, but by
          Perennis, the Prefect of the Pretorium, in the name
          of the emperor (180-185). And what is left of the interrogatories, shows that
          Perennis made great efforts to save him. 
             Some years
          later, Pope Victor (190) having succeeded Eleutherus,
          Marcia obtained the pardon of all the confessors who were then working as
          convicts in the mines of Sardinia. The list was given her by Victor. She
          entrusted the letters of pardon to Hyacinthus, a priest, who went to Sardinia,
          and returned with the liberated confessors
             CHAPTER XIV 
           THE CHURCHES OF THE SECOND CENTURY 
            
                
               THE
          Church of Rome, the inner life of which was so intense during the 1st century
          of its history, could not but be a centre from which Christianity radiated.
          From the beginning, it was known far and wide by its authority, teaching, zeal,
          and charity, and its evangelizing influence must have been early felt in
          regions nearer at hand. But as to this we have no detailed information. There
          is no evidence of the foundation, or existence, of any other Christian group in
          Italy, during the whole of the 2nd century. The oldest churches of the north of
          which the age can be reckoned with any accuracy, Ravenna, Milan, and Aquileia,
          date back barely to the time of Severus. Probably in the south—in the Campagna,
          for instance, or in the neighbourhood of Rome—churches were founded earlier.
          But even if this were not merely a conjecture, we should still have to
          ascertain to what extent these groups had organised themselves, and how far
          they were distinct from what was called the Church of Rome. Only the Roman
          Church is mentioned by the ancient authors of the time, or by the later writers
          who allude to this period. 
             In
          Gaul also, and in Africa, the beginnings of Christianity are shrouded in
          darkness. It is conjectured, but only conjectured, that in the 2nd century a
          Christian colony existed at Marseilles. Under Marcus Aurelius there was a
          church at Lyons and another at Vienne. A little later, St Irenaeus mentions
          churches in Germania, and also in Celtic countries. So we may conclude that in
          these remote days, Christianity had already spread to some extent in ancient
          Gaul. The Church of Lyons was a radiating centre, a kind of mother-church.
          Amongst its members were indeed many Asiatics and
          Phrygians, but the native element was represented. We hear of local
          notabilities, such as Vettius Epagathus and Alexander
          the physician. Bishop Pothinus, an old man of ninety,
          and Irenaeus the priest, presided over the little community. A severe trial
          befell them, 177 A.D. The Christians, though still few in number, were very
          unpopular. Men believed, or pretended to believe, all the abominable calumnies
          which were everywhere circulated about the Christian assemblies. No one would
          lodge them; the baths were closed to them; they were excluded from the marketplace;
          they were hooted, beaten, and ill-treated in a thousand ways. At last the
          malicious reports attained such proportions, that the authorities intervened.
          The municipal magistrates and the tribune of the Roman cohort, stationed in
          Lyons, arrested a certain number of Christians, and put them to torture, with
          their slaves, some of whom were pagans. Most of the Christians stood firm, though
          the executioners, excited by the mob, carried the torture to the extreme limits
          of cruelty. A few, however—about ten—fell away. But an especially serious
          feature was, that the pagan slaves did not hesitate to confirm the current
          tales of infanticide and debauchery. 
             The
          legate of the district being absent, these preliminary proceedings did not lead
          to any sentence. The confessors, released from the rack, were thrown, still
          quivering from their tortures, into loathsome dungeons, without either
          attention or food. Their brethren who were still at liberty, braved a thousand
          dangers to bring them help. Several died in prison, notably the old Bishop Pothinus. The apostates had not been separated from the
          rest. Touched by the loving-kindness of the confessors, and strengthened by
          their example, they nearly all repented of their weakness and professed the
          faith anew. 
             On
          the legate's return, several sentences were pronounced. Sanctus, the deacon of
          Vienne; Maturus, a neophyte of amazing courage;
          Blandina, a frail and delicate female slave, and an Asiatic, Attalus of
          Pergamos, one of the pillars of the Church of Lyons, were all condemned to be
          thrown to the wild beasts, and were despatched to the amphitheatre. The first
          to gain the martyr's palm were Sanctus and Maturus;
          they were first burned on a red-hot chair, and then devoured by raging beasts.
          That day, the beasts would not touch Blandina; so she was led back to prison,
          with Attalus, who had been discovered to be a Roman citizen. 
             The
          legate then deemed it wise to consult the emperor. Marcus Aurelius replied as
          might have been expected; the apostates were to be released, and the others
          executed. A last hearing took place. To the great surprise of the judge, and of
          all present, the apostates had become confessors, and but few remained to be
          set at liberty. 
             It
          was now the season when crowds poured into Lyons, from all the cities of Gaul,
          for the festivities held at the Altar of Rome and Augustus, at the confluence
          of the Saone and the Rhone. Games in the amphitheatre always formed a part of
          the official rejoicings. Those Christians who could claim the title of Roman
          citizens, the legate decapitated. There were still enough for the wild beasts.
          In spite of his Roman citizenship, Attalus was amongst these. He came in first,
          accompanied by the Phrygian physician Alexander, who had only just been
          arrested. Others followed. The last to suffer were Ponticus,
          a child fifteen years of age, and the admirable Blandina, who, to the last,
          upheld the courage of her companions by her example and words. The remains of
          the martyrs were burned by the executioners, and their ashes were thrown into
          the Rhone. 
             When
          all was over, a letter with the melancholy but glorious tale was sent to the
          brethren in Asia and Phrygia, in the name of the "servants of Christ,
          living at Vienne and Lyons."
             In
          this letter, the Church of Lyons also expressed its views on Montanism; some
          letters from the confessors on the same subject were also enclosed. Several
          were addressed to the brethren in Asia and Phrygia; another, to the Bishop of
          Rome, Eleutherus, was taken direct to him by the
          priest Irenaeus. The final salutation ran thus : 
             "We
          salute you in God, now and always, Father Eleutherus.
          We have begged Irenaeus, our brother and companion, to carry these letters to
          you, and we commend him to you, as a man full of zeal for the cause of Christ.
          If we had thought that rank added to anyone's merit, we should first have
          presented him to you as priest of the Church." 
             This
          commission caused the temporary absence of Irenaeus. After the catastrophe, it
          fell to him, as bishop, to reanimate the remnants of the Church of Lyons.
          During the peace which followed the persecution under Marcus Aurelius, he had
          to devote himself entirely to his duties as pastor and missionary. The variety
          of languages spoken in Gaul added to his difficulties. Greek was not sufficient
          in Lyons, an essentially Latin city; and outside the town Celtic was necessary.
          Moreover, Gnosticism was spreading in Gaul, as elsewhere. Ptolemaeus was gaining adherents there, either by personal influence, or by his writings;
          the Asiatic Mark, much opposed at home, had it more his own way with the
          simple, fervent souls of the Christians of the Rhone valley. Irenaeus dealt
          with these heretics, along with many others—for in this field increase is
          rapid—in a large work of which some valuable Greek fragments and a complete
          Latin version have come down to us. His Refutation
            of False Knowledge appeared about 185 A.D. In the following years,
          we find him much taken up with the religious affairs of Rome, in which he was
          always deeply interested. 
             In
          Africa also, the curtain, which hides the first days from us, is raised upon
          scenes of martyrdom. It is but natural to suppose that Christianity was early
          established in the great city of Carthage. That it spread thence into the
          interior, is clear from the fact, that under the proconsul Vigellius Saturninus (180 A.D.), who first took strong repressive measures, a certain
          number of Christians were found in the little town of Scilli,
          at a considerable distance from the metropolis. Twelve of these, seven men and
          five women, were tried at Carthage before the proconsul, July 17, 180 A.D., and
          upon their refusal to "return to Roman customs," they were all
          condemned to death and executed. This was not the first time that Christian
          blood flowed in Africa. The title of "first martyr" was given, in the
          4th century, to one Namphano, of Madaura,
          in Numidia. We gather from the writings of Tertullian, that at the end of the
          2nd century, Christians were very numerous in Carthage and the provinces; but
          he gives no details, and mentions four places only—Uthina, Adrumetum, Thysdrus, and Lambesis. Of the contemporary bishops of Carthage he says
          not one word. 
             Beyond
          the Adriatic, Christian evangelization, even in apostolic times, reached
          several of the coast towns in Dalmatia and Epirus; Nicopolis is mentioned in St
          Paul's epistles. Epiphanes, the son of the heretic Basilides, came from the
          island of Cephalonia. On the Greek mainland, the Church of Corinth, founded by
          St Paul, and already mentioned in connection with St Clement, still held a very
          important position. On his journey to Rome, Hegesippus conversed at Corinth
          with the Bishop Primus. 
             In
          all these lands, the reign of Antoninus had been a trying time for the
          Christians. As was always and everywhere the case, the opposition they
          encountered came less from the imperial magistrates than from the local
          authorities, whose zeal, however, had been moderated by Antoninus. Melito,
          under Marcus Aurelius, could quote rescripts of the preceding emperor addressed
          either to the assembly of Achaia, or to the municipalities of Athens, Larissa,
          and Thessalonica. 
             Dionysius,
          who succeeded Primus as Bishop of Corinth, was a man of considerable
          importance. He was consulted on all sides, and his letters quickly obtained a
          wide circulation. They were collected into a volume, perhaps during his
          lifetime: Eusebius had it in his hands, and made a very interesting abstract
          from it, for his history. In addition to the letter to the Romans, there was
          also one addressed to the Church of Lacedaemon, in which he urged them to have
          a care for sound doctrine, and for peace and unity; another letter was
          addressed to the Church in Athens, which had just passed through an all but
          fatal crisis. The Athenians, having lost their Bishop Publius during a
          persecution, had wearied of the faith and of the Christian life, and had
          relapsed almost into paganism. Happily, the zeal of their new bishop, Ouadratus, brought them back to the fold. In this letter,
          Dionysius reminds the Athenians of their first bishop, Dionysius the
          Areopagite, converted by St Paul. 
             In
          Crete, there were already at least two churches, that of Gortyna and that of Knossos. To the Church at Gortyna, where
          the bishop was named Philip, Dionysius addressed congratulations on their
          courage—shown no doubt under some persecution; at the same time, he advised
          them to beware of heretics. It was perhaps at Dionysius' instigation that
          Philip wrote a treatise against the Marcionites. In his letter to the Knossians, Dionysius advises their Bishop Pinytus not to exaggerate the duty of continence, but to
          consider the weakness of human nature. Pinytus replies, thanking the Bishop of Corinth, and begging him to write again, and
          not to fear rising above the first elements, or meting out to the Cretans more
          solid food. Dionysius also wrote to the more distant churches of Nicomedia and Amastris, and to a lady named Chrysophora.
          These letters throw but little light upon the Christian communities of Greece,
          at the end of the 2nd century. There are no particulars as to the countries
          farther norths 
             On
          the other side of the Aegean, as well as in Greece, Christianity had old and
          deep roots. Around the Church of Ephesus, the chief of those founded by St
          Paul, many others sprang up at an early date. Those of Alexandria, Troas, Colossse, Laodicea, and Hierapolis are mentioned in his
          epistles. The Apocalypse refers besides to those of Smyrna, Pergamos, Sardis,
          Philadelphia, and Thyatira. The churches of Magnesia (on the Meander) and of Tralles appear in the letters of St Ignatius. Many others,
          only known later, no doubt existed from the beginning of the 2nd century. 
             Behind
          Asia Proper, many Christian communities existed on the plain of Phrygia.
          Phrygia was essentially an agricultural country, and inhabited by a simple and
          gentle folk; their native rites were of fabulous antiquity, and had not been
          very deeply influenced by Hellenism. They involved great religious assemblies,
          near celebrated sanctuaries, and noisy, exciting ceremonies, presided over by
          wild and fanatic priests, Galli and Corybantes (priests of Cybele), whose religious frenzies were world-famous. 
             On
          his first mission, St Paul had stayed at Antioch in Pisidia, and at Iconium,
          both on the south-eastern boundary of Phrygia. A little later on, he crossed
          Phrygia twice, on his way from Syria into Macedonia and into Asia. Whether he
          himself founded other Christian churches there, or whether the Gospel was
          brought them from the neighbouring churches—Iconium, Antioch in Pisidia, or
          Hierapolis—at any rate by the end of the 2nd century nearly half Phrygia was
          Christian. 
             In
          Bithynia also, on the Black Sea, Christianity spread very early. The governor,
          Pliny, complained to Trajan of this superstitious infection "which invaded
          not only the towns, but the villages and fields, making a desert around the
          temples, and ruining the trade in sacrificial victims." About this time,
          or a little later, Marcion's father was Bishop of Sinope. Under Marcus
          Aurelius, we hear of churches at Amastris and
          Nicomedia; Dionysius of Corinth, writing to the Church in Nicomedia, urged them
          to resist the Marcionite heresy; to that of Amastris,
          whose bishop was named Palmas, he explained certain texts of Scripture,
          teaching the rule of Truth as to chastity and marriage, and counselling
          loving-kindness towards penitent sinners and heretics whose hearts were touched
          by grace. From this Bithynian centre, Christianity spread towards Thrace,
          where, about this period, the two neighbouring churches of Debelta and Anchiala are mentioned in connection with
          Montanism. 
             After
          St Paul, their first apostle, the Christians of Asia proper were not bereft of
          illustrious leaders. For some time Timothy appears to have had the guidance of
          these churches. As we have seen, many witnesses of the Gospel, who had been
          driven out by the Jewish War, or who had migrated for other reasons, came here.
          Thus the traditions of the primitive Church of Jerusalem were handed on to the
          Asiatic Christians. Philip the deacon and his daughters settled at Hierapolis,
          on the borders of Phrygia; St John appears to have lived more specially at
          Ephesus. Under Domitian he was exiled to Patmos, whence he wrote to the seven
          churches, sending them his Book of Visions. The seven letters of the
          Apocalypse, and the two short letters in the Johannine collection, witness to
          his authority in the churches of Asia, and show him in the terrible, and yet
          gentle, aspect in which tradition portrays him. The fourth of our canonical
          Gospels, and also the First Epistle of St John, appeared under his name after
          his death. They came rather late, and gave the Gospel story in a form little
          resembling that to which men were accustomed. And they were not accepted
          without opposition. But the same inspiration which guided the Church to accept
          the whole of the Old Testament, together with several additions of a very
          recent date, moved her to And a place for the Gospel of St John by the side of
          the documents already accepted. The doctrinal gain accruing from the Johannine
          theology compensated for the difficulties of interpretation, and these, on the
          whole, were then not very serious. 
             The
          persecution from which the old apostle had suffered seems to have spared his
          last days. But Asia soon had its martyrs. The Apocalypse extols Antipas of
          Pergamos, who was slain near the dwelling-place of Satan, that is near the
          celebrated temple of Zeus Asclepios. 
             From
          St Paul's time, heresy had harassed the Asiatic Christians; we have traced it
          in the Apocalypse and in St Ignatius' epistles. And we have also noted that
          each of the churches in Asia was governed, in Trajan's time, by a hierarchy of
          three grades, bishop, priests, and deacons. One of these bishops, Polycarp of
          Smyrna, we already know. About the same time, or a little later, Papias, Bishop
          of Hierapolis, compiled a book of traditions, and of essays on interpretation,
          the loss of which is much to be deplored. For long, their lived in company with
          the heads of the Church certain highly venerated old Christians of the first
          days, of which they loved to tell. With them were prophets and prophetesses
          whose words were much valued, like the daughters of Philip, Ammias of Philadelphia, and Quadratus the apologist. 
             The
          fact that Quadratus was a writer, and one who did not fear to address himself
          even to emperors, shows that the possession of the gift of prophecy did not
          forbid a man the ordinary activities of life. And the name of Melito, the
          learned Bishop of Sardis, was also quoted as amongst the prophets. 
             Polycarp
          crowned his long and fruitful episcopate by martyrdom. Shortly after his return
          from Rome, a whirlwind of fanaticism broke over Smyrna. Cries arose: 
             "Down
          with the atheists!". They clamoured for Polycarp. He was not to be found
          in Smyrna, for he was hastening from town to town exhorting the faithful, and
          foretelling his approaching martyrdom. Meanwhile some dozen Christians, one of
          whom was a certain Germanicus, were condemned and thrown to the beasts. But the
          proscribed were uplifted by the persecution; and Quintus, a Phrygian, and
          several others gave themselves up to the magistrates. Quintus had presumed too
          much on his strength. At the last moment, he failed. Polycarp was arrested near
          Smyrna, and borne to the amphitheatre, where the proconsul had him appear
          before him in his box. Being commanded to cry: "Down with the
          atheists!", he did so at once, evidently using the words in a very different
          sense to that of the pagan crowds. But when told to blaspheme Christ, he
          replied : "These eighty-six years I have served Him; and He has never done
          me wrong. He is my King and my Saviour, how could I blaspheme Him?". He
          was burned at the stake. 
             After
          Polycarp, Melito held a foremost place among the Christians of Asia. Fragments
          only remain of his literary work, which Eusebius catalogued; it must have been
          considerable. Besides his apologetic treatises, mentioned above, he wrote on
          various religious or philosophical questions, such as the nature of man, the
          senses, the soul, the body, and the intellect; the creation, and generation of
          Christ, the devil, the Apocalypse of St John, faith, baptism, Sunday, the
          Church, hospitality, Easter, and the prophets, probably in connection with
          Montanism which was then just emerging. We still possess the preface, addressed
          to a certain Onesimus, of a selection, made by him, of ld Testament texts, which he thought referred to the Saviour. Before undertaking
          this work, Melito deemed it fitting to journey into Palestine, and investigate
          on the spot what were the authentic contents of the ancient Bible. Thence, he
          returned with a list which includes all the books of the Old Testament,
          preserved in the Hebrew, except the Book of Esther. His extracts, filling six
          volumes, he took from them alone. Melito's last work was called The Key; but its contents are
          unknown. 
             Besides his literary fame Melito left behind a remarkable reputation for
          sanctity. The Asiatic episcopate boasted then of many such men : Papirius, who
          succeeded Polycarp as head of the Church of Smyrna; Bishop Sagaris of Laodicea, who suffered martyrdom under the proconsul Sergius Paulus (c. 167
          A.D.); Bishop Thraseas of Eumenia,
          in Phrygia, who was martyred at Smyrna; Bishop Apollinaris of Hierapolis, a man
          of letters and an apologist, like his brother of Sardis.-St Irenaeus, who was
          also a native of Asia—and who, in his childhood, had both seen and heard
          Polycarp — remembered ancient "priests", whose words he liked to
          recall in refutation of Gnostic modernisms. One of them wrote a satire in
          iambics against Mark, a disciple of Valentinus, of which a fragment remains. 
             These memories and fragments, which have survived so many shipwrecks,
          show how living and active Christianity in Asia already was in those early
          days. The two great Christian centres, in the 2nd century, were Rome and Asia.
          Nowhere else did anything of importance occur. Nothing happened in Asia,
          without echoing immediately in Rome, and vice
            versa. Communication by sea was then easy for all, and intercourse
          was incessant. Polycarp, Marcion, Justin, Rhodo, Irenreus, Attalus of Pergamos, and Alexander the Phrygian,
          these three last settled at Lyons, are instances in point. Abercius, Bishop of
          Hierapolis, in the heart of Phrygia, may be included. He came to Rome, where he
          saw the majesty of the empire, and lived in the midst of a "people stamped
          with a glorious seal," as he describes the Christians. And the
          controversies which soon arose over the Montanist prophecies, Easter, and
          Modalism, bring out still more clearly the constant intercommunication between
          the venerable churches of Asia and the great Metropolis of the West. 
             CHAPTER XV 
           MONTANISM 
            
                
               THE
          Montanist movement began in Phrygian Mysia, in a village called Ardabau, under the proconsulate of Gratus. Montanus was a convert, who, according to
          some traditions, had previously been a priest of Cybele, and he attracted
          attention by ecstasies and transports in which he uttered strange sayings. At
          such times he seemed to lose his own individuality; a divine inspirer spoke by
          his mouth, and not he himself. Two women, Prisca (or Priscilla) and Maximilla,
          soon developed the same phenomena, and associated themselves with him. All this
          was noised abroad, not only in the remote district where the village of Ardabau was situated, but throughout Phrygia and Asia, and
          as far as Thrace. The followers of the new prophets maintained that it was the
          Paraclete manifesting himself to the world. Others who could not accept their
          view, declared that it was simply a case of demoniac possession. 
             The
          Paraclete confidently announced the speedy return of Christ, and the Vision of
          the Heavenly Jerusalem descending from above, which was to appear first in the
          clouds, and then rest on the earth, at a spot indicated. This was a plain on
          the further side of Phrygia, between the two little towns of Pepuza and Tymion. The three
          prophets transported themselves thither, when or wherefore is not precisely
          known: they were followed by an immense multitude. In some places the people
          were so entirely won over to the movement that all the Christians left. In the
          feverish expectation of the last day, country, family, and all earthly ties
          were disregarded. Marriages were dissolved; and community of goods and the most
          severe asceticism prevailed. This state of mental exaltation was fostered by
          the words of the possessed prophets; the voice of the Paraclete was heard, and
          his exhortations animated them afresh. 
             Days,
          weeks, months, and years, however, passed away, and still the Heavenly
          Jerusalem came not. But the Church on earth, after the first loss of balance,
          protested a good deal. The orthodoxy of the prophets was no doubt beyond
          reproach, and the circumstances of their time and surroundings lent them some
          support. The Gospel of St John, still in the full strength of its new
          popularity, had roused a special interest in the Paraclete; the descriptions of
          the Heavenly Jerusalem, and of the millenium, in the
          Apocalypse, were enthralling, and few Christians, in Asia or elsewhere,
          banished them from their thoughts on the end of all things. Both tradition and
          custom had consecrated the right of prophets to arouse Christians in the name
          of the Lord. 
             The
          Didache and the New Testament both show what a prominent place prophecy held in
          the life of the early churches. The Bishop of Sardis, Melito, was believed to
          have the prophetic gift. Before him, Quadratus, Ammias,
          and the daughters of Philip had been endowed with this gift. They were still
          famous. The ascetism of the Montanists did not exceed that permitted, though
          not imposed, in other Christian circles. It was free from the dualistic
          tendencies of the Gnostics and Marcionites: and anything that seemed extreme
          was justified by their firm belief in the near approach of the last day. 
             Still,
          this sudden excitement, this exodus, these exact determinations of time and
          place, introduced a sense of profound unrest among the Christian churches. Some
          of them had been in existence for nearly a century or more, and had grown
          accustomed to live an ordinary life with no special preoccupation as to the end
          of all things. They soon met the prophets with the objection that their
          proceedings were contrary to custom. In the Old Testament, as in the New,
          prophets had never spoken in a state of ecstasy. The communication which, by
          their means, was established between God and their hearers, had not hindered
          them from preserving their own individuality. They spoke in the name of God,
          but it was they themselves who spoke. In the case of Montanus and his prophetesses,
          the Paraclete himself was heard, just as in certain pagan sanctuaries, the gods
          were heard to speak directly, by the mouth of pythonesses. "The man
          himself is a lyre," said the inspired voice, "and I am the bow which
          causes him to vibrate ... I am not an angel, nor a messenger ... I am the Lord,
          the Almighty." . . . This seemed unusual, and an abuse, and reprehensible. 
             Possibly
          Melito had already dealt with the matter in his books on prophecy, of which we
          have but the titles. Apollinaris, Bishop of Hierapolis, resolutely attacked the
          new prophets. Another very prominent person in the Christian world of Asia,
          Miltiades, wrote a treatise to maintain "that a prophet ought not to speak
          in ecstasy." 
             He was answered by skilful writers amongst the Montanists. The
          Catholics, however, did not confine themselves to writing; they soon adopted
          very different methods. Sotas, Bishop of Anchiala in
          Thrace, endeavoured to exorcise Priscilla; and two other Phrygian bishops,
          Zoticus of Comana, and Julian of Apamea, betook
          themselves to Pepuxa, and assailed Maximilla. But
          these attempts failed, owing to the opposition of the sect. 
             The
          movement spread in Asia, sowing discord everywhere. In many places, synods
          assembled, in which the claims of the prophets were examined and discussed. At
          last the unity of the Church was broken; and the opponents of the Paraclete
          excommunicated his followers. Some, carried away by their zeal, even ventured
          to question the authority of those sacred books, on which the Montanists based
          their claims: and they rejected en bloc all St John's writings, the Apocalypse as well as the Gospel.
          This was the origin of that particular religious school which later St
          Epiphanius opposed under the name of Alogi.
             But
          if Montanus did not succeed in winning the churches of Asia as a whole, he at
          least managed to introduce profound divisions among them. The Heavenly
          Jerusalem did not appear upon earth; but, on the other hand, the movement led
          to the foundation of a terrestrial Jerusalem. The name of Pepuza was changed; it was called the New Jerusalem. It became a holy place; a sort of
          Metropolis of the Paraclete. The necessity of feeding the crowds who flocked
          there at first, led to some kind of organization in the sect. Before long
          several others were associated with Montanus, and continued in authority after
          his death. A certain Alcibiades, then Theodotus, described in one of the
          documents we have, as the first overseer of prophecy, and lastly, Themison, who, hoping to extend and defend the movement,
          wrote a sort of encyclical. Themison, it was said,
          was a confessor of the Faith. The Montanists, indeed, did not flinch from
          martyrdom, and dwelt with some complacency on their own merits in this respect. 
             All
          this was much discussed by the opposition. The financial organization, the
          collectors of offerings, and the salaried preachers of the sect were keenly
          criticized. It was said that the prophets and prophetesses led a very
          comfortable, and even fashionable life, at the expense of their converts. 
             "Let
          them be judged by their works," men said. "Does a prophet frequent
          the public baths and paint himself, and does he consider his raiment? Does he
          play dice? Or lend money on usury?". Doubts were also expressed as to the
          virginity of Priscilla, who like her companion Maximilla had, it was said, left
          her husband to follow Montanus. Themison was but a
          false confessor: he had purchased his release from martyrdom. Another
          confessor, much honoured in the sect, a certain Alexander, was even more
          worthless. He had indeed been summoned before the tribunal, but as a brigand
          and not as a Christian. This was under the proconsulate of Aemilius Frontinus as the archives of Ephesus testified. 
             Montanus
          and Priscilla died first. Maximilla remained alone and suffered much from the
          opposition to which her sect was exposed. The Paraclete groaned within her:
          "I am persecuted as though I were a wolf. I am not a wolf; I am Word,
          Spirit, and Power." At last she died, having predicted wars and
          revolutions. Malevolent people declared she hanged herself; the same was said
          of Montanus; as to Theodotus, the story was that, in an ecstasy, he rose
          towards heaven, and falling back again was killed. This gossip is repeated by
          the anonymous writer quoted by Eusebius, but he expressly declares that it is
          not to be relied on. He is quite right. Such stories as these do not help us to
          form any adequate conception of such an important religious movement. It did
          not end with the death of the prophets. Thirteen years after the death of
          Maximilla, the new prophecy still divided the Christian community of Ancyra.
          And for a long time the Montanists caused discussion and controversy, not only
          in Asia Minor, but in Antioch and Alexandria, and in the churches of the West.
          Serapion, Bishop of Antioch, condemned them, in a letter addressed to Caricus and Pontius; to this were attached the signatures
          of several other bishops, together with their protests against the innovators.
          Clement of Alexandria, in his Stromata, proposes to treat the subject in a book On
            Prophecy. But it is in the West that the history of Montanism has
          special importance. 
             Even as early as 177 A.D., the date of the martyrs of Lyons, the mind of
          the Church in Gaul and in Rome was deeply stirred by the new prophesying. The
          new Church of Lyons, having many Asiatic and Phrygian members, was well
          informed on all that took place in Asia. In Rome also, the matter came up very
          early, and, as in many other places, it caused at first great perplexity. The
          confessors of Lyons wrote about it, from prison, "to the brethren in Asia
          and Phrygia, and also to Eleutherus, Bishop of
          Rome". These letters were inserted in the celebrated account of the
          martyrs of Lyons, with the opinion of the "brethren in Gaul", on the
          spirit of prophecy claimed by Montanus, Alcibiades, and Theodotus. Eusebius,
          who actually saw the document, describes it as wise and quite orthodox ; yet
          his words convey the impression that it was not entirely opposed to the
          Phrygian movement. St. Irenaeus, who carried these letters to Rome, cannot be
          numbered amongst the opponents of Montanism. It is conceivable that the
          Christians of Lyons rather advised toleration, and the preservation of the
          peace of the Church. We do not know what effect this intervention had on Eleutherus, nor how long the Church of Rome was in taking a
          decision. It looks as if Rome also felt that there was no call for mutual
          excommunication. Tertullian says the decision was not unfavourable to the
          prophets, and that the Pope had already despatched conciliatory letters to that
          effect, when a confessor, named Praxeas, arrived from
          Asia with fresh information, and succeeded in inducing him to alter his first
          decision.
             Thus the Montanist pretensions to inspiration did not succeed in
          obtaining recognition in Rome. It is possible that for some time, Rome merely
          maintained an attitude of reserve. The Paschal controversy was not likely to
          incline the Roman Church to attach much weight to the authority of the Asiatic
          episcopate. But a more decided attitude was eventually taken. Already by the
          beginning of the 3rd century, as the Passion of St Perpetua and the writings of
          Tertullian show, it was necessary to choose between communion with the Church
          and belief in the new prophesying. 
             The movement was therefore discouraged in the West as in the East.
          Nevertheless, it continued to spread. The prophets being dead, the objections
          to their ecstasies gradually subsided. What was extravagant and open to
          criticism in the Phrygian organisation and in the assemblies at Pepuza, naturally attracted less attention out of Asia.
          From a distance, the most striking feature was the great moral austerity of the
          Montanists. Their fasts, their special rules of life, presented no features
          that orthodox ascetics had not long made familiar. Visions, ecstasies, and
          prophecies were equally familiar. In many lands, those who led specially
          mortified lives, enthusiasts and people much imbued with the idea of the Second
          Advent, felt themselves attracted by the new prophesying. Tertullian, having
          long lived in a state of mind which may be described as Montanist, finally
          became an open convert to Montanus, Priscilla, and Maximilla (c. 205 A.D.).
          This was not then possible without a rupture with the Catholic Church. But that
          did not hinder him. The Montanists of Africa chose him as their head, and even
          called themselves Tertullianists. This is not the
          place to speak of the writings he published, both before and after his
          separation from the Church. It is enough to say that his most important
          Montanist work, the treatise in seven books on ecstasy, De Extasi, no longer exists. The seventh book he devoted to a refutation of Apollonius. Tertullianists existed till St. Augustine brought their
          last Carthaginian adherents back to the Catholic Church.
             About
          this time the Montanists were represented in Rome by a certain Proculus or Proclus, highly venerated by Tertullian. St
          Hippolytus paid some slight attention to the Montanists, but without dwelling
          much on them; he objects to their fasts, and more especially to their trust in
          Montanus and his prophetesses. Another Roman author, Caius, wrote a dialogue
          against Proclus, of which a few lines survive. It does not seem that the sect
          ever took deep root in Rome, for after St Hippolytus, we hear no more of it. 
             In Phrygia, however, Montanism lasted much longer. The New Jerusalem was
          long venerated. There lay the mother-community. Annual pilgrimages replaced an
          exodus en masse.There was a great
          feast—Easter or Pentecost—which began with a dismal display of fasting and
          ended with great rejoicings. A permanent organisation had taken the place of
          the prophets and their first lieutenants. First came the Patriarchs, then the
          These two grades seem to have represented the central government of the sect;
          the local hierarchy, bishops, priests, etc., was subordinated to them. Women
          had been intimately connected with the origin of the movement; they always held
          a higher place in the sect than in the Church. The Church had had its
          prophetesses like the Montanists; for a longtime still it had deaconesses.
          According to St Epiphanius, the Montanists admitted women to the priesthood and
          the episcopate. He also says that, in their ceremonies, seven virgins, dressed
          in white, and carrying in their hands lighted torches, played a great part.
          These virgins indulged in ecstatic transports, weeping over the sins of the
          world, and so carried away the congregation that they too were melted to tears.
          In his day the sect was known under various names, such as Priscillianists, Quintillianists, Tascodrugites,
          and Artotyrites. The two first names were derived of
          course from those of notable Montanists. The name of Tascodrugites came from two Phrygian words, signifying the forefinger and the nose. Some of
          the sect, it appears, placed their Anger in their nose during prayer. The name Artotyrites was derived from the use of bread and cheese in
          their mysteries. All this is but doubtful. And still more so is the rumour, an
          evident calumny, that in one of their rites they bled a child to death.
             Their
          peculiar method of determining the date of Easter is better attested. During
          the controversy over the various orthodox reckonings, the Montanists fixed on a
          settled date in the Julian calendar, April 6. 
             But
          these details on the Montanism of a later date have but a relative interest.
          What is really important is the origin and character of the primitive movement,
          and the attitude of the Church. However eagerly the speedy return of Christ was
          looked for, towards the end of the 2nd century, however deep was the respect
          then felt for the prophetic spirit and its various manifestations, the Church
          was not drawn away by Montanus from the true path; neither prophecy in general,
          nor the expectation of the Last Day was forbidden; but orthodox tradition was
          upheld against religious vagaries, and the authority of the hierarchy against
          the claims of private inspiration
              
               CHAPTER XVI 
            
                
               THE
          Church derived the practice of devoting one day in seven specialty to the
          service of God, from the Jewish ritual system. But the observance of the
          Sabbath was left to the Judaic-Christians, and the Church early introduced in
          its stead the observance of Sunday, which was characterized rather by meetings
          for religious worship than by cessation from manual labour. These meetings were
          two: the vigil, in the night between Saturday and Sunday, and the celebration
          of the Liturgy, on Sunday morning. Before long "stations" or fasts,
          on Wednesdays and Fridays, were associated with these meetings. There was no
          reason why Christians should observe the feasts and fasts of the Jewish
          calendar. They were allowed to drop out of use. Neveitheless each year one of these holy days, the Paschal Feast or the Feast of the Azymes,
          recalled the memory of the Passion of the Saviour. The memories which Israel
          had connected, and still connected, with this anniversary might no longer be of
          interest; but it was impossible to forget that Our Lord had died for the
          salvation of the world on one of those days. The Pasch was therefore retained,
          though the ritual details of the Jewish observance were omitted. 
             As,
          however, Christians had not at first made any concerted arrangement,
          differences soon arose in the manner of celebrating the Christian Pasch. In
          Asia, they kept it on the 14th of the first Jewish month, the 14th Nizan. In Rome, and nearly everywhere else, the feast was
          not observed on that particular day—for a point was made of keeping it on
          Sunday—but that day determined which special Sunday should be devoted to the
          Pasch solemnities. 
             This
          difference as to the day was naturally connected with a different way of
          interpreting the feast. On the 14th of the month Nizan—or
          according to the evangelists, on the next day—Christ had died; on the Sunday,
          He rose again. Neither of these great events could be ignored. The festival of
          Sunday was counterbalanced by the solemn Good Friday. That week the ordinary
          fast of the "station" was observed with rigorous strictness; the
          general tendency being to prolong it till Sunday morning. Thus, the Christian
          of those days mourned for His Master during the whole time that He had been
          under the dominion of death. 
             In
          Asia, where they still made a point of keeping to the 14th Nizan,
          their thoughts seem to have centred round Jesus as being the true Paschal Lamb.
          So they replaced the ritual feast of the Jews that evening by the Feast of the
          Eucharist. According to the synoptic Gospels, indeed, the Lord was crucified,
          not on the 14th but on the 15th; in those days, however, things were not gone
          into so minutely, and by a slight anticipation, the Sacrifice of Calvary was
          made to agree with that of His symbolic prototype, the Paschal Lamb. At any
          rate, the fourth Gospel soon rectified this discrepancy, by altering the date
          of the Passion from the 15th back to the 14th. 
             Now,
          how did the Christians of Asia celebrate the Feast of the Resurrection? Did
          they keep it two days after the 14th, or on the next following Sunday? Did they
          indeed celebrate it by any special commemoration? We do not know. All we know
          is, that the fast which preceded their Paschal Feast—for they also observed a
          fast—ended on the 14th. Under such ill-regulated conditions, misunderstandings
          were inevitable. And even amongst the Christians of Asia, difficulties soon
          arose. The Church of Laodicea was agitated in 167, by a serious controversy on
          the Paschal celebration. Melito of Sardis wrote a treatise 011 the subject, as
          did Apollinaris of Hierapolis. As they both advocated the observance of the
          14th, the quartodeciman use, it is difficult to see
          what the Laodicean disagreement could have been over; certainly Apollinaris
          defended the 14th by a reference to the Gospel of St John, and refused to admit
          that the Lord kept the Pasch on the eve of His death. Was this perhaps not in
          accordance with Melito's view? Was this the point upon which they dififered? We do not know. 
             A far more widespread controversy was bound to come, some day or other,
          between the advocates of the quarto-deciman use—peculiar to Asia—and those maintaining the Dominical or Sunday use, which
          was almost universal elsewhere. 
             The
          discrepancy was plain enough, and was already recognised in Rome by Trajan's
          and Hadrian's time. There were many Christians of Asia in Rome at that time;
          and the very early Popes, Xystus and Telesphorus, saw them every year keep
          their Pasch the same day as did the Jews. They maintained that was correct. It
          was allowed to pass, and though the rest of Rome observed a different use, no
          one fell out with them. But later on, this divergence seemed sufficiently
          important to demand some effort to remove it. Polycarp during his stay in Rome,
          tried to convince Pope Anicetus that the quarto-deciman use was the only one permissible. He did not succeed. Neither could Anicetus
          succeed in persuading the old master to adopt the Roman method. They parted,
          nevertheless, on the best of terms. Under Soter, the successor of Anicetus, the
          relations appear to have been a little more strained. It was about this time
          that the troubles in Laodicea arose: the question was growing crucial. About
          130 A.D., Victor, the second in succession to Soter, determined to have done
          with it. He explained his views to the bishops of Asia, and begged Bishop
          Polycrates of Ephesus to call them together for a conference. Polycrates did
          assemble them. But they adhered steadfastly to their old custom. The Bishop of
          Ephesus replied in their name to Pope Victor, by a singularly forcible letter,
          citing all the illustrious Christians of Asia, beginning with the apostles
          Philip and John. He himself came of a family long consecrated to the Church,
          for seven of his relations had been bishops. All the saints and all the bishops
          whom he quotes kept the feast on the 14th day. He announced that he intended to
          continue the same practice, "without allowing himself to be scared by any
          threats, for it is written : It is better to obey God, than man." 
             It
          became manifest, however, that the churches of Asia stood alone in their view.
          Other Episcopal synods assembled to consider the matter. All their synodical
          letters—of which Eusebius examined the archives—were in favour of the Dominical
          use. Bishops Theophilus of Cesarea, Narcissus of
          Jerusalem, Cassius of Tyre, Clarus of Ptolemais, and many others, all took part
          in the Palestinian council. They all said that their custom agreed with that of
          the Church of Alexandria as to the celebration of Easter. The Bishops of Osroene concurred. The usage of Antioch, about which we
          have no direct evidence, could not have differed from theirs. The envoys from
          Pontus under their dean, Bishop Palmas of Amastris,
          Bishop Bacchylus of Corinth, and Irenaeus, in the
          name of the Christians of Gaul, over whom he presided, all expressed the same
          view. 
             Strong
          in such support, Victor went farther. He determined to break down the
          resistance of the Asiatics, by cutting them off from
          communion with the Church. But the letters he sent out with that object did not
          meet with the same response as his appeal to tradition. Irenseus intervened, together with other bishops. Though agreeing in the main with the
          Roman Church, they could not, for such an insignificant matter, allow venerable
          churches, founded by apostles, to be treated as centres of heresy, and cut off from
          the family of Christ. 
             It
          is probable that Victor thought better of his severe measures. But certainly,
          in the long run, the churches of Asia adopted the Roman use. By the 4th century
          and notably at the Council of Nicea, nothing more was
          said on the subject. There were still a few quartodecimans,
          but even in Asia they were but a small sect, quite outside the Catholic Church.
          In Rome, for a short time—evidently among the settlers from Asia—there was some
          resistance. A kind of schism was organised by a certain Blastus. Irenaeus knew
          him and wrote to him on the matter. But this opposition did not last.
              
               CHAPTER XVII 
           CONTROVERSIES IN ROME—HIPPOLYTUS 
            
               FROM
          the days of Nerva and Trajan, the emperors succeeded each other by adoption,
          and governed with wisdom. The paternal affection of Marcus Aurelius revived the
          system of hereditary succession : a great misfortune for the empire. Under his
          son Commodus, Rome saw a repetition of the mad tyranny of Caligula and Nero. A
          sovereign caring for nothing but the amphitheatre, where the dregs of the
          people applauded his skill as a gladiator : wealthy citizens demoralised by
          terror, decimated by proscription; government carried on chiefly by means of
          the prxtorian guard; all this the philosopher-emperor
          had led up to by associating his son with himself in the government. It lasted
          for thirteen years. 
             On
          December 31, 192, Marcia, the morganatic wife of Commodus, seeing her own name
          on the list of persons to be killed the next night, was beforehand with the
          emperor, and ended these infamies. The praetorian guard were made to proclaim
          an old officer, Pertinax, but his severity soon disgusted them so completely
          that they murdered him. Two senators then presented themselves as candidates
          for the succession. The one who promised most, Didius Julianus, was chosen, and forced by the guard upon the Senate and the Roman
          people. This transmission of power by the garrison of Rome did not suit the
          armies on the frontier. They chose their own generals, Severus, Niger, and
          Albinus, as candidates for the empire. Severus, who was commanding in Pannonia,
          was the first to arrive in Rome, where he established himself. Then, having
          come to terms with Albinus—the commander of the army in Brittany, already
          proclaimed in Gaul—he advanced against Niger, his Eastern competitor, and
          conquered him. Turning next against Albinus, he got rid of him also, and
          remained the sole master of the empire, severe in deed as in name. Order was
          re-established, the frontiers were defended, the Roman armies appeared again in
          Parthia, and this time carried their conquests as far as the Persian Gulf. 
             Severus
          was harsh to the Christians, as to everyone else. Tertullian protested against
          his severities in his various writings of the year 197, Ad Martyres, Ad Nationes, Apologeticus.
          Severus strengthened the laws against the Christians, and by a special edict,
          forbade conversions. But we shall revert to this point later on. 
             Pope
          Victor died during this reign, in 198 or 199. He was succeeded by Zephyrinus.
          And with Zephyrinus, the history of the Roman Church becomes for a time rather
          less obscure. The new pope was a simple and unlettered man. He was scarcely
          installed, when he summoned a person called Callistus, then living in retreat
          at Antium, and associated him with himself in the
          government of the clergy, especially confiding to him the care of the cemetery.
          "The cemetery" had been, until then, in the villa of the Acilii, upon the Via Salaria. Callistus transported it to
          the Via Appia, near which were several very ancient family burying-places,
          known by the names of Praetextatus, of Domitilla, and
          of Lucina. From the 3rd century, these family burying-places formed a nucleus
          of extensive catacombs, where the popes had a special funereal chamber.
          Although they continued to bury in the cemetery of Priscilla, and although new
          burying-places were opened elsewhere, the cemetery in the Via Appia became
          especially prominent. It was called by the name of Callistus, although he
          alone, of all the popes of the 3rd century, was not buried there. 
             Callistus
          had made himself rather notorious under the previous popes. Hippolytus, his
          bitter enemy, says he was first the slave of a certain Carpophorus,
          a Christian of Caesar's household; and that his master had a bank in the
          Piscina Publica, and entrusted Callistus with funds to run it. Callistus
          managed the affair very badly, and to escape from the anger of Carpophorus he tried to run away. He was embarking at
          Portus, when he saw his master arrive; he threw himself into the sea, but was
          fished out again and sent to the pistrinum. Attacked
          by the creditors of his slave, among whom were many Christians, Carpophorus released him. Callistus did his best to find
          the money. He had, in fact, debtors among the Jews; he went to find them in the
          synagogue. A great commotion ensued. The Jews declared they had been disturbed
          in their ceremonies, and dragged their creditor before the Prefect of Rome,
          Fuscianus, accusing him of insulting them, and denouncing him as a Christian.
          And in spite of the efforts of Carpophorus, his slave
          was condemned, as a Christian, to the mines of Sardinia. 
             All
          this happened during the episcopate of Eleutherus. Some time afterwards, the confessors in Sardinia were
          liberated, as we have said before, by the intervention of Marcia. The name of
          Callistus was not on the list given by Pope Victor to Marcia. But Hyacinthus
          the priest, who was sent by the pope to Sardinia, persuaded the procurator to
          release Callistus with the others. He then returned to Rome; but, after all
          that had occurred, there were too many in Rome who looked at him askance.
          Victor sent him to Antium and gave him a monthly
          pension. It was from this position, that of a pensioned confessor, that he
          passed to the councils of Zephyrinus, no doubt in the capacity of deacon. In
          his eight or ten years' retreat he had probably had plenty of time to cultivate
          his mind. Yet he seems always to have remained a man of action and governing
          power, rather than a trained theologian. 
             But
          there was no lack of theologians in Rome. Among the presbyters was one of the
          first order, Hippolytus, a disciple of St Irenaeus. His later quarrels with his
          superiors, and the fact that he wrote in Greek, a language that shortly
          afterwards ceased to be spoken in Rome, combined to cause the greater part of
          his works to be forgotten. But the researches of contemporary erudition are
          gradually bringing them to light, and they show that the great Roman writer had
          no occasion to envy the literary fame of Origen, his Alexandrian brother.
          Origen knew him personally. During a visit which he paid to Rome, in the time
          of Pope Zephyrinus, he was present one day at the delivery of a homily by
          Hippolytus, who contrived to introduce into his sermon an allusion to the
          illustrious Alexandrian. 
             Moreover,
          Rome had never ceased to be the favourite resort of Christian thinkers and
          religious adventurers. As in the days of Hadrian and Antoninus, they still
          flocked there, keeping the Church in a perpetual state of agitation. And
          interesting controversies arose, the precursors of those which afterwards,
          during the 4th and following centuries, caused such serious disturbance. 
             The first Christians, as we have so often said, were all of one mind
          with regard to the Divinity of Jesus Christ. They sing hymns, said Pliny, to
          the Christ whom they honour as God,  quasi
            deo. "My brothers," says the author of the
          pseudo-Clementine homily, "we must think of Jesus Christ as God". But
          how was He God? How could His Divinity be reconciled with the strict Monotheism
          which Christians, as well as Israelites, professed? Here was the parting of the
          ways. Setting aside the Gnostics, who, though they differed from other
          Christians in their conception of God, were very explicit as to the Divinity of
          the Saviour, we find that the current opinions may be summed up under two chief
          types : first, Jesus is God because He is the Son of God incarnate; second,
          Jesus is God, because God has adopted Him as Son, and raised Him to the Divine
          status. The first explanation is that given most explicitly by St Paul and St
          John, who both teach, without any circumlocution, the pre-existence of the Son
          of God before His incarnation in time. St Paul does not employ the term Logos
          (the Word) to indicate the preexistent Christ. It
          appears in the writings of St John, and it was some time before these writings,
          being considerably later than those of St Paul and the first Christian
          preaching, were accredited to their canonical position, so that it is at first
          necessary to distinguish between the fundamental and commonly received doctrine
          of the pre-existent Christ, and that more special aspect of it derived from the
          term Logos. The apologists, beginning with St Justin, laid great stress upon
          the idea of the Logos; but it was a purely philosophical idea, and the
          deductions drawn from it were usually quite over the heads of simple believers. 
             These
          simple believers—except the Ebionites of Palestine, who persistently declared
          Jesus to be a great prophet, and saw only a Messianic attribute in His title of
          Son of God—either abstained altogether from puzzling themselves, and weakening
          their belief in the Divinity of the Saviour (and these were certainly the
          greater number)—or they explained it to themselves by one of the two
          alternatives indicated above, Incarnation or Adoption. The language of Hermas
          is, it seems, adoptionist. He has got hold of the
          idea of a divine person, distinct, in a certain sense, from God the Father, who
          is for him the Son of God or the Holy Spirit. With this divine person, the
          Saviour is permanently connected during His mortal life, but not in the way
          afterwards described as the Hypostatic Union. His work finished, He is
          admitted, in recognition of His merit, to the honours of apotheosis. 
             Hermas
          did not present these ideas properly developed as a thesis. They make a
          transitory appearance, in a corner of his book, by the way, in connection with
          other things well calculated to distract attention from them. But the mere
          fact, that a man like Hermas should have such an interpretation in his mind at
          all, and have it in such perfectly good faith, is none the less remarkable. We
          shall see later that it is connected with other similar manifestations. 
             Under
          Pope Victor there arrived in Rome a rich Christian from Byzantium, named
          Theodotus. He was called Theodotus the currier, because he had made his fortune
          by that industry. He was a learned man, and set himself to dogmatize. According
          to him, Jesus, except for his miraculous birth, was a man like other men. He
          grew up under ordinary conditions, manifesting a very high degree of sanctity.
          At His baptism, on the banks of the Jordan, the Christ, otherwise called the
          Holy Ghost, descended upon Him in the form of a dove: He thus received the
          power to work miracles. But He did not thus become God, and according to the Theodotians, this prerogative only became His after His
          resurrection, and but a section of them conceded even so much. 
             Victor
          did not hesitate to condemn such doctrines. Theodotus was excommunicated. He
          persisted; and his adherents were sufficiently numerous to entertain the idea
          of organizing a Church of their own. Two disciples of the Byzantine (a second
          Theodotus, a banker by profession, and a certain Asclepiades) found a Roman
          confessor called Natalius, who, in return for a salary, consented to act as
          bishop in the new sect. But Natalius did not persist. He had visions, in which
          our Lord rebuked him severely. As he turned a deaf ear, "the holy
          angels," during the night, administered to him such a forcible
          chastisement, that as soon as day dawned, throwing himself at the feet of Pope
          Zephyrinus, the clergy, and the people, he sued for mercy. Finally they took pity
          on him, and he was re-admitted to communion. A little later there appeared
          (about 230?) another teacher of the Theodotian sect, a certain Artemon or
          Artemas, who seems to have lived long and made himself rather prominent. 
             So
          much for their external history. Their doctrine must be more closely examined.
          It appears from the summary given to us that the Theodotians,
          like Hermas, acknowledged a divine power called Christ, or the Holy Ghost, as
          well as God. One special point which St Hippolytus emphasizes in the doctrine
          of Theodotus the banker, is the worship of Melchisedech. Melchisedech was identified by him with the Son of
          God, the Holy Spirit. This notion, suggested by a wrong interpretation of the
          Epistle to the Hebrews, is found also much later and in other quarters.
          Combined with the theory that Christ was God only by adoption, this idea led
          them to place Him lower than Melchisedech. He, the
          Son of God, of course could not but stand higher than the good servant Christ,
          whose actions he controlled and whose advancement he regulated. Therefore, it
          was to Melchisedech that the sacrifice was offered.
          Christ was chosen to call us from our devious ways to this knowledge; He was
          anointed and chosen by God, because He has turned us from idols, by showing us
          the way of truth." This is exactly the work of the Saviour as described in
          the parable of Hermas. 
             Therefore,
          we are not much surprised to find this school tracing their parentage back to
          previous generations. The Theodotians contended that
          they were faithful to the ancient tradition, upheld in Rome till the time of
          Pope Victor, and only altered under Zephyrinus. This was, to begin with,
          untrue, because it was Victor himself who condemned the Theodotians.
          Besides, a number of ancient writers, such as Justin, Miltiades, Tatian,
          Clement, Irenaeus, and Melito, had all insisted on the Divinity of Christ, declaring
          Him to be, at the same time, God and Man. From the beginning numbers of
          Christian hymns and canticles had, indeed, expressed the same belief, but then
          these compositions either showed a simple belief in the Divinity of Christ, or
          explained it by the doctrine of the Logos, as taught by St John. And this did
          not exclude other ideas from being held here and there, though obscurely and
          without their being pressed. Also, we must not forget that, inadequate as it
          appears to us, the Theodotian theology found adherents down to the end of the
          4th century, and that St Augustine,s almost on the
          eve of his conversion, still quite sincerely believed it to represent orthodox
          Christianity. 
             One
          peculiarity of this school is its familiarity with positive philosophy.
          Aristotle was held in great honour by the Theodotians,
          as were also Theophrastus, Euclid, and Gallien. They studied logic and even
          abused it, by misapplying it to the Bible. When a matter-of-fact mind, averse
          to allegory, takes up biblical criticism, the outcome is often the mutilation
          and alteration of the sacred text. The Theodotians appear to have had the same Canon of Scripture as the Church; they did not,
          like the Alogi, exclude the writings of St John, although they must have found
          it awkward to reconcile them with their own doctrines. But their copies of the
          Scriptures had but little resemblance to the received text, and were not even
          all alike. We hear of those of Asclepiades, of Theodotus, of Hermophilus, and
          of Apollonides, all differing one from the other. The
          only traces left of this biblical criticism are found in the book to which we
          owe the above information—"The Little Labyrinth." It was specially
          directed against Artemas, and there is strong evidence that it was written by
          Hippolytus, towards the end of his life. It was not the first time that the
          great Roman theologian had attacked the Theodotians.
          He had already made special allusion to them, first in his      Syntagma,and afterwards
          in the Philosophumena. 
             The Alogi also came into collision with him. We have seen that this sect
          arose in Asia, when the Montanist prophets first appeared, and when the
          writings of St John were still of such recent origin that it was not altogether
          absurd to question their authority. The Alogi were specially concerned with the use or abuse the Phrygian enthusiasts made of the doctrine
          of the Paraclete and visions and prophesies. Their teaching does not appear to
          have affected Christology. St Irenaeus had repudiated it. Hippolytus thought he
          ought to attack it. He did so in a book entitled Defence of the Gospel of John and the Apocalypse,
          a great part of which must be included in the chapter devoted to the Alogi by
          St Epiphanius. These bitter foes of the Montanists had perhaps followed them to
          Rome, where just then the disciples of the Paraclete were very prominent. The
          Montanists had several leaders who did not always agree: one of them was a
          certain Aeschines, and another was Proculus or
          Proclus, much venerated by Tertullian. Proclus wrote to push forward the claims
          of the new prophesying. He was answered by a Roman Christian named Caius, who,
          in the course of his argument, was led to appeal to the tombs, in the Vatican
          and the Via Ostia, of the apostles Peter and Paul. Caius' book was in dialogue
          form. It contained a very striking criticism of the Apocalypse which the
          author, like the Alogi, attributed to Cerinthus. Hippolytus did not think he
          ought to let such an assertion pass. He answered Caius in some Capita,certain fragments of which have recently been discovered. 
             But
          as early as these first years of the episcopate of Zephyrinus, Hippolytus was
          expending his energies in another controversy. The Theodotians,
          expelled by the Church, could only make a stir outside; whilst in the very
          heart of the Christian community a great controversy agitated both cultivated
          and uncultivated minds. 
             The
          aim was to reach some understanding as to what exactly the Divinity incarnate
          in Jesus Christ really was. Starting from the Johannine axiom, "the Word
          was made flesh", many writers, and especially the Apologists, began to
          study Philo's theory of the Logos. They found in that theory a means of
          reconciling their own faith with their philosophical education, and also a
          point of contact with the educated hearers or readers, to whom they were
          defending Christianity. Celsus himself approved the doctrine of the Logos. But
          what exactly was the Logos? At bottom, in whatever form their thought clothed
          itself, the Logos was for them God revealing Himself externally, acting outside
          Himself, allowing Himself to be known, or making Himself known. God is
          ineffable, abstract, and unknowable: between Him and the world an intermediary
          was necessary. This intermediary could only be Divine : the Word proceedeth from God. All external action on the part of God
          must be attributed to Him, first the Creation, then the divine manifestations
          (theophanies) in the Old Testament, and at last the Incarnation. 
             What now is the relationship between the Word, the accessible God, and
          the Father, who is God inaccessible? This is the delicate point. The Word is of
          God, of the very Essence of the Father. Yet He is more than that in Himself. St
          Justin says crudely, He is another God. But neither this exaggerated
          expression, nor others as strong, which owing to the poverty of theological
          language these early writers used, should be taken in any sense which exceeds
          what we mean by the distinction of Persons. In this theory, what calls for
          criticism is rather, that the distinction of Persons is not conceived as
          eternal, as being a necessity of the inner life of God. The Platonizing
          Christians only need the Word to explain certain contingencies. Logically
          anterior to Creation, the Word was so chronologically as well: nothing more.
          The Greek term Logos, with its double meaning of Reason and Word, suggested a
          compromise. As Divine Reason or thought, the Word had always existed in the
          Bosom of God; as the Word, He came forth from it, in a particular manner and at
          a given moment. This idea is expressed more clearly by the terms "Word
          immanent" and "Word uttered", which we meet with sometimes. 
             But,
          like all compromises between religion and philosophy, this had its drawbacks.
          It was inspired essentially, and above all, by a theory of the universe quite
          foreign to Christian tradition, and which was worked out rather by genuine
          Platonists, the thinkers of the school of Philo, or specially by Gnostics of
          all kinds. The unity of the divine principle, the Monarchy as it was called,
          was only saved by a sort of distribution, organized like the Pleroma, to fill
          up the gap between the infinite and the finite. The Person of the Word alone
          here replaced a whole series of aeons, archons, and demiurges. When once the
          world is there, when creation is accomplished, there were no more difficulties.
          The Creator Logos diffused Himself in His works, especially in Man; supplied
          him with wisdom according to his need; manifested Himself in the best
          philosophy of the Greeks, and in the prophets of Israel; and at last in Jesus,
          gave His supreme message. The theory went no farther. It was for the witness of
          the Church to supply the knowledge of that which is the foundation and
          characteristic of Christianity— salvation through Jesus Christ. 
             These
          defects and lacunae explain the small amount of enthusiasm which the theology
          of the Logos roused, not only among the mass of Christians, but even in men
          like St Irenaeus, with whom the one thing that carried weight was the tradition
          of the Church. God the Creator; Jesus, Son of God, the Saviour; these were the
          two poles between which the thought of the great Bishop of Lyons moved. It was
          not that he was ignorant of the various definitions mooted around him; but it
          was not by them that his mind was influenced. Irenaeus was not the leader of a
          school; he was a leader of the Church. It is but natural that others of the
          clergy should have been of the same mind; and this brings us back to Rome, at
          the moment when the theology of the Logos clashed with the steadfastness of
          Church authority. 
             The
          struggle did not, however, open with a direct attack. The theology of the Logos
          had first to meet the opposition of another school of theology. In Asia, in
          very early days, there were people who would not hear of any intermediary
          between God and the world, especially in the work of redemption, and they
          declared that they knew but one God, He who was incarnate in Jesus Christ.
          According to them the names of Father and Son corresponded only to different
          aspects of the same Person, playing transitory parts and not to divine
          realities. This is what is called Modalism. The theorists of the Logos, who
          were so obviously Platonists, reproached their adversaries for being inspired
          by Heraclitus and Zeno. In reality, the Modalists had
          specially at heart the defence of the Divinity of the Saviour, and this gained
          for them at first a certain amount of sympathy. Unfortunately they bungled it,
          and had to be dropped. 
             This
          doctrine had already found its way to Rome in the days of Pope Eleutherus, when a confessor named Praxeas appeared there from Asia. The Roman Church, absorbed in the consideration of
          Montanus and his prophecies, and still hesitating to condemn, had almost
          decided not even to reprove, when Praxeas arrived
          with information such as changed the wind at once, and the decision was given
          against the Phrygians. Praxeas was a Modalist. His doctrines spread so much that Tertullian said
          of him that in Rome he had done two diabolical works : "He had put to
          Sight the Paraclete, and crucified the Father". This last shaft soon
          brought the new doctrine into ridicule. It exposed pretty clearly one outcome
          of the doctrine quite contrary to Scripture. The Modalists were called Patripassians. The doctrine of Praxeas spread also in Carthage, favoured, says Tertullian,
          by the simplicity of the people. But they found an opponent, no doubt
          Tertullian himself. He denounced them to the authorities of the Church, and Praxeas was obliged, not only to promise amendment, but
          also to sign a document acknowledging his error. He was effectually silenced. 
             About
          the same time, at Smyrna, a certain Noetus, whose
          name also gave rise to many witticisms, was arraigned before "the
          priests" of Smyrna for the same kind of teaching, and reprimanded. He
          complicated the situation by calling himself Moses, and his brother Aaron, an
          odd proceeding behind which probably lurked undue pretensions. At first he
          defended himself successfully. But as he persisted in holding forth,
          dogmatized, and gathered a group of disciples round him, he was once more
          called before the presbyteral college. This time he was more explicit and
          affirmed significantly that, after all, he did no harm by teaching a doctrine
          which enhanced the glory of Jesus Christ: I know but one God; he said, it is no
          other than He who was born, who suffered, and who died. Noetus was excommunicated. 
             Thus
          the Modalist doctrines had been twice condemned, at
          Carthage and at Smyrna, before they tried their fortunes in Rome for the second
          time. A disciple of Noetus, called Epigonus, came and
          opened a school there; but he was soon replaced as head by a certain Cleomenes,
          who, in his turn, was succeeded, a little later on, by Sabellius. There was
          already a Theodotian school in Rome which had even become a church. The Modalist teachers were much opposed to the Theodotians. Probably after the checks they had met with in
          Africa and Asia, they had the good sense to soften down whatever was most
          startling in their language. And they were well received at first by the
          general run of believers, who suspected no evil, and even by the Bishop
          Zephyrinus, who was but little versed in the subtleties of theology, and was
          above all careful, as in duty bound, for the peace of the Church. He left the Modalist teachers and their school alone. They laid special
          stress on the term Monarchy,
          which meant much the same as "consubstantiality" (a term of later
          use), and which denoted the most rigorous Monotheism. Monarchy was the one
          thing talked about. The Gnostics, we have seen, introduced this system into
          their Pleroma; and Marcionism had developed on the same lines, under the
          direction of Apelles. Popular orthodoxy willingly joined this movement; they
          were always ready to defend the Holy Monarchy. Even the Montanists could not
          keep out of it; some of them, led by Aeschines, enrolled themselves under the
          banner of Modalist theology. Others, however, with
          Proclus at their head, maintained a different attitude. 
             But
          the common enemy was the theology of the Logos, defended by Hippolytus in Rome,
          by Tertullian in Africa. The orthodox accused it of introducing two Gods. It
          required, indeed, some education in philosophy, and moreover some sympathy, not
          to see in the Logos, as presented by them, a second God, distinct from the true
          God and inferior to Him. But how was it possible to avoid this Charybdis,
          without falling into the Scylla of Patripassionism?
          Zephyrinus, good man, at last did not know which way to turn: he was quite
          ready to say with Noetus and his people, “I know one
          God only, Jesus Christ, and beside Him no other who has died or suffered.” But
          he added: “It was not the Father who died, it was the Son.” This was but to
          repeat the very terms requiring to be reconciled, the traditional axioms as to
          Divine Unity, the Incarnation, and the distinction between the Father and the
          Son. Zephyrinus was acting up to his position in upholding tradition; but he
          could not solve the enigmas it involved. 
             Hippolytus,
          who had a solution of his own and could not succeed in getting his bishop to
          accept it, grew more and more exasperated. His anger was quick to recognize
          behind Zephyrinus his adviser Callistus. When, therefore, Zephyrinus was dead,
          and Callistus was chosen to succeed him, Hippolytus hesitated no longer. He
          raised a cry of scandal, and with some of his adherents separated himself from
          the Church. This serious step caused a great deal of commotion. Callistus could
          not allow it to be said that Hippolytus and his followers had separated from
          him because he patronized false doctrines: he condemned Sabellius for heresy.
          But neither could he allow Hippolytus to impose his theology upon him. The
          theologian, therefore, found himself in the pitiful position of leader of a
          schismatic Church, and there he remained, even under Urban and Pontian, the
          successors of Callistus. 
             His bitterness came out in the book which we erroneously call the Philosophumena. It was a
          refutation of all doctrinal systems opposed to Christian orthodoxy; orthodoxy
          being adjusted, needless to say, to the point of view of the author. The
          subject is dealt with in nine books, followed by a tenth book of
          recapitulation. The first four books are devoted to the philosophies or
          mythologies of the Greeks and Barbarians; then come the various Gnostic sects,
          and other Christian heresies down to Noetus and
          Callistus; and finally the Elkasaites and the Jews.
          This was not the first time that Hippolytus had combated heresies. At least
          twenty years before he had drawn up a list of heretic leaders, beginning with
          Dositheus and ending with Noetus as the thirty-second
          of the series. This work, called the Syntagma,
          is lost, but almost the whole of it is included in St Epiphanius' compilation.
          Hippolytus there sets forth their various systems, and then following St
          Irenaeus, refutes them, whilst discussing their arguments and interpretations.
          In the Philosophumena the method employed is entirely different. He couples every heresy with some
          philosophical or pagan system, previously refuted, or scoffed at—for this
          author is a master of invective. Hippolytus had never been conspicuous for
          mildness, but between the Syntagma and the Labyrinth his
          character had embittered considerably. The mere mention of Callistus makes him
          furious, and what he says of him is, therefore, not to be relied on. It is not
          sufficient to put aside his malicious interpretations; even the facts, as given
          by him, cannot be accepted without reserve. 
             Hence,
          it is difficult to take the doctrinal statement that Hippolytus gives, as
          really representing the teaching of Callistus. “There is but one divine spirit,
          called by various names, Logos, Father, and Son. This last term applies to the
          Incarnation. The Son is the visible Being, the Man. Become Divine by the
          Incarnation, he is identical with the Father; therefore the Father and the Son
          are one God, one Person only, and not two. Therefore the Father shared the
          sufferings of the Son, for we must not say that the Father suffered.” 
             Tertullian
          was acquainted with this doctrine of the compassion (co-suffering), but
          he does not attribute it to Callistus, and his book against Praxeas was perhaps written before his episcopate. It seems pretty evident that we have
          here a sort of evolution of Modalist doctrine. The
          rather crude Patripassianism, of earlier times, being
          threatened by the attitude of Zephyrinus and Callistus, it may have been
          thought advisable to amend it. 
             But
          the improvement is but slight, and it is not easy to understand how after
          condemning Sabellius, Callistus could have accepted this. But controversialists
          are always inclined to distort the opinions they denounce, and to try to
          compromise their adversaries, by connecting them with mischievous doctrines.
          Still it is, of course, quite possible that in the orthodox camp the distrust
          of the theology of the Logos, the fear of Ditheism and the all absorbing care
          for the doctrine of the Divine Unity, combined with the imperfection of
          technical language, may have led, occasionally, to ill-founded notions and to
          the employment of expressions open to criticism. 
             In
          spite of the passionate asseverations of Hippolytus, two things on his own
          showing are certain: first, that Callistus condemned Sabellius; and secondly,
          that he did not condemn Hippolytus. Hippolytus went off of his own accord. And,
          whatever distrust it inspired, the theology he represented escaped a formal
          condemnation. In the next generation it was openly professed by the Roman
          priest Novatian. It still had followers, far into the 4th century. But none of
          them, neither Novatian nor the later representatives of this theory, were in
          the main stream of thought which led up to the orthodoxy of the Nicene Creed.
          That did not grow out of the theology of the Logos, as formulated by the
          apologists, and later, by Hippolytus and Tertullian; but rather from the simple
          religious belief of early days, defended—rather than explained—by St Irenaeus,
          formulated—more or less—by the Popes Zephyrinus and Callistus, and soon to find
          in their successor Dionysius an interpreter quite equal to his subject. 
             It
          was not only for his teaching that Hippolytus fell foul of Callistus. The anti-pope accused him with equal bitterness of relaxing the
          bonds of Church discipline. 
             According to Hippolytus, Callistus declared that no sin was too grave
          for absolution, and eagerly welcomed back into the Church offenders whom even
          the sects rejected ; he would not allow the deposition of peccant bishops; he
          admitted to orders men who had married more than once; he allowed the clergy to
          marry ; and also tolerated secret marriages between Roman ladies of good family
          and men of low standing. In these accusations it is not always easy to
          distinguish between false statements and malicious interpretations of real
          facts. On the first point, the testimony of Hippolytus is confirmed in part by
          Tertullian, who published his book De Pudicitia, as a protest against a solemn
          declaration of the Pope, evidently Callistus, as to the absolution, not as
          Hippolytus says, of all sinners, but of a certain class of sinner. For some
          time, the Church had held that the excommunication of apostates, homicides, and
          adulterers should be perpetual. Callistus relaxed this severity in cases of
          adultery and the like: “I learn”, says Tertullian, “that a peremptory edict has
          just been issued. The Pontifex Maximus, the Bishop of bishops, has spoken. “I”,
          he says, “I remit sins of adultery and fornication to whosoever shall have done
          penance for them.” Then follows one of his most cutting and sarcastic
          invectives. The rigorists of all the schools, the Montanists, and the Hippolytans, were much scandalized. It does not follow that
          they were right. Moreover, in stipulating that the repentant sinners should do
          penance, Callistus was not offering them very attractive terms. We can judge of
          this from Tertullian's own words. This is the description, or rather, the
          caricature, which he gives of the reconciliation of a penitent: “Thou dost
          introduce”, he says, addressing the Pope, “thou dost introduce into the Church,
          the penitent adulterer, who comes to make supplication to the assembly of the
          brethren. Behold him then: clothed in a hair-shirt, covered with ashes, in a
          sad plight, a spectacle to excite horror in the hearts of ah present. He
          prostrates himself in the midst of the congregation, before the widows, before
          the priests; he seizes the fringe of their garments, he kisses their
          footprints, he takes hold of their knees. In the meantime thou dost harangue
          the people, thou dost excite the pity of the public for the sad fate of the
          suppliant. O good Shepherd, O blessed Pope, thou dost relate the parable of the
          lost sheep, in order that thy lost goat may be returned to thee; thou dost
          promise that henceforth he shall never wander from the fold again....” 
             Happily
          for his reputation, Hippolytus wrote other things beside his pamphlets. His
          exegetical work is considerable. It extends over all the books of the Bible,
          from Genesis to the Apocalypse. But he seldom comments on the whole of a book
          as he does on the prophecy of Daniel. Besides his exegetical treatises, he also
          wrote on AntiChrist, on the origin of evil, on the
          substance of the universe, on the resurrection : this last book was dedicated
          to the Empress Mammea. We have seen with what heat he
          attacked heretics in general, and those of his own time in particular; he wrote
          a special book against the Marcionites. He also appears to have taken up the
          question of Church discipline : his name is claimed for many later
          compilations, which, more or less, must have been inspired by him. The Paschal
          Question also attracted his attention. He treated it in a general way, in his
          book on Easter. He afterwards undertook to save Christians from being dependent
          on the calculations of the Jews by drawing up Paschal tables himself, founded
          on a cycle of eight years. This cycle was imperfect: the new calculation was
          soon out of harmony with astronomical facts, and had to be abandoned. But for
          the moment his discovery was considered marvelous. A
          statue was erected to Hippolytus by people of his own sect, and still exists.
          The theologian is shown seated on a chair upon the sides of which his famous
          tables appear. A little behind them is a catalogue of his writings. To judge by
          the starting-point of the cycle, this monument belongs to the year 222, the
          year in which Callistus died.
             The
          last work of Hippolytus seems to have been his book of Chronicles; a few fragments or
          adaptations of it still remain, in various languages, for it was very widely
          read. Hippolytus brought it down to the last year of Alexander Severus (235
          A.D.). It contained, among other things, very interesting geographical
          descriptions. 
             Some
          of these writings are earlier than his schism, but a good many of them, notably
          the works of calculation and chronology, belong to the time when Hippolytus
          claimed the position of head of the Roman Church, in opposition to the
          legitimate Popes, Callistus, Urban, and Pontian. Their differences were healed
          by persecution. After the peaceful years of Alexander Severus, the accession of
          Maximin the Thracian brought back the evil days. The new severities were
          specially aimed at the clergy. In Rome, the heads of both parties, Pontian, the
          legitimate Bishop, and Hippolytus, the anti-Pope, were arrested. Both were
          condemned to the mines of Sardinia. Drawn together by the miseries of their
          prison, the two confessors finally became reconciled. Hippolytus himself, in
          his last moments, exhorted his followers to unite themselves with the rest of
          the faithful. His schism did not survive him. When peace was once more restored
          to the Church, his body was brought back to Rome with that of Pontian, who also
          died in that pestilential island. They were buried on the same day, Aug.
          13—Pontian in the cemetery of Callistus among the popes, Hippolytus in a crypt
          on the Via Tiburtina. His friends were allowed to
          erect his statue there. The honor paid to the martyr
          finally effaced the remembrance of his schism. A century later, Damasus recognized
          Hippolytus as a martyr; he had also heard it said that he had returned to the
          Church after taking part in a schism; but having only a very vague notion as to
          what this schism was, he identified it with that of Novatian
             The
          writings of Hippolytus, which ought to have kept alive his memory, were soon
          lost sight of in Rome. In the next generation, the Roman clergy spoke and wrote
          in Latin. In the East, the title of Bishop of Rome, which Hippolytus had
          assumed on the title-page of his works, caused much perplexity to the learned,
          as they could not find his name in any episcopal catalogue. Eusebius does not
          know where he had been bishop; and what is still stranger, nor do St Jerome and
          Rufinus! Pope Gelasius (c. 495) by a strange perversion assigns to him the See
          of Bostra. Others, less familiar with the history of
          the popes, accept the title of Bishop of Rome, without troubling themselves
          about the discrepancy such an assumption involved. Later still, when the legend
          of another martyr, Hippolytus, buried at Porto, came to light, they put things
          straight by saying that Hippolytus, the author, had been Bishop of the Port of
          Rome. 
             In
          Rome itself, at any rate, Hippolytus retained the title of Roman Priest, both
          in history and in the memorials in the Office. He is so called in the Liber pontificalis.
          And towards the end of the 6th century he was thus represented, with suitable
          accessories, in a mosaic of the basilica of San Lorenzo. But a strange romance
          about the Decian persecution was already in circulation; the episodes travel
          from Babylon to Rome, and put upon the scene every kind of martyr, some Roman,
          others Persian; some authentic, the others imaginary. Hippolytus appears in
          these stories. He is represented as a subordinate of the Prefect of Rome, and
          in that capacity has charge of St Lawrence as prisoner; then he is converted
          and dies a martyr's death, with his nurse Concordia, and eighteen other
          persons. A most singular transformation! 
             NOVATIAN
           The
          Emperor Maximin was dethroned in 236, and put to death the following year. His
          edicts against the Christians cannot have been long in force; the Roman Church
          regained the peace she had enjoyed since the reign of Caracalla. Anteros
          succeeded the exiled Pope Pontian, but only for a few weeks. Fabian followed
          him, and held the See until the Decian persecution. He is known as the
          constructor of certain buildings in the cemeteries of Rome, and as having
          assigned the different regions of the city to the seven deacons. This, no
          doubt, was the origin of the ecclesiastical divisions, the official zones of
          clerical and of religious administration, which were retained in Rome for many
          centuries. Serious trouble in the African Church called for Fabian's intervention
          outside his own See; the deposition of Privatus, Bishop of Lambeses.
          Origen also addressed to him a memorial justifying himself as to the
          accusations brought against his doctrine. The science of theology continued to
          be cultivated in Rome. Instead of Hippolytus, a new teacher was heard—Novatian. 
             Some
          of his writings are still extant, and they are in Latin : for the time has come
          when the Roman Church changed its language and substituted Latin for Greek.
          Novatian's chief work is a treatise on the Trinity, refuting the Gnostics, the Theodotians, and the Sabellians. It takes the shape of an
          exposition on the three chief articles of the Creed : I believe in God, the
            Father Almighty . . . and in Jesus Christ, His Only Son ... and in the Holy
            Ghost. The author displays a profound knowledge of Holy Scripture; his
          reasoning is concise, his explanations clear, and his conceptions sufficiently
          exact. Coming after so many controversialists, he profited by their labors. In consequence, his theory of the Trinity, whilst
          supporting the Western theory of the double state of the Logos, is much more
          exact and complete than any of its predecessors. But Novatian is not only a
          theologian; he is also a master of rhetoric, careful and elaborate in style, he
          develops his subject artistically, and he gives his readers an occasional rest
          from dry study by magnificent Rights of eloquence. 
             Like
          Hippolytus, Novatian was a priest of the Roman Church. Perhaps he exercised
          functions similar to those of the catechists of Alexandria and the theologian
          priests of Africa; they, besides the instruction of catechumens, had also the
          charge of the young readers. The elevation of Novatian to the priesthood had
          met with some opposition. The clergy did not like him. His talent had
          undoubtedly made him many enemies. At this inopportune moment it was remembered
          that he had not been baptized according to the ordinary form, but during an
          illness, and with only the abridged form used in such cases. However, whether
          the majority was, as a whole, favorable to him, or
          whether Bishop Fabian took a special interest in the introduction of so
          distinguished a man to his presbyteral college, these objections were
          overlooked. In ordinary circumstances, Novatian might indeed have been most
          useful, but his talent as an orator, and his learning, which attracted much
          admiration in some circles, had rather filled him with conceit. He had not a
          very strong head; the persecution which was approaching, and especially the
          ecclesiastical crisis which it caused, revealed that he was wanting in strength
          of character.
              
               
           CHAPTER XVIII 
           THE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OF ALEXANDRIA
           
            
               WHEN
          the Romans took possession of Egypt, many thousands of years had passed since
          the first corn was sown in the mud of the Nile, and harvested in the spring,
          under the intense heat of a pitiless sun. The long monotonous history of Egypt
          is that of a people over-much governed. The ancient native dynasties were
          followed successively by Persian administrators, Macedonian kings, and Roman
          viceroys: the government changed hands, but never its form and efficiency. 
             Long before Alexander, the Greeks of Miletus had a colony at Naucratis,
          on the western arm of the Nile; but Egyptian Hellenism really began only with
          the Macedonian conquest. It was a Hellenism quite peculiar to itself,
          essentially military and monarchical; literary, certainly, but above all,
          commercial. Alexandria was its sanctuary. Founded by the hero, whose tomb it
          held, it became the residence of kings descended from his companion-at-arms,
          Ptolemy, the son of Lagus. The Museum of Alexandria, that great focus of study
          and instruction, organized on the model of the Greek literary associations,
          soon became the center of all Greek intellectual
          life, the headquarters of the philosophers, thinkers, poets, artists, and
          mathematicians of the world. Through the haven of Alexandria, sheltered by the
          isle of Pharos, the world's merchantmen gained access to the treasures of Egypt,
          which, till then, had been a closed country, a sort of China. Thence radiated
          into the far interior, a swarm of Greek merchants, adventurers, and officials.
          They obtained a footing almost everywhere, mingled with the native population,
          and produced a hybrid Egypto-Hellenic race, who formed a link between pure
          Hellenism and old Egyptian thought. As a matter of course, Egypt soon reacted
          on her conquerors. The result of all these influences was a mixed population,
          very active and industrious, strong to endure, and, as a rule, docile, if
          managed with a firm hand. 
             On
          August 1, 30 B.C., Alexandria fell into the hands of Octavius; and Egypt, with
          its immemorial past, became a Roman province, or, to speak more correctly, the
          emperor's private domain, governed direct by creatures of Caesar, for the
          benefit of his private purse. 
             A
          prefect—a Roman knight of the lower order—represented the emperor, who
          appointed two or three other officials, such as the judge of Alexandria, and
          the president of the Museum. Everything else was in the hands of the prefect,
          who, on behalf of the emperor, officiated in place of the Pharaohs in the
          religious ceremonies. 
             Elsewhere,
          the Romans had always favored and encouraged the
          development of municipal institutions. In Egypt, where they found no fully organized
          cities, with elections, council, and magistrates, they left things as they
          were. Alexandria itself was only a crowd under control, not an organic body of
          citizens. It acquired a council or a senate, for the first time under Septimius
          Severus, but no magistrates. It was the same with Ptolemais, in Upper Egypt.
          The only exception was Antinoé, organized as a city,
          by the Emperor Hadrian. The rest of the country was divided into nomes,
          a system which dated from remote antiquity. The Egyptians, properly so-called,
          were excluded from the Roman community. They could not become Roman citizens,
          without being first naturalized as Alexandrians, and that was not very easy to
          accomplish. Even after Septimius Severus and Caracalla, the Egyptians continued
          to form an inferior caste, and they never appear to have regained their proper
          position in the empire. The national language, Egyptian or Coptic, which had
          several dialects, was preserved in the country, in the small towns, and even
          among the lower classes in large towns. 
             As
          to religion, the Greek legends did not count for much; at most, they may have
          supplied some ornamental additions to the old national cult, which was too
          solidly established on Egyptian soil to yield to strange gods. In Alexandria
          itself, the enormous temple of Serapis dominated the bustle of Greek commerce,
          from the height of its artificial hill. The gods of the Nile were conquering
          the conquerors. The Ptolemys had to become the
          high-priests of the religion they had inherited from the Pharaohs. 
             There
          was, however, one protest, Israel had returned to Egypt, and formed, in
          Alexandria, an important community, amounting to a third of the whole
          population. They were far from being treated as enemies. The Jews had their
          chief, or Ethnarch, and their national council; they enjoyed complete religious
          liberty. Nevertheless, in this strange land, they finally forgot their own
          tongue, and the Holy Scriptures had to be translated for them. The vicinity of
          the Museum drew them to literature. Under this influence arose Philo's
          exegesis, threatening to dissipate in philosophic dreams the old religion of
          the people of God. In Alexandria there grew up also that literature of a Jewish
          and Monotheist propaganda, in which pseudosibyls and
          apocryphal poets pitted their wits, to their hearts' content, against the gods,
          the sacrifices, and the temples. 
             The
          origin of Christianity in Egypt is extremely obscure. It is not mentioned in
          the New Testament; the only native of Alexandria mentioned there is Apollos,
          and he plays rather an insignificant part in St Paul's time, as an itinerant
          missionary, not in his own country, but in Asia and in Greece. The only book in
          early Christian literature which appears to have originated there is the Gospel
          according to the Egyptians. Valentinus, Basilides, and Carpocrates are the
          first Christians of Egypt whose names appear in history. From Alexandria the
          female teacher, Marcellina, came to Rome, in the time of Pope Anicetus. There
          Apelles fled, after his quarrel with Marcion; and it was from thence that he
          returned with his clairvoyante Philomena. But we must
          not conclude that these heretical manifestations represent the whole of
          Alexandrian Christianity. These schools, precisely because they are only
          schools, imply a Church, "the great Church", as Celsus says; these
          very aberrations, precisely because they bear the names of their authors,
          testify to the existence of orthodox Church tradition. And in Egypt, as
          elsewhere, this rested on episcopal organisation. In his Chronicle, published
          221 A.D., Julius Africanus inserts the names of ten bishops, who had held the
          See before Demetrius, the bishop of his own day. Demetrius became bishop about
          189. Before him, the chronologist gives the names of Anianus, Abilius, Cerdo, Primus, Justus, Eumenes, Marcus, Celadion, Agrippinus, and Julian.
          The length of his episcopate is subjoined to the name of each bishop; but these
          figures are of no interest, as, even supposing the resulting chronological
          table to be correct, no incident belonging to the time has survived. One
          tradition—which, at the beginning of the 4th century, Eusebius reports, and
          which he reproduces, without however corroborating it—says that the Evangelist
          Mark first preached the Gospel in Egypt, and founded churches in Alexandria. In
          a place called Boucolia, to the east of the town, a
          sanctuary was shown, where reposed the body of the apostle, and of the bishops,
          his successors.
             The
          history of the Church in Alexandria, however, is rather obscure, even in the
          time of Bishop Demetrius, whose long episcopate corresponds with those of the
          Popes, Victor, Zephyrinus, Callistus, and Urban. The celebrated catechetical
          school is the feature that stands out most prominently. 
             In
          Rome, we have already heard of many schools of transcendental exegesis and
          theology. The Church had difficulties with several, and had to condemn them.
          But not always; and even when it came to a rupture, the school was not
          condemned as a school, but as the organ of a mischievous propaganda. In other
          words, the Church did not censure theology, but only bad theology. 
             If such institutions could exist in Rome, in such matter-of-fact
          surroundings, how much more in Alexandria, that great center of learning and critical literature, under the shadow of the Museum, the home
          of Hellenic wisdom, within reach of the celebrated Library, face to face with
          the ancient Jewish schools, where the memory of Philo still lived on, and with
          the new Gnostic schools, where such men as Basilides and Carpocrates were
          shining lights. Christianity, which drew so many converts from among people of
          cultivation, could not but be affected by their claims, and adapt itself, in
          some measure, to their habits of mind. Yet we have no reason to think that it
          did so very readily. The orthodox catechetical School at the time of the
          Emperor Commodus, shows no sign of being founded by one of the ancient bishops.
          Though Anally accepted as an institution of the Alexandrian Church, and made
          available for the instruction of catechumens, it appears, like its Roman
          counterparts, to have sprung from the efforts of private individuals. 
             We
          must not forget that an immense majority of the population of Alexandria was
          industrial and commercial, and that the Museum enlightened Hellenism as a
          whole, rather than its own immediate surroundings. Even in Alexandria, the
          great mass of Christians could have been but little concerned with speculative
          thought. The catechetical School could never have interested more than a
          restricted number of cultivated minds. The rest distrusted rather than admired
          it. And this was the general tendency. Greek culture itself was already under a
          cloud. The Gnostics had made it the inspiring force of their interpretation of
          Christian teaching with lamentable results, as the Alexandrian Christians knew
          by experience. This puts the actual value of this famous theological School in
          its true light. 
             Its
          earliest teachers are unknown. The first whose memory has survived, Pantaenus,
          was a converted Stoic, a native of Sicily. He went, we are told, to preach the
          Gospel to the "Indians", and is said to have found they had a Gospel
          in the Hebrew tongue, brought by the Apostle Bartholomew. On his return to
          Alexandria, he took over the management of the School, and numbered among his
          disciples Clement, his future successor, and Alexander, who afterwards became
          bishop of the churches in Cappadocia and Jerusalem. Nothing of his has been
          preserved. Although Eusebius speaks of his writings, it does not appear that
          any of them were ever published. 
             It
          is quite otherwise with Clement, his successor; a sufficient number of his
          writings remain, to give an idea of the probable teaching of the Alexandrian
          School, during the last twenty years of the 2nd century.
           
           CLEMENT
               
           T. Flavius Clemens, as his name indicates, was probably descended from
          some freedman of the Christian consul of that name. He began life as a heathen.
          After his conversion, he followed the teaching of several masters in
          succession, whom he enumerates in a passage of his Stromata without naming them—a Greek of Ionia,
          another of Magna Gracia, a third of Coelosyria (Antioch?), an Egyptian, an Assyrian (Tatian?), and a converted Palestinian
          Jew. Finally, he met Pantasnus in Egypt, and, with
          him, found rest for his soul. 
             The
          School of Alexandria was exactly the environment he was seeking, and which
          suited him. There the wisdom of ancient Greece was not considered an accursed
          thing, nor was it treated with indifference. There, men believed, as Justin
          did, that it contained a kind of illumination from the Divine Logos adored by
          Christians in Jesus Christ. There religious learning was cultivated in this
          broad spirit, not only with a view to apologetics, but as a means of perfecting
          the individual. It was an orthodox Gnosticism : it did not concern itself with
          the mysteries of the Creator, nor was it led astray in foolish dreams of the
          Pleroma, or the eccentricities of impracticable asceticism; but still like the
          other Gnosticism, it assured its followers of a position of privilege among the
          rest of the faithful. There were elements in the religious life of a Gnostic
          Christian, unknown to the general run of believers. He did not work out his
          salvation as others did; he knew more; his moral ideal was higher than theirs. 
             As with Valentinus and Basilides this advanced teaching was justified by
          a special tradition, “The Lord, after his resurrection, had confided the hidden
          knowledge to James the Just, to John, and to Peter, who communicated it to
          other apostles, and these again to the Seventy, of whom Barnabas was one”.
          Through Pantasnus, it reached Clement. We do not know
          exactly when Clement succeeded his master in the direction of the catechetical
          School. He was already known as a writer before the time of Pope Victor—that
          is, roughly speaking, about the time that Irenseus finished his great work. Perhaps his Protreptic,
          still preserved, belongs to this first period, and possibly also the eight
          books of Hypotyposes,
          of which we have only fragments. Of this last work, Eusebius speaks with
          reserve, and confines himself to the enumeration of the sacred books, authentic
          or disputed, quoted in it. Photius is more outspoken, and gives a very damaging
          analysis of it. Clement taught the eternity of matter; he said the Son was only
          a creature; he believed in the transmigration of souls (metempsychosis), and in
          the existence of other worlds, prior to the creation of man. The history of
          Adam and Eve was treated in a shamelessly impious manner. According to Clement,
          the Word was made flesh only in appearance. Moreover, he acknowledged two or
          three Words, as the following phrase shows : “The Son is also called the Word,
          with the same name as the Word of the Father; but it was not He who was made
          flesh; neither was it the Word of the Father; but it was a Power of God, a sort
          of derivation from His Word, which in the form of reason dwells in the heart of
          man.” 
             These doctrines, which drew down the condemnation of Photius, scattered
          as they were in exegetical commentaries, may have been less accentuated than he
          thinks. The fact remains that these first theological flights of Clement's did
          not prevent his being enrolled in the college of presbyters of Alexandria. This
          personal connection between the Church and the School was distinctly of service
          to the School. The other books of Clement did not give rise to the same
          objections as the Hypotyposes.
          The chief are the Miscellanies(Stromata)
          and the Tutor. In the
          first, the teaching is chiefly theoretical; the other aims rather at building
          up the moral character of the disciple. The Miscellanies consists of seven books, the first four being written before the Tutor. Having completed this
          last work, Clement returned to the Miscellanies,
          but never finished it. 
             Clement
          was extraordinarily learned; he had thoroughly mastered biblical and Christian
          literature, authentic and apocryphal, and not only orthodox literature, but
          also Gnostic writings of all kinds. He was not less well read in poetry and
          heathen philosophy. His quotations—for he quotes freely—have preserved many
          fragments of lost books. 
             But he had not a synthetical mind. He jumps so often from one subject to
          another, that it is difficult to discover, in his books, any well thought-out
          plan, or completed design. But, at the beginning of his Tutor, he seems to open out on
          his system of Christian teaching; he distinguishes between the three functions
          which the Word, through His medium, fulfils. He convicts, He trains (moral
          education), He teaches (intellectual education). If the Miscellanies, as is probable,
          correspond to this third process, then, evidently, synthesis was not what
          Christian Gnosticism, as Clement conceived it, required. The book is full of
          digressions, and consists of disconnected sentences. This is the more
          surprising, in that the rival schools of Valentinus and Basilides are
          remarkable for the synthetical form of their teaching. Origen was needed to
          supply this element. 
             Clement did not end his career in Alexandria. The persecution which
          broke out in Egypt, 202 A.D., was aimed specially at the catechumens; so it
          necessarily had a disastrous effect on the institution over which he presided.
          The first two books of his Miscellanies, written at that time, contain more than one allusion to this crisis. At last,
          he had to fly. Shortly afterwards we hear of him at Caesarea in Cappadocia,
          with Bishop Alexander, who had studied under him as well as under Pantaenus.
          The persecution also raged furiously in Caesarea. Alexander was thrown into
          prison; Clement took his place in the government of the Church, strengthened
          the faithful, and made many new converts. This is recorded of him, in a letter
          from Alexander himself, sent by the hand of Clement, to the Church of Antioch,
          in 211 or 212. He was already well known to the faithful in Antioch. In another
          letter to Origen, written about 215, Alexander alludes to him as already dead. 
             Besides
          his books on theological teaching, Clement wrote others, less speculative, such
          as his famous discourse “On the salvation of the rich”, which we have almost
          entire, and his homilies “On fasting and on slander”. He took part in the
          controversies of his day on the Paschal question. His book on this subject has
          some affinity with a similar work by Melito; another, dedicated to his friend
          Alexander, seems, from its title, Ecclesiastical
            Canon against Judaizers, to have the same tendency. 
               But
          what is most open to criticism in Clement's works is not the eccentricity of
          his theology. The fundamental objection to his teaching, as to that of Origen,
          and no doubt also to that of their predecessors, is that they attached too much
          importance to knowledge— religious knowledge, of course. The Gnostic
          believer—that is to say, the theologian—is to them on a higher spiritual plane
          than the simple believer. This conception is no doubt quite different from the
          heretical distinction between psychic and spiritual—depending on natural
          differences of temperament. Nevertheless, it is also connected with the
          doctrine of Platonic philosophy, that knowledge, instead of augmenting a man’s
          responsibility, increased his moral worth. The School of Alexandria claimed to
          turn out Christians who were not only more learned than others, but morally
          better. This assumption was difficult to reconcile with the general principles
          of Church discipline. The local Church became aware of this, and, by
          incorporating the school into itself, gradually modified its tone, both on this
          and on other points, in which it might otherwise have become a menace to unity.
           
           ORIGEN
               
           Of
          Clement it is uncertain whether he was born at Athens or at Alexandria. Origen,
          as his name alone would tell us, was a native of Egypt. His parents were
          Christians, and of good position : his first master was his own father,
          Leonides. From his earliest childhood, enthusiasm possessed and consumed him;
          everything carried him off his feet: learning, martyrdom, asceticism. Leonides
          was denounced and condemned as a Christian (202-3). His son not being able to
          share his martyrdom, urged him to confess the faith openly. Deprived by
          confiscation of his paternal inheritance, he found means to support himself and
          the large family of which, at the age of seventeen, he became the head. The
          catechetical School had been dispersed by the persecution; but the example of
          the martyrs converted many honest folk, who gather round this child, already as
          distinguished for learning as for faith, and Bishop Demetrius accepted him as a
          catechist. But the edict of Severus claims new victims in the scarcely
          reconstituted school. The youthful teacher leads his disciples to martyrdom;
          others gather around him; nothing daunts his zeal; and at last he draws upon
          himself the concentrated rage of the heathen fanatics. 
             More
          peaceful days succeeded: then, his courage under the fire of persecution was
          followed by a wild access of asceticism. Origen, by his mortified life, became
          the forerunner of saints like the Anthonys and the Hilarions.
          It would not be his fault, if orthodox Christianity were outdone in asceticism
          by the sternest philosophers, or by these Gnostics and Montanists, who had most
          cruelly macerated the flesh. Origen went even farther—too far. In the time of
          Justing a young Christian of Alexandria, wishing to give the lie to the
          abominable calumnies which defamed Christian morality, asked permission of the
          Prefect of Egypt, to apply to himself literally the words of St Matthew, XIX.
          12. Origen does not ask for leave, he takes it, thinking thus to put a stop to
          the suspicions which his duties as catechist might excite amongst the enemies
          of the Christian name. 
             Bishop
          Demetrius, informed of this courageous though unreasonable act of
          mortification, nevertheless retained Origen at the head of his School. The
          young teacher soon became the glory of Alexandria. While giving instruction to
          a daily increasing number of disciples, he never dropped his own studies.
          Justin, Tatian, and Clement had passed into Christianity from paganism: their
          education had been first philosophical, and then religious. Origen's studies
          followed an inverse order. Brought up in the Christian faith, he at first
          derived from heathen sources only the elements of ordinary knowledge, such as
          grammar. It was not till much later when he began to feel he must understand
          the teaching which he had to oppose, that he set himself to study Greek
          philosophy and heretical books. He then attended the lectures of Ammonius Saccas, in company with an older disciple, Heraclas, who had already been in the School five years.
          But, whilst allowing his powerful intellect to range over these Helds of learning, he carefully studied Christian
          tradition, and strove to ascertain exactly what the teaching of the Church was.
          It seems likely that it was with a view to this, that about 212 he made his
          journey to Rome, being desirous, as he says, to see this very ancient Church.
          So also he, who, as a student of exegesis, was so bold in his scriptural
          interpretation, felt more than anyone the need to settle the correct text by
          critical research. He learnt Hebrew, and sought everywhere for different
          versions, by which to check the Septuagint. His journeys gave him good openings
          for such research. He is perpetually on the move; to Rome, to Greece, to
          Nicopolis in Epirus, to Nicomedia, to Antioch, to Palestine, and to Arabia. Heraclas, who had already helped him in his teaching, took
          charge of the School during the absence of Origen. It was not always thirst for
          knowledge which sent Origen roaming. Many great personages, anxious for
          information about Christianity, were moved by his reputation for learning, to
          send for him. Thus, the legate of Arabia sent an urgent summons for him, and,
          about 218, the Princess Mammea, mother of the future
          Emperor, Alexander Severus, sent an escort of cavalry to fetch him from
          Antioch. 
             Sometime
          earlier, at the time of the sack of Alexandria by the troops of Caracalla,
          Origen had been obliged to fly; he took refuge in Palestine, with the Bishops Theoctistus of Caesarea, and Alexander of Aelia. These
          prelates, friends of learning, proud to show off to their flock the celebrated
          catechist of Alexandria, persuaded him to address, not only the catechumens,
          but all the congregation in their churches. Demetrius vehemently protested
          against this, which seemed to him to be irregular, and recalled his spiritual
          son. The Palestinian bishops excused themselves by quoting precedents. 
             Fifteen years passed. The Bishop of Alexandria, proud of Origen's
          success, and of the fame of his School, gave him a free hand in his teaching,
          and did not restrain the bold speculations which are revealed in his earliest
          works, notably in the First
            Principles now first appearing. A rich and devoted friend of his,
          named Ambrose, put at his disposal a whole staff of stenographers and copyists:
          and thus Origen's commentaries attained wide popularity beyond the limits of
          his School. 
             At last, however, a breach with the bishop changed the situation.
          Origen, summoned to Achaia to combat certain heresies, was ordained priest on
          his way through Palestine, by his friends the Bishops of Aelia and Caesarea.
          Demetrius had refrained from raising him to this office. By leaving Origen a
          layman, he confined his instruction to the catechumens outside the Church, and
          prevented his preaching within it. Heraclas had been
          differently treated, and admitted to the college of presbyters, without
          renouncing his philosophical studies, or even taking off his philosopher's
          cloak. Perhaps the Alexandrian usage was already opposed to the ordination of
          eunuchs. But Eusebius insinuates, and St Jerome declares, that the prelate was
          only actuated by petty jealousy, and this is quite possible. The Palestinian
          bishops, whom Demetrius had forbidden to allow Origen to preach because he was
          not a priest, wished, no doubt, to do away with this restriction. They did not
          share the views of their colleague of Alexandria as to eunuchs. Neither did
          they make any difficulty about ordaining a member of another Church. But,
          however that may be, Demetrius protested roundly, though without giving any
          other reason than that of the self-inflicted mutilation. Origen, after a tour
          in Achaia, Asia Minor, and Syria, returned to Egypt, and tried to resume the
          direction of his School. But this the bishop opposed. Origen was condemned by
          two successive synods, to give up teaching, to leave Alexandria, and finally,
          to be deposed from the priesthood. This decision was communicated to the other
          bishops, and ratified without discussion by many of them. The decision appears
          to have been accepted in Rome, as was, later on, a similar sentence pronounced
          against Arius. 
             In
          Palestine, on the contrary, as in Cappadocia and Achaia, Origen's position was
          strong enough to withstand this blow. He found shelter and protection with the
          Palestinian bishops, established himself in Caesarea, and in this new sphere
          went on teaching in the schools, writing, and preaching to the faithful. 
             Although
          he himself was turned out of Alexandria, his doctrine still remained,
          interpreted by his old coadjutor, Heraclas. Soon
          after Origen left, Demetrius died, and was succeeded by Heraclas.
          It seems that his friendship for Origen had cooled, and that, as a bishop, Heraclas maintained the attitude of his predecessor. The
          Master remained in Palestine, and one of his disciples, Dionysius, took over
          the direction of the catechetical School. But in spite of the undoubted
          efficiency of this new master, the Alexandrian School was no longer in
          Alexandria. It was in Caesarea, and thither repaired the most distinguished
          students, such as Gregory, afterwards called Thaumaturgus, and his brother
          Athenodorus. 
             Thither also came letters to Origen from the most celebrated prelates of
          the East, such as Firmilian, Bishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, and there also
          his most important literary enterprises originated; notably, his famous edition
          of the versions of the Old Testament, the Hexapla and Octapla.
          People also sought him out there to solve doctrinal difficulties, to refute
          heretics, and to provide arguments against bishops who had strayed from the
          accepted teaching. His knowledge, his logic, and his eloquence were invincible.
          Moreover, to all this was added the charm of the most attractive sanctity, and
          the prestige of marvelous asceticism. His renown was
          universal; his writings and his letters circulated throughout the East, and as
          far as Rome, where, however, they were hardly read, as Greek was passing out of
          use. And, while thus edifying the Church by his virtue, and illuminating the
          faith by his teaching, he also defended it against all enemies—heretics, Jews,
          and pagans, he faced them all. To this last period of his life belongs his
          famous treatise against Celsus. He still lacked, however, the glory of the
          martyrs and confessors. In 235, the persecution of Maximinus had obliged him to
          leave Palestine, and take refuge in Cappadocia. Two of his friends, Ambrose and Protoctetus, a priest of Caesarea, were thrown into
          prison. Again taking up the strain with which as a child he had encouraged his
          father to die for the faith, Origen addressed the two confessors in his
          "Exhortation to Martyrdom". The tempest passed, but fifteen years
          later, the Decian persecution found him at his post of Christian Teacher, and
          he was arrested, dragged to the rack, thrown into prison, and loaded with
          chains, and his limbs were wrenched asunder. He was threatened with the stake,
          and subjected to other tortures. Nothing daunted his courage. Nevertheless,
          less fortunate than his friend Alexander, who died in prison, Origen lived on.
          He survived the end of the persecution for two or three years, and found time
          to associate himself with Cornelius, Cyprian, and Dionysius, the great bishops
          of the day, in the merciful work of reconciling the apostates, whose faith had
          failed in the days of trial. His friend, Ambrose, died before him. A letter on
          martyrdom from his old disciple, Dionysius, then Bishop of Alexandria, was one
          of the last that he received. At last he died, crowned with all the honors a Christian may aspire to in this world, and poor to
          the very last. It was at Tyre that he gave up his beautiful soul to God. His
          tomb there was long visited. 
             I
          do not say venerated. At that time, the solemnities of a yearly commemorative
          festival were only accorded to martyrs, and to some extent to bishops. Origen
          does not appear in the legends of the saints : his unremitting labors for the furtherance of learning, great as they were,
          did not appeal to the ordinary public. And besides, his doctrines were soon
          called in question; the disputes which raged around his memory were not
          calculated to crown him with a halo. Some few, indeed, stood up for him, but
          they were unskillful and overdid it; and his enemies
          were many. Few names have been more execrated than his. Yet the historian
          discerns without difficulty the passions, whether excusable or disgraceful,
          which stirred up against him such men as Demetrius, Methodus,
          Epiphanius, Jerome, Theophilus, and Justinian. We are far from possessing all
          his works, yet we have enough to enable us to estimate and to compare his
          teaching and the accepted doctrines of the time, and above all, to impress upon
          us the absolute purity of his intentions. 
             His
          literary output is immense. The greater part of it is devoted to the Bible.
          First came the celebrated Hexapla (or six-fold Bible) where stood in parallel
          columns the Hebrew text in Hebrew and in Greek characters, and the Septuagint
          with the Greek texts of Aquila, Symmachus, and Theodotian, as well as various
          incomplete versions. This monumental work still existed at Caesarea in the time
          of Eusebius; whether it was preserved until the time of Epiphanius and Jerome
          is doubtful. A transcription of part of it, containing only the four Greek
          versions, was called Tetrapla. Origen also drew up a
          recension of the Septuagint, in which obelisks marked the passages wanting in the Hebrew, and asterisks distinguished supplementary passages,
          borrowed from the version of Theodotian, wherever the Hebrew seemed more
          complete than the Septuagint. These critical works led up logically, if not
          chronologically, to an immense mass of commentaries, differing in form
          (scholia, homilies, treatises, or tracts), but covering all the books of the
          Old and New Testament. 
             Besides his labors on the criticism and
          interpretation of the Bible, Origen left other works on special subjects;
          treatises On Prayer and On the Resurrection,
          an Exhortation to Martyrdom,
          ten books of Miscellanies,
          and the two most famous treatises Against
            Celsus, and On First
              Principles. A hundred of his letters, collected by Eusebius, formed
          an important addition to this literature. Two of them were addressed to the
          Emperor Philip and to his wife, Otacilia Severa. 
             Epiphanius estimates the literary productions of Origen at six thousand
          volumes. This enormous number is not improbable, if we consider the
          peculiarities of an ancient library, and the small size of the rolls (volumina) written on. However that may be, only a
          part of his great achievement has been preserved to our day. The copyists,
          especially the Greeks, were soon turned aside by the anathemas heaped upon him.
          The Latins, however, were more lenient, and, thanks to them, we still have the
          treatise on First Principles,
          a profound work from which we can estimate Origen's synthetic theology, though
          indeed all we have is a rendering, evidently tampered with in several places.
          Rufinus, the translator, warns us of this in his preface. St Jerome made
          another and more correct translation; but of his version, as of the original,
          unfortunately only fragments remain. 
             The
          idea even of a synthesis is characteristic. From the time of St Justin, not to
          say of St John, men had sought to employ the conception and language of
          philosophy as a means of explaining Christian doctrine. But their efforts were
          incomplete. The points which they intended to defend, or to accentuate, were
          elaborated in philosophical language; the remainder they left untouched. In
          this, Justin and the other apologists, and later on, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, and
          Tertullian, are all alike. Their theology, as such, was always incomplete and
          fragmentary. The doctrinal synthesis was represented by the Creed. There, in
          that brief formula, between “God, the Father Almighty”, and “the resurrection
          of the body”, was comprised all that believers required for faith and hope.
          Besides this simple popular formula, there were only Gnostic systems, equally
          complete, from their ineffable abyss to the return to God of elect souls.
          Clement had philosophized Christianity, but his attention was not drawn to
          particular points by the necessities of controversy, nor had he ever felt the
          need of combining the elements of doctrine into an harmonious system. Origen
          was the first among Christian thinkers to conceive the idea of a synthetic
          theology, and he also realised it. The following epitome is based on the First Principles. 
             God,
          in His essential nature is One, immutable and good. By virtue of His goodness,
          He reveals and communicates Himself; by virtue of His immutability, He reveals
          and communicates Himself eternally. As, however, it is impossible to conceive
          of direct relations between essential Oneness and relative manifoldness, God
          has first to assume a condition capable of such relations. Hence, the Word, a
          distinct Person, a derived Divinity. Origen does not shrink from the term second
            God. The Word, begotten of the substance of the Father, is co-eternal and
          co-substantial with Him. Yet, beside this derivation of being from the Father,
          the Word, according to Origen, is inferior in that He has, in Himself, the
          archetype of all finite things, plurality. Thus viewed, He belongs to the
          category of the created; He is a creature, as the Bible says.
             Here
          again, as with the apologists, it is the very fact of creation which
          necessitates the existence of the Word. But for Creation, the Word had had no raison d'être. However—and here
          Origen is quite logical—the essential goodness of God requires the existence of
          creatures; therefore, the Word is necessary and eternal. 
             Neither
          in this system, nor, once more, in that of the apologists, docs there appear
          any place for a third Divine Person. The theory propounded requires no Holy
          Spirit. Nevertheless, Origen, like all his orthodox predecessors, acknowledged
          Him. He occupies so prominent a place in the doctrine of the Church, that it is
          impossible to get out of doing so. And thus, the Holy Spirit completes the
          Trinity, or rather the hierarchy of Divine Persons. The characteristic
          relations of the three Persons of this hierarchy towards created life are—that
          the Father acts (indirectly) upon all beings; the Word, upon reasonable beings,
          or souls; and the Holy Spirit, upon beings who are both reasonable and
          sanctified. 
             Such
          is the Divine World, as constituted by the Three immutable Persons; below,
          comes the world of inferior spirits subject to change. They were created free,
          and almost immediately so abused their liberty, that restraint and correction
          became necessary. To this end, the world of sense was created. The body is a
          provision for the purifying discipline of the spirit. In proportion to the
          gravity of their fault, the bodies which spirits are endowed with are either etherial (angels) or material (men), or grotesque and
          horrible (demons). 
             Thus
          the creation of the body is correlative to that of spirit; there is no such
          thing as uncreated matter. 
             The
          union of body and soul gives the latter the opportunity for struggle and
          victory. In this struggle, men retain their free-will and are helped by angels
          and hindered by demons. But the conflict will have an end evil is not eternal;
          and the purification will include even the demons. 
             Here
          the theory of Redemption comes in. The Word, deeply concerned in the probation
          of men, sends them the assistance of chosen souls in a bodily form; the
          Prophets. He even used a whole nation as an instrument of deliverance; but
          finally, all intermediaries proving insufficient, He came Himself. An
          absolutely pure soul took human form; and the Word united Himself to this soul,
          which retained its liberty, and remained capable of right or wrong action.
          Hence the development of the Man Christ. With Origen the salvation of the
          ordinary Christian arises from the work of the cross, the sacrifice, payment of
          the debt, emancipation from bondage to the demon; for the Gnostic Christian,
          salvation comes from intellectual enlightenment. To neither of them is it the Word
          made flesh raising, by the closest communion, human nature to the divine. The
          Christ of Origen removes obstacles from the path of the ordinary Christian, and
          offers to the Gnostic Christian an example and illumination; but that is all. 
             The
          end of things is only a relative end, for things must always exist, and the
          circle recommence. When life is ended, the sin which still remains is expiated
          in another way, by an immaterial and purifying Are. Then, the created spirit
          enters its Anal state. Clothed with a glorious body, which has nothing in
          common with the human body, it is henceforth confirmed in goodness. The
          material body left behind serves to clothe other spirits in endless succession. 
             Such
          is Origen's system. At the beginning of his First Principles, he describes the
          method of its formation. Origen begins by drawing up a list of the points
          clearly held by the Church; he carefully distinguishes between what he finds in
          authorized preaching, and what is only private opinion or vague belief.
          Authorized teaching is far from giving the key to all problems; nevertheless,
          he intends his synthesis to rest on that. “Here are the elements, the
          foundations, which must be used if, according to the precept: Enlighten
          yourself with the lamp of knowledge, a doctrinal compendium is to be drawn up,
          rationally designed as an organic whole. Make use of clear and indisputable
          inference; draw from Holy Scripture, whatever can be found there, or deduced
          from it; and then, from all these various sources, form one single body of
          doctrine.” 
             It
          is impossible to imagine a more excellent method. Unfortunately, it is taken
          for granted that Holy Scripture may be interpreted allegorically. And so any
          doctrine may be discovered in any given text; and thus the door is opened to
          private judgment, to rash speculation, and to all the vagaries of an
          ever-changing philosophy. Thus, Origen ended by constructing a system, which is
          scarcely recognizable as Christianity; a sort of compromise between the Gospel
          and Gnosticism, a theological system, in which the traditional teaching is
          rather evaded than incorporated, and where even what seems satisfactory in
          itself becomes alarming when its context is taken into account. 
             After
          the death of Origen, his doctrine provoked much criticism, but more on special
          points than as a whole, for no one appears to have attacked the system, as
          such. And this criticism, even, was long delayed. The First Principles was not by any
          means the last work of its author. He wrote it at Alexandria, before he got
          into trouble with Bishop Demetrius. Demetrius was not alarmed by it; indeed, he
          cannot have been hard to please in the matter of doctrine, for it was in his
          time that Clement published his Hypotyposes.
          When he finally broke with Origen, and denounced him to the whole Church, it
          was only on account of his self-mutilation and of his ordination by the foreign
          bishops. Heraclas, the friend of Origen, and his
          fellow-worker, when he published the First
            Principles, made no protest, either then, or as Bishop of
          Alexandria. Dionysius, who ruled the Alexandrian Church, after Heraclas, was himself a disciple of Origen, and kept on
          good terms with him to the end. We know in what veneration he was held by the
          Bishops of Palestine, of Arabia, of Phoenicia, of Cappadocia, and of Achaia. In
          Rome, the judgment of Bishop Demetrius, which, as we have seen, had no
          doctrinal significance, was accepted, and for a time the matter went no
          further. In the end, however, disquieting rumors arose and reached Pope Fabian. Origen thought it necessary to write to him, as
          well as to other bishops, on his orthodoxy. He complained bitterly of people
          who had falsified his writings, and even of the indiscretion of Ambrose, who,
          in his haste to publish his friend's works, had allowed him no time for
          revision. Only an optimist would accept such an explanation with his eyes shut.
          Still, it is certain, not only that Origen died in the communion of the Church,
          but that his doctrine, whatever surprise it may here and there have occasioned,
          was never officially condemned during his lifetime.
             
           
           CHAPTER XIX 
           CHURCH AND STATE IN THE
          THIRD CENTURY 
              
                
               IN
          the history of Christianity, the last years of Marcus Aurelius are marked with
          blood. Persecution, like much else, had grown slack during the reign of
          Commodus; not that the prohibition of Christianity was withdrawn, but as in
          Rome the central government refrained from enforcing it, and was even somewhat
          tolerant, it was open to the provincial authorities to be strict or easy-going,
          according to circumstances and inclination. In Asia, the proconsul Arrius
          Antoninus (184-5) distinguished himself by his zeal against the Christians.
          Once, during his proceedings against them, the whole body of Christians in the
          town appeared before him and gave themselves up to his tribunal. Some he sent
          to execution; and to the rest he said, "Miserable wretches! if you so
          desire death, you have precipices, or halters, at command". A
          characteristic incident which reveals the embarrassing results of the attempt
          to apply the law in its full rigour. 
             In
          Rome, in spite of the affair of Apollonius, things were fairly quiet. It was
          the same in Africa, where about this date Tertullian refers to the humanity of
          some of the proconsuls. 
             This
          uncertainty in the application of the law, which restricted severity to
          isolated cases, was hardly likely to impede the progress of Christianity
          seriously. The danger to the State, which impressed Celsus so deeply, finally
          roused the emperors to take more effective measures. We have already inquired
          into the origin of the prohibition which, during the 2nd century, formed the
          only legal ground for persecution. Now, though this general prohibition was not
          revoked, new edicts were issued, specifying the different classes of Christians
          to be prosecuted, and determining the whole procedure, including police
          regulations, penalties, and confiscations. The application of these edicts was
          not left to the discretion of individual governors; they were bound to take
          action, and to follow out from point to point, the plan of repression laid down
          by the officials of the Imperial Secretariat. Consequently, the persecutions
          became far more fierce; though, on the other hand, of shorter duration. Before
          long, however, the constant change of emperors, and some instances of the
          failure of severe measures, led to the withdrawal of the persecuting edicts.
           
           I. The Time of the Serverian Emperors
           Septimius Severus was the first emperor to issue such an edict.
          Personally, he was far from unfavorable to the
          Christians. His house was full of them, and his son Caracalla was brought up by
          a Christian nurse. But this did not mitigate the severity of provincial
          governors. Tertullian's Apology, his two books, Ad Nationes, in 195, and
          his appeal to the proconsul Scapula in 211, were written to protest against the
          cruelty of the magistrates of Severus. But these documents do not bear on the
          particular form of persecution, with which the name of this emperor is
          specially connected. What Severus tried to do was to stop the conversions to
          Christianity. He issued an edict with that object, about 200 A.D., during his
          visit to Syria. Spartian records it, in clear but
          laconic terms : "He forbade, under grave penalties, conversions to Judaism
          or Christianity." The circumcision of anyone, not a Jew by birth, had long
          been strictly forbidden. This prohibition was now extended to baptism; though,
          apparently, not for long. At any rate, Christian writers do not distinguish
          between the victims of this edict and those of ordinary persecution.
          Nevertheless, it is remarkable that at this very time the catechetical School
          of Alexandria was dispersed, and Clement, its head, obliged to leave Egypt.
          This school was the most prominent organ of Christian propaganda in Egypt:
          masters and disciples both came clearly under the operation of the edict.
          Origen, who tried to reconstitute the School, was also proscribed, and though
          he himself escaped death, many of his newly converted disciples were arrested
          and executed. This was in the year 202, when the celebrated martyrs, Perpetua,
          Felicitas, Saturus, and their companions, all neophytes or catechumens,
          perished at Carthage. 
             While
          the Emperor Severus was thus enforcing the old Roman methods, his own house
          became the center of an intellectual movement, whence
          sprang a sort of religious rival to Christianity. Before his elevation to the
          throne, Severus had found a wife in an old Syrian priestly family, attached to
          the service of the temple of El-Gabal, at Emesa. Julia Domna, the daughter of
          the high-priest Bassianus, was a woman of strong will, and of remarkable
          intelligence and cultivation. As empress, she was soon surrounded by all that
          was most intellectual in the empire. At that time, cultivated men had ceased to
          ridicule the gods. They were becoming religious. Philosophical mysticism had
          not, as yet, expressed itself in the formulas of the neo-Platonic system; but
          there was, almost everywhere, a tendency to transform the Pantheon into a
          hierarchy, so as to reconcile it in some degree with a conception of Divine
          Unity; in morality, this school encouraged Pythagorean asceticism. In short, it
          was feeling its way; and Julia Domna helped to find it. A woman of such
          practical ability, that if allowed, she would have ruled the State, could not
          ignore the religious position, and she interested her circle in it also. In
          spite of edicts old and new, the progress of Christianity was becoming daily
          more alarming. The old religions could only bring against it a divided force.
          Might they not be drawn together round some tenet or symbol, and thus acquire a
          kind of unity? Might not the gods of divers temples and people be regarded as
          the representatives of a Supreme God, the Creator of the world, who ruled it
          through them, and of whom they were only partial manifestations? The most
          natural, and at the same time the most splendid symbol of this Supreme God,
          would be the sun, which sheds light and heat over all. The beautiful empress,
          brought up at the altars of a Semitic god, conversant with all the mythologies
          and philosophies of Greece, and surrounded, on the Palatine, by an areopagus of thinkers from the four corners of the empire,
          was herself the personification of this new movement—the ideal high priestess
          of this synthetic system. 
             She
          had, however, too much good sense to pose as herself inspired. She left that
          role to a rather mysterious personage, Apollonius of Tyana, who was known to
          have lived in the time of the Caesars and the Flavians. His reputation as
          Pythagorean ascetic, miracle-worker, wandering preacher, and sorcerer, still
          lingered in Asia Minor and elsewhere. One of the empress's literary circle, Philostratus, was set to write his life. Julia Domna had in
          her possession some rather doubtful memoirs by a certain Damius, said to have
          been a companion of Apollonius. These she gave to Philostratus,
          and on this foundation he embroidered extensively, borrowing right and left,
          even from the Christian Gospels, the traits best calculated to bring out the
          importance and virtues of his hero: such as, his love for his fellow-creatures,
          his great compassion for human misery, and his deep religious devotion to the
          gods in general, and the divine Sun in particular. 
             The
          book had a great success, much more so than the new religion. In surroundings
          hostile to Christianity, it was soon seen what capital could be made of it, if
          not in favour of pagan syncretism, at least against the spread of Christianity.
          Once accepted as true, the legend of Apollonius would rival the Gospel in the
          story of a beautiful life, pure, pious, and devoted, abounding in miracle and
          acts of beneficence. Porphyry, Hierocles, and Julian did not fail to make the
          most of it. 
             The
          influence of Julia Domna continued after the death of Severus in 211, till the
          end of the reign of Caracalla. When her son was assassinated (217), the empress
          preferred death to submission to his murderers. Her equally ambitious sister,
          Julia Mcesa, then appeared on the scene, and
          unexpectedly prolonged the Severian dynasty, and the influence of the high
          priestly family of Emesa. She had two daughters, Sohemias and Mammea, each the mother of a young son. The
          soldiers of the army of the East, much attached to Caracalla, were persuaded to
          believe that the son of Sohemias was the natural son
          of their emperor. The child—he was but thirteen—was already high-priest of
          Emesa. Macrinus, who had succeeded Caracalla, was deposed, and the young priest
          became Roman Emperor. We know him by the name of the god Elagabalus, whom he transported
          to Rome, and continued to worship with fanatical devotion. Like his great-aunt
          Domna, the new emperor was a syncretist, but after a
          fashion of his own. Olympus must centre round his god, and his first step was
          to marry that deity to the celestial Juno of Carthage. Baal, having emigrated
          to the West, was reunited to Astoreth, and greeted
          with the accustomed Syrian rites, in all their depravity and frenzy. The
          emperor himself presided over this religious orgy, and there delighted to abase
          all that remained of the old Roman dignity. At last the praetorians sickened of
          the imperial high-priest and his obscene processions. They threw him into the
          Tiber, and replaced him by the son of Mammea, the
          gentle and virtuous Alexander. The god of Emesa, the goddess of Carthage, and
          many other divinities, brought from afar for the celestial nuptials, were sent
          back to their temples. Alexander, however, had also a turn for eclecticism in
          religion. His piety was even more inclusive than that of Julia Domna, and he
          venerated at the same time, in his oratory, Abraham and Orpheus, Jesus Christ
          and Apollonius of Tyana. Mammea, his mother, had had
          communications with Origen and Hippolytus, and possibly Alexander may also have
          had some acquaintance with them. He would have raised a temple to Jesus Christ,
          and included Him, officially, amongst the gods, but for the intervention of his
          advisers. They did not, however, prevent his openly tolerating Christian communities,
          extolling their morality and organization, and, on occasion, protecting them
          against unjust accusations. 
             Peace
          reigned for thirteen years, then Alexander was assassinated by some mutinous
          soldiers (March 19, 235), who Hung the imperial purple over the shoulders of
          Maximin, a rough and fanatical soldier. A violent reaction at once set in. The
          Christians, favored by the late emperor, were now
          singled out for persecution by a special edict, which, Eusebius tells us, was
          aimed solely at the leaders. Origen says also that the Christian buildings were
          burned. It was then that his friends, Ambrose the deacon, and Protoctetus, the priest of Caesarea in Palestine, to whom
          he addressed his Exhortation to Martyrdom were arrested, and that he
          himself was obliged to hide. All three, however, survived this persecution. It
          was specially fierce in Cappadocia, where the legate did not content himself
          with hunting out the clergy, but attacked all believers indiscriminately. In
          Rome, Bishop Pontian, and Hippolytus, the head of a schismatic community, were
          arrested and exiled to Sardinia, where they speedily died. The Bishops of Antioch,
          Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Caesarea of Cappadocia, must have eluded the
          pursuit, for no vacancies arc chronicled in these sees, under Maximin. The
          Bishop of Carthage must have escaped also, for we hear of no martyr among the
          predecessors of St Cyprian. On the whole, the edicts of Maximin do not appear
          to have been rigidly carried out during his lifetime ; after his death they
          were not enforced at all. Gordian III (238-43 A.D.) and Philip (243-49) left
          the Christians in peace. By reputation, at least, Philip was a Christian, but
          secretly; his coinage and the records of his doings give no indication of any
          external difference in religion between him and the other emperors.
           
           2.   The Decian Persecution (250-51)
           Decius
          being proclaimed emperor in September 249, found himself almost immediately
          confronted by a double task : he had to effect a moral reform, and to repel the
          invasion of the Goths. This latter duty was forced upon him by circumstances,
          and though he did not succeed, he at least died with honor in the attempt. 
             The
          work of reform he took upon himself, without duly estimating either his own
          strength, or the obstacles to be overcome. He revived the office of censor, and
          entrusted it to the senator Valerian, commissioning him to reform all abuses,
          whether in the palace, the senate, the government, or elsewhere. A
          determination to extirpate the Christian religion was among his schemes for
          general reform; he saw in Christianity a potent solvent of Roman manners and
          customs; he expected to put an end to it by severe measures, vigorously
          applied. It was rather late in the day, however, to embark on such an
          undertaking. 
             The
          edict of persecution, to judge by the way it was applied—for the text has not
          been preserved—ordered all Christians, and all suspected of Christian
          tendencies, to make some act of adhesion to paganism, to make a sacrifice, or
          libation, or to participate in the sacred feasts. In every town, even in every
          village, a commission was appointed to preside over the business. A certificate
          of sacrifice was given to those who submitted. Those who stood firm were to
          have pressure brought to bear on them by the government officials and municipal
          authorities. Naturally, those first sought out were the bishops and clergy, and
          other notable Christians. The confessors were cast into prison, and there
          suffered hunger and thirst, and other lingering tortures, until they
          apostatized. From time to time, capital sentences and executions showed the
          length to which the authorities were prepared to go. The stake was often
          resorted to, because the entire destruction of the body was supposed to do away
          with all hope of resurrection. The property of fugitives was confiscated. 
             These
          measures, vigorously applied, seemed at first to be completely successful. In
          the face of persecution the majority of Christians made a deplorably poor
          stand. “The apostasy was universal”, says Dionysius of Alexandria; “many
          important persons came forward of their own accord; the leaders allowed
          themselves to be brought by those beneath them, or by their colleagues.
          Summoned by name, and invited to sacrifice, they most of them advanced, pale
          and trembling, as though they had come, not to offer sacrifice, but to be
          sacrificed themselves. The crowd, gathered for the spectacle, laughed them to
          scorn; all saw they were cowards, as much afraid to sacrifice as to die.
          Others, with more effrontery, rushed to the altars, protesting that they had
          never been Christians. It is of such as these that the Lord said they could
          scarcely be saved. As to the lower classes, they either followed the rest, or
          took to flight. A certain number were arrested. Of these, some persevered so
          far as to endure chains and imprisonment, even for a considerable time; but,
          before being brought before the tribunal, they abjured. Others were only
          overcome by torture.” 
             In
          Carthage and in Rome, things went as in Alexandria. In Smyrna, the Bishop
          Eudaemon apostatized, with many of his flock. But, on the other hand, there
          were some martyrs and more confessors. In Rome, Pope Fabian, arrested at the
          beginning of the persecution, was put to death on January 20, 250. Two priests,
          Moyses and Maximus, and two deacons, Rufinus and Nicostratus, were thrown into
          prison, where they remained over a year. Moyses died towards the end of the
          year. At Toulouse, Bishop Saturninus was executed. Pionius,
          a priest of Smyrna, was surprised when celebrating the anniversary of St
          Polycarp with a faithful few, and died at the stake. A Marcionite priest,
          called Metrodorus, suffered with him. Pionius not
          only died in company with a Marcionist, but was imprisoned with Eutychianus, a
          Montanist; the edict knew no distinction between the main Church and the sects.
          In Antioch and Jerusalem, the Bishops Babylas and Alexander were arrested, and
          died in prison. Origen, who was imprisoned, and all but torn in two on the
          rack, escaped with his life; but worn out, no doubt by the sufferings he had
          undergone, he did not live long. 
             In
          many places the bishops made good their escape; St Cyprian at Carthage and St
          Gregory at Neo-Caesarea did so, and so did also, no doubt, the bishops of
          Caesarea in Cappadocia and other places of which no account exists. Dionysius
          of Alexandria, being arrested as he was leaving the town, was rescued from his
          escort by friendly peasants, who led him to a place of safety. 
             From
          their hiding-places, the bishops still continued to direct their churches; they
          kept up communication with those of their clergy who remained at their posts
          under the fire of persecution, and with those courageous believers who still
          carried on the work of Christian charity. On this point, St Cyprian's letters
          are very interesting. They show how Christian communities in Rome and Carthage
          managed to exist under the reign of terror. 
             In
          Rome, the situation was so serious, that it was impossible to elect a successor
          to Pope Fabian. The See remained vacant for fifteen months. 
             A
          year of anguish passed. The confessors, crammed into dungeons, died slowly.
          From time to time, some of them were bound to the stake, thrown to the beasts,
          or beheaded. The Church joyfully recorded these noble names. Martyrs were
          buried, prisoners were visited, fugitives were succored,
          the courage of those in danger was upheld, and already there was work to be
          done in the consolation and reconciliation of penitent apostates. 
             Towards
          the end of 250 A.D., the persecution slackened; and in the following spring, it
          ceased. The bishops reappeared; Christian gatherings were resumed. In November,
          251, Decius died in battle on the Danube. The danger seemed to be over. St
          Cyprian called together a Council at Carthage, and the Church of Rome appointed
          a bishop. 
             But
          this tranquility did not last. Trebonianus Gallus, the successor of Decius, issued a new edict to compel the Christians to
          sacrifice. The empire was then devastated by plague. This seems to have caused
          the second persecution, to which we have but a few allusions, in the letters of
          St Cyprian and St Dionysius of Alexandria. 
             The
          new Pope, Cornelius, was arrested; but his flock crowded to the tribunal,
          proclaiming their faith and their readiness to die for it. Cornelius was merely
          incarcerated at Centumcellae (Civita Vecchia), where
          he died some months later (June, 253). Lucius, elected in his place, was exiled
          very soon after his consecration. He was recalled before long either by Gallus
          himself, or by Aemilian, his short-lived successor, and he took up the
          government of the Church again early in 254, but died a few weeks later (March
          4). Aemilian had already been deposed by Valerian, who restored peace to the
          Church, and at first showed himself favorably inclined toward the Christians. 
             It
          was now possible to estimate the results of the persecution. Gallus had revived
          it, to pander to the populace, which was perturbed by calamities of all
          sorts—pestilence, famine, and the invasion of the barbarians. The sanguinary
          edicts of Decius, however, were originally due to reasons of state. Decius, and
          his "reasons of state", however, had the worst of it. No doubt, for
          some time, the life of Christianity seemed suspended. Optimist officials must
          have written triumphant reports. An immense number of apostasies had been
          inscribed upon the registers. The majority of recognised Christians had the
          certificate of sacrifice. The more obstinate would, no doubt, after a taste of
          prison discipline, end by complying with the regulations. But multitudes were forgotten,
          who had either concealed their Christianity, or baffled the police. If so many
          bishops, priests, and deacons succeeded in hiding, and even in continuing their
          ministrations at the most critical moments, it must have been because the
          authorities either could not or would not see all that was going on. When the
          persecution ended, there still remained a great many Christians, who, never
          having been called upon to sacrifice, were neither apostates nor confessors.
          The success of this edict, which seemed so complete, was in reality but very
          partial. 
             Moreover,
          though the apostates had sacrificed or received the certificate of sacrifice,
          yet they had not, for all that, gone over to the religion of the empire, or
          given up Christianity. They were reconciled with the State, but not with their
          own consciences. Long before peace was restored, they began to come to their
          priests and bishops, with tears of repentance, craving pardon and readmission
          to the congregation. The emperor had made many cowards, but he had not
          diminished the number of Christians. Persecution even reanimated their spirits,
          for under Gallus the Roman Christians associated themselves in a body with the
          confession of their bishop; they had not done as much for Fabian at the outset
          of the persecution. Even the clamor of the heathen
          populace, if now and again it uprose against the Christians, was dying down;
          the old calumnies were disappearing, for the increase of Christianity drew
          together and mingled the pagan and Christian communities, and led to a better
          understanding. Only in times of public calamity was the cry of the mob now
          heard : Christians to the lions! The scenes of martyrdom which uplifted
          enthusiastic believers and troubled the conscience of apostates, drew protests
          occasionally even from pagan spectators. In short, after the 3rd century, those
          emperors who left the Christians in peace, and not those who persecuted them,
          seem to have been in closest accord with the popular feeling.
           
           3. Valerian's Persecution 
           Dionysius
          of Alexandria has left a vivid picture of the peace enjoyed by the Church
          during the first years (254- 57) of Valerian's reign. The tranquility had not been deeper, or the Christians better treated, even during the reign of
          their coreligionist Philip. So many Christians surrounded the emperor, that his
          household formed, as it were, a Church of God. Dionysius attributes the sudden
          change in the attitude of Valerian to the influence of one of the ministers, Macrian, whom he speaks of under a figure as the chief of
          the magicians of Egypt. Macrian appears indeed to
          have been a fanatical pagan addicted to the practice of magic, and, as such, a
          bitter foe of the Christians. 
             The empire had not recovered from its misfortunes. The frontiers were
          assailed on all sides; the Franks, the Alamans, and
          other pillaging tribes from Germany crossed the Rhine and the Danube. The
          Goths, dwellers by the North Sea, became pirates, harried the sea-board,
          ravaged Asia Minor, and even showed themselves in the Aegean. On the east of
          the empire, the Persians took possession of Armenia and Mesopotamia. Even the
          tribes of the Sahara attacked the outposts of Numidia. Valerian, good but weak,
          so far lost his head as to yield to fanatical counsels and renew Decian’s futile persecution of the Christians. 
             It
          was again a war of extermination intended not simply to stop the progress of
          the Church, but to destroy it. At first it was hoped that comparatively mild
          and bloodless methods would suffice. Then these having failed, they again had
          recourse to executions. There are, therefore, two edicts, of which most of the
          provisions are known. The first was published in August, 257; the second a year
          later. The first edict only affected the higher clergy—bishops, priests, and
          deacons They were enjoined to sacrifice to the gods of the empire, but were not
          forbidden to worship their own God, if they did so privately and without
          assembling for that purpose. Thus the principle of religious syncretism was
          extended to Christianity, and imposed by public authority. On recalcitrants, the magistrate was to pronounce a sentence
          of exile. 
             Authentic
          documents relate what happened in Alexandria and Carthage. The two bishops,
          summoned before the governor, were put through the same interrogatory, and on
          their refusal to recognise the Roman religion, were confined within given
          districts. Cyprian appeared alone; Dionysius, in company with a priest, three
          deacons, and a certain Marcellus from Rome, no doubt a Roman priest or deacon.
          In Numidia, the imperial legate was more severe, and condemned many bishops,
          priests, and deacons to the mines; other Christians were associated with them.
          Perhaps they had infringed the edict by holding meetings. 
             The
          second edict was promulgated a year later, in the East, where the emperor was
          fighting the Persians, and was addressed by him to the Senate, with
          instructions for provincial governors. The last but one of St Cyprian's
          letters, gives an analysis of it. It included not only the clergy, but laymen
          in certain positions. Bishops, priests, and deacons were to be incontinently
          punished with death; senators and knights were to forfeit their dignities, and
          to be deprived of their goods; and, if they still persisted, they were to
          suffer capital punishment. Matrons were to be deprived of their goods, and
          exiled. The Caesarians, that is, those employed on
          the imperial estates—an immense body, spreading throughout the empire—were to
          suffer confiscation, and to be despatched in chains to servile work in mines,
          farms, and so on. 
             Messengers from Rome carried the substance of the edict to St Cyprian.
          When they left the capital, Pope Xystus II and four of the deacons of Rome had
          already suffered martyrdom in the cemetery (August 6). Two others, Felicissimus
          and Agapetus, soon shared their fate, and finally, the last survivor of the
          college of deacons, St Lawrence, was burnt to death on August 10. At Carthage,
          Cyprian was summoned before the proconsul for the second time, and on his
          refusal to sacrifice, executed with the sword. In Spain, the following year the
          Bishop of Tarragona, Fructuosus, was burnt alive with his two deacons, Eulogius and Augurius. The accounts of the martyrdom of SS.
          James and Marien, in Numidia, and of Montanus, Lucius, and others in the proconsulate, show us that the persecution was still raging
          in the African provinces in 259. The martyrdom of the clergy was shared by many
          ordinary insignificant believers in consequence, no doubt, of the edict which
          condemned to death those who attended religious meetings. 
             We
          have no documentary evidence as to the eastern provinces. Dionysius was brought
          back from exile to the neighbourhood of Alexandria, but, though he had much to
          suffer, he was not executed. The clergy of Caesarea in Palestine also escaped.
          Eusebius can only tell us of three peasants, Priscus, Malchus, and Alexander,
          who were thrown to the beasts, in company with a woman of the Marcionite sect.
          These martyrs had, however, given themselves up. 
             In
          Syria and Asia Minor a lull in the persecution may have been caused by the
          invasion of the Persians. But the absence of direct documentary evidence is 110
          proof that there was no persecution. Valerian gone, Macrian must have continued the severities he had instituted. Not so Gallienus, for
          though his name appears, with that of his father, at the head of edicts against
          the Christians, yet he soon showed himself favourably disposed towards them.
          Proscriptions ceased. The bishops restored to their sees, even ventured to
          approach the emperor, and ask for the restoration of their confiscated churches
          and cemeteries. Gallienus gave the requisite orders. Two imperial letters,
          relating to this restitution, passed through Eusebius' hands, and in his Ecclesiastical History he
          inserted a translation of one addressed to Dionysius of Alexandria, Pinnas, Demetrius, and other bishops.
             The
          reign of Gallienus inaugurated a long period of religious peace. Direct active
          persecution did not revive till 300 A.D., during the last years of Diocletian.
          Aurelian, towards the end of his reign, had indeed intended to recommence it,
          and even made arrangements for the purpose. But his death, in 275, stopped the
          execution of the new edicts before they reached the provinces at a distance
          from his headquarters. 
             4. Corporate Property of the Christian Church
           From
          the moment that Rome made an official distinction between Jews and Christians,
          the Christians were obliged to conceal, not only their individual belief, but
          also their corporate existence. The Christian communities, not being recognised
          by the State, fell under the ban of the very strict laws, which forbid
          unauthorised associations. Pliny, who inquired of Trajan how to treat persons
          convicted of Christianity, required no special instructions how to stop their
          assemblies. Trajan, believing all associations to be dangerous, preferred to
          expose the towns to the risk of conflagration, rather than to allow them to
          organise fire brigades. Under such conditions the churches must have needed
          many ruses to hide their social life from the authorities. Nevertheless, from
          the beginning, they had pecuniary resources and common funds. 
             A
          century after Trajan, we hear of landed property, churches, and cemeteries.
          These must have been held in the name of some individual; but that gave little
          guarantee of security. Any change in the attitude of the proprietor or his
          heirs, such as his becoming an apostate, or a heretic, would emperil the tenure of the Church. If a burial-place were in
          question, its purpose, of course, could not be altered ; but, for instance, an
          ill-disposed heir might bury heretic or pagan relations in a Christian
          cemetery. It was therefore expedient to And some other mode of holding
          property. 
             And
          in this they succeeded. In the beginning of the 4th century, the churches had
          not only corporate possession of places of worship and of burial, but also had
          other property pertaining to the whole community, and not to any one
          individual. The edict of Milanexpressly refers to
          this. 
             In 272, as we shall see, the Emperor Aurelian intervened in a dispute,
          between the Catholic community at Antioch and some schismatics, over the
          possession of the Bishop's housed After Valerian's persecution, Dionysius of
          Alexandria and other bishops were invited to present themselves before the
          fiscal agents, that their sequestrated possessions might be restored. It was
          clearly as ecclesiastical property, and not merely as property used by the
          Church, that the churches and cemeteries were confiscated in 257. There is
          evidence of this earlier still. Under Alexander Severus (222), a dispute arose
          between certain tavern-keepers and the Christian community of Rome, over the
          ownership of some land, formerly State property; the matter was brought before
          the prince, who decided in favour of the Christians. Perhaps it was he who
          authorized them to hold property. The Christianus esse passus est of Lampridius (c. 22) seems also to refer to their
          corporate existence, for their personal safety had hardly been in danger under
          Alexander's immediate predecessors. 
             The churches which, according to Origen, were destroyed in 235, by
          Maximin's order, appear to have belonged to Christian communities. There seems
          no doubt that the cemetery given into the charge of Callistus (198) by Pope
          Zephyrinus, belonged to the community, as also those Carthaginian areae sepulturaraum,known to be the property
          of Christians in Tertullian's time. Ecclesiastical property clearly, therefore,
          existed in the 3rd century, and probably very early in the century. Under cover
          of what law, or legal fiction? Was it by means of the elastic legislation for
          burial clubs, favoured by Septimius Severus? The common folk were allowed to
          combine, in order to provide for themselves decent burial : these associations
          were allowed to collect monthly subscriptions, to hold property, and to have
          religious meetings; they were represented by an  actor, an official authorized
          to act in their name. Inscriptions prove that these dubs abounded throughout
          the empire. Why should not the Christian societies have enjoyed these
          privileges? They took special care of their graves; why should they not have
          appeared in the character of burial clubs, thus sheltering themselves under the
          protection of the law? 
             Why?
          For several reasons. First of all, they had a great repugnance to these clubs.
          Tertullian, who has left a famous parallel between the pagan clubs and
          Christian associations, brings out, with his usual force, the points in which
          they differed. A Spanish bishop, who had ventured to join one of these clubs,
          and allowed his children to be buried by them, incurred ecclesiastical censure
          in consequence. Moreover, the law as to these burial clubs laid down, as a
          primary condition, that they must not infringe the decision prohibiting illicit
          associations. 
             Now,
          what association was more illicit than Christianity? It would therefore have
          been necessary to keep their Christian character from the knowledge of the
          authorities. This would have been extremely difficult. The burial clubs were
          small associations, numbering only a few dozen people. The Church of a large
          town, like Rome, Carthage, or Alexandria, in the middle of the 3rd century,
          might easily number from thirty to forty thousand. It would have been difficult
          to pass off such a multitude as a funeral club. 
             To
          me, it seems more probable that if, after the death of Marcus Aurelius, the
          Christian communities enjoyed long intervals of peace, and if they were able to
          hold important and valuable property, it was due to the fact that, without any
          legal subterfuge, they were tolerated, or even recognised, as churches or
          religious societies. Tertullian proclaimed in the market-place, that the
          Christian society was a religious society : Corpus sumus de conscientia religionis, etc. He might have saved himself
          the trouble. The fact was common knowledge. In his day, the idea of a Christian
          was inseparable from the idea of a member of a religious society. The religious
          meetings, the religious bond which united all believers, were the first things
          to be noticed and evil-spoken of. Therefore, to tolerate the Christians meant
          to tolerate the Christian body; to persecute the Christians meant to persecute
          the collective entity they necessarily formed. This entity, which grew and
          strengthened, might appear dangerous to the safety of the empire; then,
          extermination was the remedy. But it might appear innocuous. The peril was not
          apparent to Commodus, the Syrian Emperors, Gallienus, nor even to Valerian,
          Aurelian, and Diocletian, at the beginning of their reigns. It was natural to recoil
          from the destruction of so many people, and from the extermination of a
          society, which had successfully resisted so many efforts to destroy it. Some
          emperors went even farther. When Gallienus wrote to the bishops to come and
          claim their churches, when Aurelian evicted Paul of Samosata from the Church of
          Antioch, the Christians must certainly have been tempted to consider themselves
          authorised, both as individuals, and as a body. 
             To
          sum up—the emperors of the 3rd century each took up a very decided attitude
          towards the Church; either they persecuted it openly, or they tolerated it.
          They never ignored it. The places of meeting, the cemeteries, the names and
          dwelling-places of the leaders were known to the city magistrates and to the
          Government. If a persecuting edict came, they knew where to find the bishop;
          they arrested him, and confiscated the places of worship and all the Church
          property. The edict was revoked, and again they turned to the bishop in order
          to restore the confiscated property. Of legal fictions, of funeral
          associations, of mysterious title deeds, the documents bear no trace. All
          transactions take place direct between the Government and the Christians as a
          body. Christianity was still prohibited in theory; no imperial rescript ever
          recognised it as a religio licita,
          or pronounced the Christian communities to be authorised associations. The
          legal restrictions were still there. But it became more and more impossible to take
          them seriously. The marvellous luxuriance of the Lord's Vine burst asunder all
          bonds.
             CHAPTER XX 
           AFRICAN CHRISTIANITY AND THE ROMAN CHURCH IN THE MIDDLE OF THE 3RD
          CENTURY—CYPRIAN 
              
                
               I. The African Provinces
           THE
          Africa of the ancients lay, like a great island, between the desert and the
          sea, the Syrtes and the Ocean. The first known
          inhabitants were of a race not unlike the European races. In ancient history
          these tribes, now all designated by the common appellation of Berbers or Kabyles, were grouped under various names—Maryices, Moors, Numidians, and Goetuli.
          They never constituted a single state, and rarely formed combinations of any
          importance for long. The tribal system, still in force there, especially to the
          west, seems to suit them best. But it leaves them ill-protected against an
          invader; they are, therefore, at the mercy of colonizing strangers. 
             The
          first of these colonists were the Phoenicians. Carthage, founded to be Queen of
          the Western seas, became in addition the mother-city of the African continent.
          Its houses of business fringed the whole coast, and it spread itself far into
          the interior, into the fertile valley of the Bagradas,
          and even further, into the fruitful regions afterwards known as Byzacium and Numidia. This whole country was studded with
          towns and villages, where Canaanite customs, institutions, and language
          prevailed. Behind this zone of colonization, permeated by Phoenician
          civilization, lay the Berber country, which was opening up to the political
          influence of the Carthaginians, and still more to their commerce. 
             The
          conflict with Rome put a stop to this expansion. After the Second Punic War,
          Carthage was excluded from the sea, and retained in the African continent but a
          small domain, corresponding roughly to that part of the interior where
          Phoenician was spoken. Beyond, stretched the kingdoms of Numidia and
          Mauritania. Massinissa having sided with the
          conquerors, these survived the final catastrophe (146 B.C.). The Romans
          destroyed Carthage and annexed her territory; but at first they did no more.
          The Latin colonization only began a century later, when Caesar (44 B.C.)
          restored Rome's ancient rival, annexed the kingdom of Numidia, and welded this
          new Africa and the province already existing into
          one single province. Colonies of Latin emigrants settled not only on the site
          of Carthage but in some of the other coast towns, and even in the interior. The
          Phoenician municipalities were reorganised on the Roman system; the         suffetaewere replaced byduumvirs,
          the ancient Canaanite gods, by the gods of Rome, and the Punic tongue by Latin.
          Then Berber, lying beyond the Carthaginian colonies, was penetrated, and
          gradually many Latin cities sprang up there. 
             Yet,
          the land was far from being completely Latinized. Phoenician was long spoken in
          the country districts, as was Celtic in Gaul, and Coptic in Egypt. Finally, it
          was supplanted, but only much later, and probably not until the Arabs abolished
          it and Latin together. The native Berber tongue held its ground then, and has
          continued in use, through many changes, right down to the present day. Berber
          was also the language of the native states of Numidia and Mauritania, which
          long survived the Punic state, and of the Goetuli and
          other independent tribes on the borders of the Roman territory. It held its
          own, with all the Berber institutions, in a number of little isolated
          autonomous districts in the interior of these provinces. These were governed
          either by native chiefs, or by Roman administrators. 
             To
          maintain the Roman authority among a people still so far behind the
          civilization of Rome, an army was indispensable. The proconsul, though
          responsible to the Senate, had, contrary to custom, a legion under his command.
          This led to difficulties. To end them, it was decided (37 A.D.) to separate
          Numidia from the proconsular province, and to administer it through the legate
          of the legion. The proconsular province extended from Hippo (Bone) on the west
          to Tripolis; and Numidia spread south in a fan-shape,
          from the sea-coast between the river Ampsaga (Oued-el-Kebir) and the territory of Hippo, till with a long line
          of frontier it faced the desert tribes. The headquarters were at the foot of
          the Auras range, first at Theveste, and then at Lambesis. 
             The
          kingdom of Mauritania, which lay to the west of the Ampsaga,
          retained its independence till 40 A.D., when it was annexed and divided into
          two provinces, Mauritania Caesariensis, and Mauritania Tingitana,
          which took their names from their capitals, Caesarea (Cherchell)
          and Tingi (Tangiers). Here, colonization began too
          late, and was necessarily less successful than in the eastern provinces. The
          Roman stations did not extend so far south; and the mountains on the coast
          continued to be held by independent tribes. In Tingitana,
          the number of Roman towns was very small, and almost all were on the coast of
          the Atlantic. The interior no more became Latin than it had become Phoenician.
          The province of Baetica, in Spain, was continually
          threatened by the pirates of the Riff, over whom the Roman authorities had as
          little control as have the authorities of Morocco now. 
             Mauritania
          and the eastern provinces were treated by the Romans on very different lines,
          and they were divided by a chain of custom-houses. In Mauritania, the year was
          not reckoned according to the fasti consules of Rome, but according to
          a peculiar provincial system. The governors were merely procurators, as in the
          little civilized Alpine districts. 
             2. Rise of Christianity—Tertullian
           No
          information, even legendary, exists as to the foundation of the Carthaginian
          and other African churches. From whatever country their first apostles came,
          the Carthaginian Christians early took their lead from Rome. Their most
          frequent communications were with Rome; they were deeply concerned with all
          that occurred there; every intellectual movement, every disciplinary, ritual,
          or literary event in Rome was echoed at once in Carthage. The writings of
          Tertullian attest this, and also those of St Cyprian, and indeed all the
          documents of the African Church so long as its history lasted. 
             Like
          other new importations, Christianity spread rather quickly from Carthage,
          through the African colonies. It is possible that it made conquests even
          beyond" As a rule, however, the Christian missions did not leave the lines
          of Latin influence. Although the Gospel was preached in Punic and in the Berber
          tongue, yet, in these lands, Christianity always remained a Latin religion. The
          Bible was never translated into these native idioms, as it was into Syriac,
          Coptic, Armenian, or Gothic. And indeed, who wrote in Berber or in Punic?
          Literature there, whether Christian or pagan, was always Latin. It has never
          been suggested that the liturgy was celebrated except in Latin. And if
          exceptions existed, they were certainly in Greek, and not in any native
          dialect. 
             This
          was a cause of weakness, as the bad days of the Arab invasions proved.
          Christianity, being too closely connected with Latin institutions, did not
          survive them. 
             The
          most ancient memorial of African Christianity we possess, relates, not to
          Carthage, but to Scilli, a town in proconsular
          Numidia. Here were arrested the martyrs whom in 180 the proconsul Vigellius Saturninus condemned at Carthage. This magistrate
          was the Arst to take action against African
          Christians. He had many successors. The reign of the African Severus was not a
          time of peace for the Christians of his native land. Tertullian was continually
          writing to defend them. On March 7, 203, Carthage was the scene of the
          martyrdom of two young women from Thuburbum Minus,
          Perpetua and Felicitas, who died in company with a group of their
          fellow-countrymen, all neophytes or catechumens. The story of their captivity
          and martyrdom, written almost entirely by Perpetua herself is one of the gems
          of early Christian literature. It was preserved, in a setting of his own
          reflections, by someone sharing Tertullian's views on visions and prophesying :
          perhaps Tertullian himself. 
             In
          the time of Severus and Caracalla, Tertullian was the most prominent person in
          the Carthaginian Church The son of a centurion of the proconsular cohort, he
          had, when still a pagan, cultivated literature and the law,s and spent some time in Rome. After his conversion, he settled at Carthage,
          where he was soon raised to the priesthood. From 197 A.D., he is found, pen in
          hand, exhorting the martyrs, and upholding Christianity in the face of its
          pagan opponents, and pleading for it against the cruelties of the proconsul.
          His earliest works exhibit all his characteristics—burning rhetoric,
          inexhaustible vigour, profound knowledge of his time, familiarity with the past
          and the books recording it, and also the aggressive and quibbling spirit
          traceable in all his writings. For twenty years he never ceased contending with
          pagans, magistrates, Jews, and heretics—Marcion in particular—intervening in
          every doctrinal controversy, or question of casuistry, and treating them all in
          the same uncompromising manner. For ever a fighter, for ever in a state of
          nervous irritation, at last, not satisfied with opponents outside the Church,
          he fell foul of those within who were less harsh and
          intolerant than himself. In this state of mind, he was easily won over to the Alontanists. Then in the name of the Paraclete, he
          vociferated to his heart's content against second marriages, against Christians
          who became soldiers, artists, or officials, against those who did not veil
          their daughters, or practise sufificient mortification, and against bishops who took upon them to restore penitents to
          communion. The humiliation of accepting the Phrygian revelations, which a man
          like Tertullian must have felt keenly, was no doubt the price paid for this
          freedom of speech. But he found compensations. His impetuous and picturesque
          eloquence inspired the ecstatic utterances of the women, through whom the
          Paraclete spoke. In his sect, he was supreme. In Africa, the Montanists were
          called Ter- tullianists. 
             But
          beneath these storms, the main body of the Church of Carthage and all its
          African branches continued their ordinary Christian lives. Their history
          remains unknown : and Tertullian's writings give no insight into its details.
          No bishop is mentioned in his authentic writings. The Passion of St Perpetua alludes
          to Bishop Optatus, and to a certain Aspasius, a priest and teacher, who neither
          hit it off with each other, nor succeeded in keeping the peace in their flocks.
          Perhaps this Optatus was Bishop of Carthage. Later, appears a certain Agrippinus, under whom a great African Council decided
          against the validity of heretical baptism. This council was an innovation. The
          custom of holding bishops' meetings had not begun in Africa in Tertullian's
          time. But it took root soon afterwards, and it was indeed in Africa that
          synodical action became most fully consolidated. 
             An
          event, which must have made a great stir throughout Christian Africa was the
          condemnation of Privatus, Bishop of Lambesis. Though
          this city was the headquarters of the Roman legion, and the usual residence of
          the legate, and was the most important in the district after Carthage, it does
          not seem to have contained many Christians. Privatus was condemned for heresy
          by a Council of ninety bishops. The number is interesting, as showing how
          widespread Christianity already was in the African provinces. Donatus, Bishop
          of Carthage, and Pope Fabian both wrote letters, severely censuring Privatus.
          If only these letters were still extant, we should know exactly into what
          heresy the Bishop of Lambesis had fallen. The
          intervention of Fabian and Donatus fixes the date as between 236 A.D. and 248. 
             Donatus
          was succeeded, in 249, by St Cyprian, whose writings throw a great light upon
          the African Church and its relations with the Church of Rome, during the next
          ten years. 
              
               3. St. Cypyian and the Decian Persecution
           Coecilius Cyprianus before his conversion, belonged to the best society in Africa. Rich,
          or at least in easy circumstances, highly cultivated, an expert rhetorician and
          master of eloquence, and in great request as a lawyer, he had troops of friends
          amongst the best people of his day. There was nothing to suggest that he would
          one day throw in his lot with the Christians, and become one of their leaders.
          Nevertheless, in the prime of manhood, his soul opened out to higher issues.
          Touched by grace, he asked for, and received baptism (246 A.D.), a venerable
          priest, Coecilian, helping him to take the first
          steps. He was amazed at the great inner change which at once came over him. He
          has given us a picture of this joy of his conversion, in his book   Ad Donatum,the earliest of his writings. 
             His
          was a complete conversion. Cyprian not only renounced the world and his
          fortune, which he distributed in great part amongst the poor, but even all
          secular literature. Tertullian and St Jerome, though they reviled poets,
          orators, and philosophers, continued to read and to quote them. But Cyprian,
          once a Christian, abjured all literature except the Bible. He soon became
          thoroughly conversant with it, and has left two collections of Scripture
          passages, classified and grouped according to subjects, i.e., controversy with the
          Jews, justification of the rules of Christian life, and exhortation to the
          confessors to persevere even unto blood. These extracts bear witness, as indeed
          do all his writings, to his great familiarity with the books of the Old and New
          Testament. 
             Shortly
          after his conversion, he was admitted to the bench of presbyters; then, the See
          of Carthage falling vacant, he was almost unanimously elected bishop. Some of
          the priests, however, opposed the election of the neophyte, and in spite of his
          later efforts at conciliation, always maintained an attitude of antagonism
          towards him. 
             He
          had not been bishop more than about a year, when the Decian persecution broke
          over the Church. Those around him thought, and he felt also, that being so well
          known in Carthage, he would inevitably be arrested, and that in such an acute
          crisis, the bishop's life would count for more than would his martyrdom. He
          left the town, and found a safe retreat outside, where he evaded the search of
          the authorities, but yet kept up communications with his Hock, and especially
          with those clergy who had contrived to remain with them. 
             The
          situation was extremely serious. In the long peace which had preceded the
          persecution, the African Christians had deteriorated strangely. Tertullian,
          from the height of his uncompromising severity, had not spared the
          "psychics". But even the milder Cyprian was hardly less displeased
          with his Africans. According to him, they clung to the good things of this
          life, were greedy of gain, harsh, spiteful, inattentive to the admonitions of
          those above them, and given to mixed marriages, which drew them into the pagan
          world. The women painted their faces, the priests were hardly religious; the
          deacons were scarcely respectable; bishops held posts in the financial
          administration, and neglected their ministry for the sake of those duties; and
          whilst their poor died of hunger, they frequented markets, made fortunes, and
          did not shrink even from fraud or usury. 
             Such
          Christians, led by such priests, could not be expected to be very heroic. And
          their behaviour, in face of persecution, was lamentable. The first threat, even
          of confiscation, let alone death, was too much for most of them. The
          Carthaginian magistrates and the other special officials were at once
          overwhelmed by the crowd of apostates, demanding certificates of sacrifice.
          There were defections even among the clergy. Still, a fair number of priests
          and deacons succeeded in evading the search, as did a good many of the laity;
          and a few confessors were imprisoned. 
             The
          retirement of the bishop was naturally not approved by all. In Rome especially,
          where there was no very clear idea of the position of Cyprian in Carthage, and
          the special risks he ran, the criticism was very severe. Shortly after the
          death of Fabian, a sub-deacon from Carthage, named Crementius,
          arrived in Rome; the priests gave him two letters : one, addressed to Cyprian,
          informed him of the martyrdom of his brother-bishop; the other, written in
          accordance with the news brought from Carthage by Crementius,
          bore neither address nor signature; but the text showed clearly that it was
          intended for the clergy of Carthage. Both were delivered to Cyprian at the same
          time. The second astonished him considerably. The writers addressed the clergy
          of Carthage, as if they were no longer under the rule of their bishop :
          "We have heard," they said, "that the holy Pope Cyprian has left
          the city. We are told that he has acted rightly, being an eminent person (persona insignis)".      The Roman presbyterate, however, evidently
          did not consider this reason a sufficient one; for they at once alluded to the
          parable of the Good Shepherd who died for his sheep (Fabian), as compared with
          the hireling (Cyprian) who deserted them on the approach of the wolf. A little
          further on in the letter, the lapse of certain apostate Christians in Rome was
          attributed to the fact that they also were "eminent persons" (quod essent insignes personae). This imported a bad meaning
          into the term insignis persona,
          and the tone of the letter was not such as to minimize the effect. The clergy
          of Rome dwelt much on their own laudable virtue, and on the zeal with which
          they had played their part during the persecution. They held themselves up as
          an example to the Carthaginian clergy, and did not spare them some rather
          severely expressed advice. 
             Cyprian
          could not but be hurt; and so indeed he was. He wrote at once to Rome to
          acknowledge the letter informing him of Fabian's martyrdom, and congratulated
          the Roman Church on the glory it reflected on her. As to the instructions sent
          to the clergy of Carthage, he made as though he had no knowledge of their real
          origin, or rather, he expressed doubts as to their being drawn up by the Roman
          presbyters. "I have read," he says," another letter, without
          address or signature. The writing, the matter, and even the paper it was
          written on, have astonished me a little. Perhaps something has been omitted or
          altered. I return it to you as it is, so that you may see whether it is really
          the letter you entrusted to the sub-deacon Crementius." 
             The
          reply of the Roman clergy is lost, but it is apparent that this convinced
          Cyprian that false reports regarding him had been carried to Rome. He felt it
          necessary to justify himself To this end, he sent to Rome copies of thirteen
          letters he had written to the priests, deacons, confessors, and others in his
          church. These documents were well fitted to show that he had in no wise
          abandoned his pastoral duties. At the same time, he gave the reasons for his
          retirement. The clergy and confessors of Rome, who were still corresponding
          directly with the clergy of Carthage, now grasped the situation, and expressed
          approval of the conduct of Cyprian. They also transferred their correspondence
          to the hands of another scribe, and the eloquent Novatian took the place of the
          hasty and incorrect writer of the first letter. 
             This
          change of attitude may perhaps have been effected at some cost to Cyprian's
          dignity, but it gained for him some very opportune support. The last letters in
          the collection he sent to Rome show clearly the difficulties of the peculiar
          situation in Carthage, which was due to an unexpected alliance between the
          confessors and the lapsed. Many of the confessors were simple folk, and the
          morality of some was elementary. Some amongst them had confessed the faith, and
          borne torture, rather out of bravado, than from deliberate religious
          conviction. The universal respect accorded to the martyrs, the honour rendered
          to them after death, the extreme veneration, the solicitude, and the personal
          attentions which surrounded the imprisoned confessors, were all calculated to
          turn heads that were not very strong. These good folk were inclined to set
          themselves much above the ordinary Christian, to consider themselves great
          authorities on religious questions, and, if occasion offered, to step into the
          place of the properly constituted spiritual leaders. The situation in Carthage
          was aggravated by the bishop's being absent and a fugitive. The populace did
          not grasp the reasons which had induced him to conceal himself; they kept all
          their enthusiasm for the heroes who had endured the rack and the wooden horse,
          scourging, and all the other atrocities of prison, and who now awaited but the
          final award to ascend to Heaven, and reign with Christ. 
             Such
          feelings were very prevalent, not only amongst the faithful laity who had not
          apostatized (slantes),
          but also, and above all, amongst the lapsi, i.e., those who had, in a
          greater or lesser degree, compromised themselves by obeying the edict; finding
          or believing they were now pretty safe, they tried to return to the communion
          of the Church. But that was not so easy. Discipline demanded a life-long penance
          for apostasy. No doubt, as the guilty were so many, a relaxation of the old
          rules would be necessary; but in the midst of a persecution, it was not
          possible to consider so important a question, to weigh the different cases, and
          duly apportion the penance to the degree of guilt in each individual instance.
          It was therefore laid down, in Carthage and in Rome, that the question of the
          lapsed should be reserved untouched, until the bishops could again resume the
          personal oversight of their Hocks, take counsel together, and thus give their
          decisions with due authority and uniformity. Until then, the lapsi must do penance, and abstain from communion. 
             This
          seemed too long a delay to those concerned. Besides which, the five priests who
          had opposed Cyprian at his election, and who, no doubt, had calumniated him in
          Rome, interfered; they took upon themselves to receive the lapsi to communion, and to celebrate
          for them, or in their houses. All that they required was a letter of
          recommendation from some confessor on the eve of martyrdom. The bishops indeed
          were in the habit of recognizing letters of recommendation from martyrs, as
          availing to shorten the length of canonical penance. But this indulgence was
          not supposed to be granted direct by the martyrs themselves, nor, above all, to
          be dispensed ad lib. The confessors, and in particular, a certain Lucian, who gave himself out as
          the representative of an alreadyexecuted martyr,
          called Paul, distributed letters of indulgence broadcast. As a matter of form,
          the lapsi were to present themselves before the bishop; but the letters of recommendation
          were peremptory. We feel, in reading them, that these good people felt they had
          public opinion behind them, and that it would be difficult to refuse them
          anything. Cyprian, in his letters to them, did his best to show respect and to
          be conciliatory, whilst he tried to reason with them, and to safeguard his own
          authority. 
             But, in spite of all his good will, his condescension and humility, he
          could not always accede to their wishes. The letters often covered whole
          families, large, ill-defined groups. Communicet ille cum suis,
          they wrote to the bishop. The cum
            suis was as vague as the communicet was
          unceremonious. Cyprian objected. The reply was a letter, in which the
          confessors passed a sponge over all the apostasies of Africa. The Bishop of
          Carthage was desired to see this strange dictum of the new ecclesiastical
          authority carried out in his own Church, and to transmit it to the other
          bishops of the province. 
             The
          situation was strained. Undoubtedly, the bishop was backed up by the best of
          the clergy and laity; and some of the confessors disapproved of Lucian's
          conduct, and of his audacious distribution of indulgences. But wise men are
          always in the minority, especially in times of crisis. Cyprian felt the need of
          support from the authority of the Roman Church, and specially, from its
          confessors, of whom several, such as the priests Moyses and Maximus, had been
          in prison for many months ; and letters were written to him, expressing high
          approbation of his conduct. At the same time, he took every opportunity of
          showing his respect for the martyrs ; admitting amongst his own clergy some of
          the worthiest confessors, though naturally not choosing those who were mixed up
          with the indulgence business. 
             But
          the opposition was not disarmed : on the contrary, it consolidated itself,
          being still led by the five factious priests. A certain Novatus was specially prominent among them. A rich and influential layman,
          Felicissimus, strongly supported this party. Towards the end of 250, Cyprian
          having sent a commission of bishops and priests to Carthage to prepare for his
          return and distribute his aims, Felicissimus did all he could to defeat this
          object, and to undermine the authority of the bishop. Cyprian had to defend
          himself. By his orders, his commissaries in Carthage excommunicated
          Felicissimus with his chief adherents. The rebel priests had already put
          themselves out of communion with the bishop. One of them, Novatus,
          set out for Rome, to secure for the faction at Carthage the support of the new
          pope, who, as the persecution in Rome was abating, was sure to be elccted ere long. 
             After
          Easter, that is, in April 251, Cyprian was able to return to his troubled
          Church. He had addressed his agitated Hock in two pastoral letters, on the
          position of the lapsed, and on the schism. 
             According
          to his long-announced intention, he called together a council of African
          bishops, to pronounce authoritatively upon these outstanding questions. 
             4. The Schism of Novatian
           During
          this time, Novatus was at work, trying to cause a
          division in the Roman Church. In Rome, as in Carthage, the confessors were held
          in high esteem. Those still in prison were specially surrounded with homage,
          and consulted as oracles. Novatus began by getting
          into touch with Novatian, who was easily influenced; and then he tried to win
          over the confessors. At first, he did not succeed. Moyses was loyal to Cyprian,
          and declared that he would have no communion with the faction of the five contumacious
          priests of Carthage. But after his death, in January or February 251, his
          fellow-captives were gained over, and threw in their lot with the party of Novatus and Novatian. The object of their intrigues was to
          bring about the election of a pope, who would not recognize Cyprian as the
          legitimate Bishop of Carthage, and who would protect the rival who was to be
          brought forward. As yet, they had no distinctive platform either of dogma or
          discipline, but they intended, in Rome, as in Africa, to make capital of the prestige
          of the confessors. The future successor of St Peter must be the confessors'
          pope, as in Carthage the anti-Cyprianite party
          proclaimed themselves the confessors' party. 
             Their
          intrigues came to nothing. The election took place about the middle of March:
          the enemies of Cyprian failed to prevent the choice of a candidate who was
          alien to their views—the priest Cornelius. They at once made a violent attack
          on him, accusing him, amongst other crimes, of having received a certificate of
          sacrifice, and of having communicated with open apostates. Novatus saw to it that an ill-intentioned protest should reach Carthage at the same
          time as the news of the ordination of Cornelius. It was drawn up in the name of
          a priest of Rome, probably Novatian. Cyprian, and the African bishops who were
          beginning to gather round him, saw that exact information was desirable: so
          they awaited the official reports of the election, and even despatched two
          bishops to Rome. During this delay, the party opposed to Cornelius elected
          another bishop, Novatian himself, and did their best to obtain his recognition
          by the whole Church. On receiving this news and other intelligence from Rome,
          Cyprian officially recognized Cornelius. 
             Thus
          the Novatianist schism, which gave birth to an
          important sect, did not arise from a doctrinal, but from a personal question.
          Novatian had no special views on penance. Novatus'
          antecedents in Carthage show him to have been favourable, rather than opposed,
          to some relaxation of discipline. During the controversies of the preceding
          year, Novatian had drawn up the letters of the Roman clergy and confessors,
          those letters which, St Cyprian tells us, "were sent throughout the whole
          world, and reached all the churches and all believers". Now, in these
          letters, two points were laid down : first, that the lapsi were to be
          admitted to penance, of which the duration and the conditions were to be
          referred to the bishops, who would give their decision when peace was
          re-established; and further, that apostates in danger of death might be
          readmitted to communion. During the persecution, Novatian had succeeded in
          evading the authorities, but had given no proof of any extraordinary heroism.
          No one could have forseen that lie would become the
          champion of exclusive rigorism. But when once the schism was organized, it was
          inevitably bound to take up an attitude and principles opposed to those of
          Cornelius on this burning question. 
             About the middle of May, the Council of Carthage, with Cyprian as
          president, met at last, and ruled that all penitent lapsi without
          distinction, should be admitted to penance, and in the hour of death, at least,
          reconciled to the Church; that the length of the penance should depend on the
          gravity of the case; that bishops, priests, and other clergy might be admitted
          to penance, like the rest, but not reinstated in their office. These decisions
          were transmitted to Rome. Cornelius, like most of the Roman clergy, shared the
          views of the African bishops. Nevertheless, wishing to settle a matter which
          concerned so many with the fullest possible authority, he himself summoned a
          Council of all the Italian bishops. 
             Then
          the different positions began to define themselves, and the party of Novatian
          appeared as that in favour of the most puritanical rigorism. No peace between
          the Church and the deserters!—perpetual anathemas on the idolaters. So ran the
          watchword of the new sect. They did not, indeed, forbid the apostates to do
          penance; on the contrary, they urged it on them vehemently, though depriving
          them of all hope of readmission to the congregation, even at their last hour.
          This was the discipline formerly meted out to adulterers, as well as apostates;
          but it had been for long reserved exclusively for the latter. Novatian and his
          followers insisted that this must continue, and that the concession granted to
          adultery ought not to be extended to apostasy. This summed up primitive Novatianism. Once separated from the Church, however, the
          sect soon fell into new and additional varieties of dissent. In the beginning,
          it only protested against the relaxation of a point of discipline, which,
          though rightly adopted and applied at a time when only isolated cases of
          apostasy occurred could not be enforced in the face of the innumerable
          defections, produced by a persecution of universal and unusual severity. 
             Theoretically,
          this position was a strong one, and it gives the key to the relative success of
          the new schism. The personal influence of Novatian helped the schism much, as
          did the prodigious activity with which his adherents, Novatus in particular, strove to discredit Cornelius. The Council of Rome assembled.
          There were present sixty bishops, not to mention the priests and deacons of
          Rome, and those who accompanied, or represented their bishops. The letters from
          the Counci! of Carthage were read to the assembly.
          They set forth the principle to be applied in restoring the lapsed to
          communion, and invited the Italian bishops to condemn the founder of the new
          schism. This hope was fulfilled : Novatian and his followers were expelled from
          the Church, and the disciplinary ruling of the Council of Africa was solemnly
          approved. These decisions were embodied in a synodical letter, signed by all
          the bishops present, and agreed to by all those absent. 
             Strengthened
          by this two-fold manifesto from the episcopates of Italy and Africa, Cornelius
          hastened to send out, in all directions, copies of the proceedings of the
          Synod, together with a full account of Novatian and his schism. In Africa,
          Cyprian supported him with energy; the waverers were but few and isolated.
          Nevertheless, Bishop Evaristus, one of the consecrators of Novatian, came to
          Carthage, with a Roman deacon, Nicostratus, a confessor of the last
          persecution, and several others; and they succeeded in organizing a small Novatianist Church in the African capital, with a certain
          Maximus as bishop. No doubt a similar success followed in other places. In
          Gaul, Bishop Marcian, of Arles, joined the sect of Novatian, and treated
          apostates on his lines. This is the only serious ease of defection recorded in
          the West. 
             In
          the East, things went much further. Novatian’s views found a looting in various
          parts of Asia Minor. The Bishop of Antioch, Fabius, openly became their patron.
          He, however, did not long occupy the See, and his brethren of Syria,
          Cappadocia, and Cilicia took a different view, so that the movement was soon
          got under. He had also against him the very considerable weight of Dionysius,
          Bishop of Alexandria, who was of the same mind as Cornelius and Cyprian. From
          the time of the persecution, he had ordered the restoration to communion of all
          the lapsed, in the hour of death; and at the first sign of peace, he
          circulated, throughout Egypt, a sort of penitential tariff, wherein the
          different degrees of guilt were classified, and each accorded their proper penalty.
          Novatian's letters made no impression on him; he answered them candidly, but
          gently, as was his way, telling Cornelius' rival that the best thing for him to
          do, was to drop his pretentions to the episcopate. Dionysius also applied
          himself zealously to win back the Roman confessors, who had been led into
          schism. This was a matter of great importance, and Cyprian also threw himself
          into it, with equal spirit. These two great bishops, whose positions and
          careers present so many points of resemblance, had independently taken up the
          same attitude, and they were successful. The Roman confessors nearly all
          repented, abandoned Novatian, and returned to the Church, where Cornelius and
          his followers readily received them, even restoring those who had held office
          in the Church to their former position. In the eyes of the Christian masses,
          this proved very damaging to Novatian’s prestige, and Cornelius and his two
          allies, Dionysius and Cyprian, gave wide publicity to these opportune
          retractations. 
             Besides
          the letters against Novatianism, written for that
          purpose, there also exists a sort of homily, entitled Ad Novatianum, wherein
          he is severely taken to task. It seems to have been written in Rome.
             But his little church still managed to exist ; a certain number of
          believers, firm in the Gospel, still clung to Novatian. He, in addition to his
          controversial writings, poured out practical treatises for his disciples. We
          have specimens of this literature, in his De cibis Judaicis,
          probably also in the De spectaculis, and the De bono pudicitiae.
          These, and some other works attributed to him, have come down to us through St
          Cyprian. A good many others were known to St Jerome. The abovementioned works
          have this in common, that they were written during a time of persecution,
          either under Gallus or Valerian, when Novatian was separated from his
          disciples. According to a tradition of his sect, he was a victim of the
          persecution under Valerian. 
             The
          party in Carthage in favor of clemency had been for months, in their campaign
          against Cyprian, making capital out of the vanity of the confessors, and the
          indecent haste of the lapsi.
          They must have been much surprised at the turn things were taking in Rome. Novatus, going from one extreme to another, was with the
          Roman confessors, organizing a party on severely puritan and rigorist lines. 
             On
          the other hand, the Council of 251, by its clemency to the libellaties, and other
          less deeply involved apostates, deprived the promoters of the schism of a good
          number of sympathizers. Felicissimus, on his side, tried to strengthen his
          position. He had himself ordained deacon, that is treasurer, of the opposition
          Church they were founding. They scoured Africa to beat up recruits, especially
          from the episcopate, hoping to set up a rival council to Cyprian’s, to depose
          Cyprian himself, and to establish the lax discipline, which was the aim, or the
          pretext, for the whole of this intrigue. 
             Their
          success was slight. Twenty-five bishops were expected; five only turned
          up—three apostates and two heretics. One of the heretics was the same Privatus
          of Lambesis, who, some years previously, had been
          deposed by a large council. At the same time, more than forty bishops arrived
          in Carthage for Cyprian’s usual May Council, the second after the persecution.
          The Council met on May 15, 252. Privatus presented himself, and desired to
          plead his cause, and to be reinstated : but in vain. 
             In view of the persecution, which under the new Emperor Gallus was just
          breaking over the Church, the Council granted communion to the lapsed of all
          degrees, who had conscientiously done penance till then. This still further
          diminished the     raison d'être of the
          opposition. But it did not affect the partisans of Felicissimus, who, for over
          a year, had been promoting a schism, and not doing penance. 
             They
          did not therefore relinquish their little opposition Council. They pronounced a
          sentence of deposition against Cyprian, and appointed, as his successor,
          Fortunatus, one of the five factious priests. Cyprian did not disturb himself.
          He had the whole African episcopate on his side, and the whole Christian
          population of Carthage, except a small body of intriguers, called, from the
          name of their chief, by the sobriquet of Infelicissimi. 
             Felicissimus
          set out for Rome with some of his party; they did their utmost to get their new
          bishop, Fortunatus, recognized. Pope Cornelius banished them from the Church;
          but, as they made a great commotion, and threatened to publish letters of
          Fortunatus, full of infamous calumnies against Cyprian, Cornelius took fright,
          and consented to read the documents they submitted. This concession, the reason
          for which escapes us, annoyed Cyprian considerably, and he was not a man to be
          put out without caused 
             This
          was the second cloud to arise between two great bishops, whose connection is
          famous. At the beginning of his episcopate, Cornelius had been hurt by
          Cyprian's delay in announcing his consecration, and by the steps he deemed
          necessary to verify it. Cyprian, in his turn, was much surprised by the
          timidity of his colleague, and by Cornelius' apparent readiness to lend his
          authority to the doubts cast on Cyprian's right to occupy the See of Carthage. 
             He
          frankly and eloquently remonstrated with Cornelius. This was in the summer of
          252. The persecution of Gallus, which was already impending, was soon to change
          the current of Cyprian's thoughts about the Bishop of Rome. As soon as he heard
          of his exile, he hastened to write a letter of congratulation. This time,
          Cyprian himself was able to remain amongst his people, in spite of the fanatics
          in Carthage, who were perpetually clamoring for his
          death. The following year, Cornelius having died in exile, Lucius was elected
          bishop by the Church of Rome; he was also exiled, but for a short time only.
          Peace was restored, and Lucius returned to Rome. Cyprian, who had congratulated
          him upon his confession, wrote to associate himself and the African episcopate
          in the joy of the Roman Church. 
             These letters, as indeed the whole correspondence of St Cyprian, testify
          to the close connection between the two Sees of Rome and Carthage, to their
          frequent intercourse, and to the special consideration in which the Africans
          held the Church of Rome, "the principal Church, the source of sacerdotal
          unity".
             Under
          Pope Stephen, the successor of Lucius, these relations became less pleasant;
          for a time indeed, they were rather strained. 
              
               5. The Baptismal Controversy
           Lucius
          died, March 5, 254. With Stephen, who succeeded him, Cyprian seems, from the
          first, to have been but little in sympathy. Ere long, they came into actual
          collision, and, at first, not over either Italian or African affairs. 
             During the persecution, the Spanish prelates, Basilides, Bishop of
          Emerita (Merida), and Martial, Bishop of Legio and Asturica (Leon and Astorga) had either asked, or accepted,
          a certificate of sacrifice. For this, and for various other misdeeds, they were
          deposed from the episcopate, and their successors, Sabinus and Felix,
          appointed. They did not submit. Basilides set out for Rome, succeeded in
          convincing Pope Stephen that the accusations were unfounded, and was restored
          to his position. Little pleased with this sudden change, the faithful laity and
          the newly appointed bishop appealed to the Council of Africa, which had become
          a regular institution. The letters of St Cyprian show that, except in times of
          persecution, it met at least once a year, in spring, and sometimes also in
          autumn. These great periodical assemblies did much for the maintenance and
          uniformity of discipline. Their fame spread beyond Africa, and the reputation
          of the wise and illustrious man, who was their very life and soul, added to their
          renown. It was in the autumn of 254 that the Council received the appeal of the
          Spaniards. The Council, like the pope, heard only one side, and pronounced in
          its favor. Basilides and Martial were declared unworthy to be bishops. With the
          very imperfect information we have, it is hardly possible to decide which was
          in the right. But certainly, the letter from the Council of Africa, conveying
          to the churches of Emerita and Legio-Asturica the
          news of their decision contrary to that of Pope Stephen, was not calculated to
          please that prelate. 
             Shortly
          afterwards, Cyprian received, in quick succession, two letters from Faustinus,
          Bishop of Lyons, laying before him the facts as to the schismatic attitude of
          Marcian, Bishop of Arles. Marcian was in communion with Novatian; and he
          vigorously applied his puritan principles in the reconciliation of the lapsed.
          Faustinus and other bishops of Gaul had applied in vain to Pope Stephen to stop
          the scandal. In despair, they invoked the help of the Bishop of Carthage.
          Stephen seems to have treated the Novatianists with
          some leniency; the report was that, contrary to established custom, he allowed
          the schismatic priests or deacons, who returned to the Church, to retain their
          office. Cyprian wrote to him in strong terms. 
             According
          to Cyprian, it was the duty of the pope to intervene in Gaul, to write to the
          bishops of that country, and to the faithful laity in Arles, and advise that
          they should at once take steps to get rid of Marcion and elect his successor.
          The Bishop of Carthage seems here to take upon himself to champion a rule of
          discipline and the usages established by Cornelius and Lucius, and dropped by
          their successor, for whom the tone of his letter shows indeed but scant
          respect. Stephen, whether or not he deserved Cyprian's reproaches, could hardly
          have appreciated being so taken to task. At this crisis arose the controversy
          on the baptism of heretics. 
             On
          what terms could heretics, who abjured their schism, come over to the Catholic
          Church, and be admitted to communion? This question appears to have become very
          pressing towards the end of the 2nd century, when some of the sects, which
          abounded on all sides, were on the wane. Two kinds of cases came up for
          consideration. Either the converted heretic had been initiated into
          Christianity in the Church, or in the sect. If in the Church, his initiation
          was certainly valid, but he had committed a grave sin in leaving it, and the
          Church was within its rights in imposing upon him some penance analogous to
          that laid upon an ordinary sinner. This was done everywhere. But when it was a
          case of heretical initiation, the matter was very different. Could the Catholic
          Church recognize the validity of an initiation conferred by schismatics, who,
          although nominally Christians, were in revolt against Church authority,
          separated from communion with the faithful, and given over to false and tainted
          doctrines? Even admitting that their peculiar rites and formulas still retained
          the essential qualities of those of the Church, might they not be nullified by
          the different meaning attached to them? This most delicate question could not
          be settled off-hand, and varying solutions of the difficulty appeared, which,
          however, may be reduced to two. In some places no initiation but that of the
          orthodox Church was accepted. In Rome and in Egypt, a distinction gradually
          arose. Christian initiation had two parts—baptism, and what we call confirmation.
          By the first, came purification from sin; by the second, the gift of the
          Spirit. In the ritual of this second part, special importance was attached to
          the laying on of hands, accompanied by an invocation of the Sevenfold Spirit.
          The Roman usage was, to accept baptism conferred by heretics; but it was
          thought that only the Church, the True Church, could invoke the Holy Spirit
          with any efficacy; and therefore the converted heretic had to submit to the
          imposition of hands, as if by way of penance, but really that he might receive
          the Holy Spirit. 
             In
          Carthage, the absolute repudiation of the validity of the heretical rites, had
          the authority of long established tradition. Tertullian, in his treatise on
          baptism, expressly inculcates this repudiation. About 220, it was sanctioned by
          a great Council of the African and Numidian bishops, called together by Agrippinus. In Asia Minor, councils held at Iconium, at Synnada, and various other places, had ruled the same
          practice,* which obtained as well in Antioch and Northern Syria. Palestine, in
          this, as in the matter of Paschal observance, followed the Alexandrian custom. 
             Nevertheless,
          this rough outline must not be taken as quite accurate. Centralization was
          still so little the rule, that there were differences of usage, even in Africa.
          In 255, the Council of Carthage was presented with a memoriae,
          signed by eighteen Numidian bishops, who had doubts as to the legitimacy of the
          prevailing African custom. Perhaps they were troubled by the differences
          between the custom of their own Church and that of Rome. However that may be,
          the Council decreed that the African custom should prevail, as the only
          authorized practice. This was the answer given to the Numidian bishops,
          together with the grounds for this decision.
             Soon
          after, Cyprian himself wrote to Quintus, a Mauritanian bishop, in reply to
          similar inquiries. In this letter, there is already a tone of special
          antagonism to Pope Stephen, although his name is not mentioned. At the next
          Council, in the autumn of 255, or the spring of 256, Cyprian thought the time
          had come to cut short all the African objections, and to clear up the indirect
          and smoldering controversy which divided his
          colleagues, by bringing matters to a direct issue. He wrote to Stephen in his
          own name and that of the Council, and sent him, together with the letter of the
          preceding Council, his own letter to Quintus. He intended, not only to
          establish his right to observe the ancient custom of his own Church, but also
          to show that the practice of rebaptism was the only legitimate usage, and
          consequently to induce the Roman Church to adopt it also. 
             In
          addition to this matter of baptism, the Council of Carthage also dealt with the
          position of priests and deacons, who had either joined sects, or been ordained
          by them, and it condemned them to remain always in lay-communion. Had Stephen
          made any special concession on this point? We know not, but subsequently the
          discussion turned exclusively on the question of baptism. 
             Whilst
          the delegates from the Council were on their way to Rome, Cyprian, being
          consulted by one of his bishops, named Jubafan, as to
          the importance of some criticisms which had reached him from Italy, replied to
          him by a long exposition of his own position. In the whole controversy, this
          letter is the most important document on the theory of the question. 
             The
          Romans, who, for over a year, had been perpetually taken to task by the African
          Council, gave its representatives rather a cold reception. The letter they bore
          was not very ingratiating. “We know”, it ran, “that some persons will never
          relinquish the views they have adopted, nor easily change their minds; that,
          whilst they keep up peaceable relations with their fellows, they persist in
          their own ways. We do not wish either to terrorize over anyone, or to lay down
          the law for others. Each of the heads of the Church is free to conduct his
          administration as he sees fit, being only responsible to the Lord. “At this
          moment of tension, many regrettable words were said. Cyprian was called “a
          false Christ”, “a false apostle”, “a treacherous worker”. The legates were not
          admitted to an audience with the pope; the Roman congregation was even
          forbidden to show them hospitality. 
             Stephen
          replied to the claims of Cyprian by a very serious decision. Not only did he
          refuse to abandon his own practice, but he intimated to the bishops of Africa
          that they must conform to it also; otherwise he would have no further dealings
          with them. A similar ultimatum was despatched to the East. 
             Stephen's
          letter reached Carthage in the course of the summer. Whilst awaiting the next
          meeting of the Council, fixed for September I, Cyprian wrote to Pompeius,
          Bishop of the Tripolitan province, a letter which alludes to Stephen's reply,
          and complains of it bitterly. On the day appointed, eighty-seven bishops from
          all the African provinces assembled in Carthage under Cyprian's presidency. The
          correspondence between Cyprian and Jubafan was read.
          And then the president called on each member of the assembly to pronounce his
          opinion: “In doing this”, said he, “we judge no one, nor do we propose to put
          out of communion those who think otherwise. None of us wishes to pose as a
          Bishop of bishops, or to force the agreement of his fellows by a tyrannous
          terror. Every bishop, in the fulness of his liberty and authority, retains the
          right to think for himself; he is no more amenable to the judgment of another,
          than he is at liberty to judge others.” 
             One
          after the other, the eighty-seven bishops recorded their vote against the
          validity of heretical baptism. Of Stephen and his letter no mention was made. 
             The African Church thus assumed an attitude of passive resistance. It
          did not deny the necessity for doctrinal conformity with the First of Churches,
          the principal Church, of which the Pope was the Head and the representative. It
          did not even controvert the special and superior authority which pertained to
          him, in virtue of the locality of his See, and of his succession to St Peter.
          But the African Church believed that this authority had been abused by the eHort to impose upon others an unauthorized practice. It
          did not go so far, in support of that view, as to break off, on its own
          account, from relations with Rome, but it was satisfied to make a solemn
          declaration of its decision. After the Council's manifesto, Stephen, if he
          carried out his threats, would have to abstain from sending any clergy, or
          messengers, to Carthage; perhaps, if the clergy, or any of the African
          congregation, went to Rome, they would no longer be allowed to participate in
          the liturgical ceremonies, or in the alms of the Church. The African churches,
          on the contrary, would have to continue their welcome to Romans travelling in
          Africa, and even to correspond with the clergy of Rome, so far as they might
          feel inclined to, knowing that their letters ran a great risk of not being
          read. 
             If
          this situation had lasted, it would soon have become intolerable. At the moment
          of the Council, they did not perhaps fully realise all the complications which
          might arise. But however this may be, they at once tried to open up relations
          with the churches of Asia Minor and the East, thinking thus to give more weight
          to their manifesto, and also to confirm themselves in their resistance, by the
          example of others. These churches, as they also rebaptised heretics, were
          equally involved in the controversy with the pope. A deacon, Rogatianus, set sail for the coast of Cilicia, and went on
          into Cappadocia, to Firmilian, the celebrated Bishop of Caesarea. He, with all
          his brother-bishops of Eastern Asia Minor, shared Cyprian's views on the
          baptismal question. Like Cyprian, Firmilian was renowned for virtue, learning,
          experience, and zeal. The letter he entrusted to Rogatianus,
          and with which the deacon hurried back to Carthage, referred to Pope Stephen in
          very harsh terms, without, however, disputing his authority, any more than did
          the African documents. 
             And
          thus the winter passed—a sort of blockade continuing between Rome and the
          churches of Africa and the East. Spring returned, and Easter, without, so far
          as we know, any modification of this unhappy position. 
             But
          Stephen's death, on August 2 of this year (257), relieved the tension. His
          successors, though they still retained the custom of the Roman Church, and
          tried to push it as much as possible elsewhere, saw no necessity for extreme
          harshness towards those who differed. Dionysius of Alexandria, the Irenaeus of
          this new Victor, though in his diocese he observed the same practice as
          Stephen, was not at all disposed to follow his severity, nor, for a divergence
          of this kind, was he inclined to pay any heed to an excommunication involving
          half the Church. He had already written, in that sense, to Stephen himself, and
          to two learned priests of Rome, Dionysius and Philemon, who naturally agreed
          with their Bishop. After the death of Stephen, the new Pope Xystus II. and his
          colleagues made it clear that the Roman presbyterium had modified its attitude. Dionysius of Alexandria, in writing to them, does
          not disguise his feelings as to the extreme gravity of the attempt made by the
          deceased pope, or as to the importance of keeping the peace, and of respecting
          the decisions of weighty and important councils. 
             These
          words helped to strengthen the unity, already restored by the mere fact of the
          change of popes. Xystus and Cyprian re-established the relations between Rome
          and Africa, which Stephen had broken off! Correspondence with Firmilian was
          also resumed. 
             Dionysius,
          the successor of Xystus, came to the assistance of the Cappadocian Church in
          its distress after the invasion of the Persians in 239. And, with the Roman
          alms, he sent a message of peace. Happy days! when charity was so fervent, and
          resentment so short-lived. 
             Nevertheless,
          unity was not restored at the expense of the practice Pope Stephen condemned.
          In the 4th century, St Basil still adhered to the same practices as Firmilian;
          and so it was in Syria. The Africans also adhered to their own custom, and did
          not give it up, until the Council of Arles, in 314, under the Emperor
          Constantine. 
             The
          news of the death of Stephen had hardly reached Carthage, when fresh
          persecution broke out. On August 30, 257, Cyprian was arrested by order of the
          proconsul, and ordered to confine himself at Curubis.
          A year later, September 13, 258, they came to fetch him for a second hearing.
          The interview with the proconsul took place the next day. The proconsul said:
           “Thou
          art Thrascius Cyprianus?”.
           “I
          am”, replied the bishop.
           “Thou
          art the pope of persons of sacrilegious views?”.
           “I
          am”.
           “The
          three holy emperors command thee to perform the rite”.
           “I
          will not do so”.
           “Consider
          thyself”.
           “Do
          what thou art charged to do; the matter is so clear, there is nothing to
          consider.” 
             The
          proconsul, who had not often had such a man to try, nevertheless conferred with
          his council. Then, in a reluctant voice, he summed up the indictment of the
          State against the Christian Pontiff, and finally read from his tablets : “Thrascius Cyprianus is to be executed by the sword.” 
             The
          Christians of Carthage, who had collected the night before, Hocked in crowds
          around the tribunal. They accompanied their bishop to the place of martyrdom,
          where Cyprian died, as he had lived—simply and nobly. And in spite of
          circumstances, his faithful people gave him a triumphant burial. 
             Between
          the persecutions of Valerian and of Diocletian, that is, roughly, during the
          last forty years of the 3rd century, the history of the Church in the West is
          entirely lost to sight. Through Eusebius, and also from a Roman chronicle, we
          know the succession of the popes during that time, and the length of the
          episcopate of each. Dionysius, the successor of Xystus II, has left his mark on
          the history of Oriental controversies; but we know nothing of his doings in
          Rome or in the Latin country. This is even more absolutely the case in regard
          to his successors, Felix, Eutychian, and Gallus, for even the Eastern documents
          pass them over in silence. Of two successors of St Cyprian, Carpophorus and Lucian, the names are known, but nothing more. A few names of bishops may
          be picked out here and there, in the catalogues of some other churches. 
             But
          nowhere else do we hear anything of the rest of Africa or of Italy, the
          Illyrian or Danubian provinces, or of Gaul, Britain,
          or Spain. In Spain, however, just before the last persecution, about 300 A.D.,
          a council was held, the decrees of which give us a glimpse of the situation,
          and the institutions of the Church at that time: to this we shall return later.
           
           
           CHAPTER XXI 
           CHRISTIANITY IN THE EAST
          BEFORE DECIUS 
              
                
               BESIDES
          the province of Asia, on the Aegean, Asia Minor further included—on the north,
          Bithynia, and the high lands of Pontus, which stretched along the coast of the
          Black Sea, as far as the mountainous region of Armenia; on the south, Lycia,
          Pamphylia, Upper and Lower Cilicia, with their winding coast of alternating
          plains and mountains, bordering the sea of Cyprus; and in the interior, round
          the central steppes with their great salt lake, Galatia and Cappadocia, the
          latter being dominated by the lonely summit of Mount Argeas,
          and the mountain ranges of the Taurus and the Anti-Taurus. 
             When
          the history of Christianity begins, most of these countries were little, if at
          all, Hellenized. Long before Alexander, the great Greek towns had established
          counting-houses on the sea-coast, and notably on the Euxine. After the
          Macedonian conquest, these settlements developed, and other towns gradually
          grew up in the interior. Thence, Hellenism spread, without difficulty, to the
          still barbarous provinces of Pontus, Cappadocia, and to the little Celtic
          state, which, in the 3rd century, had been founded between Phrygia and Pontus
          by bands of adventurers from Gaul. But it took some time for these people who
          were still barbarians, or whose civilization differed from that of Greece and
          Rome, to alter their manners, religions, institutions, and dialects. In St
          Jerome's time Celtic was still spoken in the neighborhood of Ancyra, as in the country round Treves; and, when Christianity supplanted
          them, the gods of the old sanctuaries of Pontus and Cappadocia had not lost
          their outlandish aspect. The Cappadocians had no literature until the 4th
          century. 
             When
          the Romans had mastered this country they, at first, left a great part of it
          under the native princes; only by slow degrees was the whole of Asia Minor
          brought under the provincial system. From the time of Trajan, there were five
          provinces; in the north, Pontus with Bithynia; in the south, Lycia with
          Pamphylia, and Cilicia; in the interior, Galatia and Cappadocia. 
             This
          position, however, was far from being attained when, about 45 A.D., St Paul
          began to convert the Jewish and even the pagan population in Cilicia,
          Pamphylia, Pisidia, and Lycaonia. During his later journeys, he may possibly
          have founded communities in Galatia proper! The first Epistle of St Peter
          indicates a wider evangelization; it is addressed to the elect “scattered
          throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia.” Half a century
          later, Christians were very numerous in the province of Pontus with Bithynia,
          which then extended even beyond the Halys, and included the important port of Amisus (Samsun). From this town Pliny, the governor of the
          province, addressed the famous report to the Emperor Trajan, in which he
          complains that the Christian missions had invaded not only the towns, but the
          villages and country districts, creating a desert round the temples and
          reducing the value of sacrificial victims. At this time Marcion was spending
          his early youth at Sinope, with the bishop his father. Under Marcus Aurelius,
          the false prophet Alexander inaugurated the worship of Glycon,
          the serpent-god, in the town of Abonoticus (Ineboli); and in spite of Lucian and his pamphlets, his
          imposture met with prodigious success. From what the satirist says, it is clear
          that Christians were very numerous in this district of Pontus. Alexander much
          dreaded them, and coupled them with the Epicureans, in his curses on the
          unbelieving. 
             Dionysius
          of Corinth wrote to the congregation of Nicomedia, who, like others, were
          troubled by the spread of Marcionism. He also wrote to two Christians of Amastris, Bacchylides, and Elpistus, who had consulted him. His letter was addressed “to
          the Church of Amastris, and the churches of Pontus.”
          In it he treats of practical questions, such as marriage, chastity, and the
          reconciliation of sinners and heretics. In this letter, Bishop Palmas of Amastris is mentioned by name. We come across him again,
          about 190. When the bishops of Pontus wrote to Pope Victor on the Paschal
          question, the name of Palmas of Amastris, as the
          oldest appears first. 
             We
          have seen already in the history of Alexander of Abonoticus how easily, in these little civilized countries, simple minds were shaken and
          carried away by religious extravagances. And Montanism found there a ready
          welcome. For a moment, the Church of Ancyra hesitated. The bishops themselves
          saw visions and rivalled the prophets. We hear of one, who having often
          prophesied before his people, finally warned them to expect the "day of
          the Lord within a year. The poor souls believed him, gave up their work, sold
          their possessions, and ceased to give their daughters in marriage. We can
          imagine the confusion when the allotted term passed without bringing the Last
          Judgment. 
             A
          little later, amidst the terror produced by earthquakes and persecutions, a
          native prophetess appeared in Cappadocia, declaring that these convulsions were
          a divine intimation that they must forthwith leave Cappadocia, henceforth an
          accursed land, and migrate in a body to Jerusalem. The mission of effecting
          this exodus was committed to her, with power to convince the doubting by fresh
          earthquakes. These absurdities were widely believed; caravans set off in the
          middle of winter; the prophetess marching at their head bare-footed, followed
          by her adherents, a priest and a deacon of Caesarea among them. But it was the
          prophetess who held services, baptized, and celebrated the Eucharist. A
          courageous exorcist at last faced this rival of Maximilla, and unlike the
          Phrygian bishops, succeeded in showing up the imposture. 
             These
          Christian communities, like those of Asia proper, suffered much both from the
          application of the laws prohibiting Christianity, and from local persecutions.
          Few details have come down to us. Tertullian, however, mentions a legate of
          Cappadocia, L. Claudius Herminianus, whose wife was converted, and who revenged
          himself by treating the Christians most harshly. Attacked by a contagious
          disease, and abandoned by his people: "Let us hide this," he said,
          "lest the Christians triumph." As his illness increased, he was
          stricken with remorse; and regretting the apostasies his severity had extorted,
          he died almost a Christian. This legate probably lived in the time of Severus.
          In the reign of Maximinus the extreme harshness of another legate, Serenianus, forced many Christians to leave Cappadocia. The
          exodus led by the prophetess, took place in his time. 
             There
          were but lew towns in these districts. The most important, Caesarea in
          Cappadocia, was the headquarters of the army which guarded both Armenia and the
          passes of the Caucasus. Under its early kings, it bore the name of Mazaca, and was an insignificant place, but gradually it
          became one of the largest towns in the empire. It does not come into Christian
          history, till about 200 A.D. It had then as bishop, Alexander, a learned man.
          He was trained in the school of Alexandria, by Pantaenus and Clement. Under
          Septimius Severus, he suffered a long imprisonment; and Clement, driven from
          Alexandria by persecution, replaced him very efficiently. Eventually, Alexander
          was released; but apparently it was not expedient for him to remain in Caesarea.
          He removed to Palestine, and, as we shall see later, settled finally at
          Jerusalem. 
             In
          the next generation, the See of Caesarea was held by Firmilian, a man of high
          birth, and like his predecessor a great friend of the Alexandrian theologian.
          In 232, when Origen was obliged to leave Alexandria and came to live in
          Palestine, Firmilian was already bishop, and invited him to remain in
          Cappadocia, "for the good of the churches." There is reason to
          believe that Origen did indeed make a stay of some length in Caesarea, during
          the persecution under Maximin. Firmilian met him also in Palestine. About this
          time, two young men from Pontus, brothers, Theodore and Athenodorus, scions of
          one of the most illustrious families of their land, influenced by Firmilian,
          but stiil more it seems by Origen, joined the
          Christian community. Being highly educated and good Latin scholars, they had
          proposed to study Roman law at the celebrated school of jurisprudence at Berytus; but their brother-in-law being nominated as
          assessor to the governor of Palestine, they followed their sister to her new
          home. There they met Origen, to whom, no doubt, Firmilian made them known. He
          succeeded in interesting them in philosophical studies, and soon completed
          their conversion. For five years (c. 240) they sat at his feet, and then they
          returned to Pontus. Theodorus, however, who was also called Gregory, expressed
          his gratitude to his illustrious master before he left, in a public panegyric
          pronounced in his presence; we still have the text of it. The private and
          municipal business which had recalled him to his native land was not allowed to
          prevent him fostering his spiritual life, in retirement. He remained in close
          correspondence with Origen, and lived thus, till the Bishop of Amasia, Phaedimus, entrusted him with the mission in Neo-Caesarea.
          Amasia was a town of some importance in a district of Pontus, called Pontus-Galaticus. In Neo-Caesarea, which lay much more to the
          east, in Pontus-Polemoniacus, there were but few
          Christians. Athenodorus, the brother of Gregory, also became a missionary
          bishop. In these remote regions, everything had still to be done, and Gregory
          laid himself out to evangelize in town and country; and, high-bred scholar
          though he was, he knew how to put himself in touch with the humblest peasant.
          He disturbed their old religious customs as little as possible, allowing them
          to retain their festivals, processions, and sacred feasts, and contenting
          himself with directing these festivities to the honor of God, and the martyrs. The people of Comana, a town
          near Neo-Caesarea, wishing for a bishop of their own, appealed to Gregory, who
          consecrated their first pastor, Alexander. 
             The
          unusual amount of detail we have here, throws some faint light on the
          intellectual conditions in Eastern Asia Minor, and on the progress of the
          Gospel there. The organized churches were fairly numerous, and soon felt the
          need of drawing together. From the end of the 2nd century, meetings of bishops
          or councils were frequent in Greece and in Asia. By the 3rd century, this
          custom had extended to Cappadocia and the neighboring districts; councils were held every year, for which the most serious questions
          were reserved, especially those of penitential discipline. Any unusual events
          gave rise to larger gatherings. Thus, early in the episcopate of Firmilian, a
          great council was held at Iconium, in which took part the bishops of
          Cappadocia, Galatia, Cilicia, and of other provinces as well, and it was there
          that the rebaptism of converted heretics was decided on. Another council, held
          about the same time at Synnada, in Eastern Phrygia,
          arrived at the same decision.
             The
          Decian persecution broke over these countries as it did over the whole empire.
          We have few details except that, like Cyprian of Carthage, Gregory, evaded
          arrest by flight, with part of his Hock. More serious was the suffering caused
          by the invasion of the barbarians, Boradi sand Goths,
          who, after the defeat of Decius (251) devastated the defenseless country. The invaders, masters of the lower Danube, crossed the straits into
          Asia Minor, and spread as far as Ephesus and Cappadocia. Other barbarians arriving
          by sea, seized Trebizond and devastated the surrounding country. When they
          departed, they left ruin behind them, and also innumerable cases of conscience
          with which St Gregory had to deal. The Christians from Pontus, whom the Goths
          took captive and then released, were vexed with scruples at having eaten
          heathen food. Gregory did not make much of this, especially as they assured him
          the barbarians had not sacrificed to idols, and the meals could therefore have
          had no religious character. Respectable women had been violated; Gregory
          consoled and reassured them as best he could. Others who had got into trouble,
          without awaiting the barbarians, he treated with more severity. More than one
          Christian had made up for his losses by helping himself to stolen goods, and
          even to captives from the train of the Goths; Gregory opines that such folk
          were enough to draw down fire from heaven on the land. But there were worse
          things still; some of the Christians had made common cause with the barbarians,
          shown them the way, the houses which were worth pillaging, and even enrolled
          themselves among them, and shared their evil deeds, forgetting, as the
          patriotic bishop said, that they were Pontians and
          Christians. 
             These
          unedifying details make us suspect that the conversions, so rapidly made by
          Gregory, were not as yet very thorough. 
             The
          life of the saintly bishop left a deep impression. His miracles arc famous, and
          secured for him the titles of the Great, and Thaumaturgus (Wonder-worker). The
          Church of Neo-Caesarea had still, in the 4th century, a creed derived from him;
          St John the Evangelist had revealed it to him, by request of Mary, the Mother
          of the Lord. This is, at least, the tradition handed down by Gregory of Nyssa,
          the panegyrist of Gregory Thaumaturgus. To judge by internal evidence only, the
          Creed of Neo-Caesarea suggests rather the inspiration of Origen. It seems
          evident, that in spite of his miracles and his pastoral labors,
          Gregory always lived up to the philosophical education he had received from the
          great Alexandrian. Various writings credibly attributed to him, besides those
          already mentioned, bear witness to his speculative tendencies!
           
           2. Antioch.
           Syria,
          from the beginning of the 2nd century, was divided into three provinces: Syria
          proper, in the north; Syria Palestina, the former kingdom of Herod; and to the
          east and the south of the latter, Arabia, which corresponded to the kingdom of
          the Nabathaei. It was annexed to the empire in 105,
          and included Bostra and Petra, as well as the
          peninsula of Sinai. 
             Antioch,
          the ancient capital of the Seleucids, was the chief town of the north, and the
          headquarters of the army of the East, and it continued to be virtually the
          metropolis of the whole district. It was a town of great size. In population
          (700,000 inhabitants) and commercial importance, it was scarcely inferior to
          Alexandria. From the military point of view, it surpassed it. Its Hellenism was
          more homogeneous and more organized. It enjoyed municipal independence. Athens
          had its memories. Tarsus retained its celebrated schools. But Antioch was, in
          fact, the greatest of Greek towns, where the Greek spirit, in spite of the
          solvent influence of its oriental surroundings, still retained its ascendancy.
          Its inhabitants were a captious people, no favorites with the emperors, whose generals they corrupted, and were apt to transform
          into rivals. Avidius Cassius reigned there in the
          days of Marcus Aurelius, and so did Pescennius Niger,
          the rival of Septimius Severus. The victory of Severus was followed up by harsh
          reprisals. The province of Syria was dismembered; Phoenicia was detached from
          it to form a fourth province; an attempt was even made to abolish the
          municipality of Antioch, and to subordinate this great city to Laodicea. But
          this freak could not last. It was no use; Antioch was still situated precisely
          where the Euphrates comes nearest to the Mediterranean, and was consequently
          the natural centre of defence for the Eastern frontier. It soon recovered all
          its privileges, and continued to be the Queen of the East. Its prestige did not
          diminish until the time of Julian. 
             We
          have already seen that Antioch succeeded Jerusalem as the chief metropolis of
          Christendom. Its bishops, in the generation after the apostles, were Enodius and Ignatius, the celebrated martyr. The heretics
          Menander and Saturninus were then there sowing the tares of Gnosticism. From
          Hadrian's time the Church of Antioch is entirely lost to sight. In the list of
          its bishops, given Eusebius by Julius Africanus, are the unknown names of Hero,
          Cornelius, and Heros. Then comes Theophilus, who apparently held the See,
          during the last years of Marcus Aurelius, and under Commodus. We know Theophilus
          by his works, though only a treatise in three books is extant. It is an apology
          for Christianity, in answer to pagan objectors addressed to a certain
          Autolycus. Previously he had written against the heresies of Marcion and
          Hermogenes. The latter was a painter, a dabbler in philosophy, still half
          pagan, and against him Tertullian also wrote his book Adversus Hermogenem.
          Considering Tertullian's usual methods of composition, it is probable that he
          incorporated most of Theophilus' book, seasoning it with additional invectives
          of his own. The writings of the Bishop of Antioch were highly thought of, and
          before long were studied in the West. Irenaeus and Hippolytus made use of them
          before Tertullian. Theophilus also published several small catechetical works.
          Such literary activity befitted the bishop of the great metropolis of the East.
          The clergy of Antioch were always highly cultivated men; and in such
          surroundings the catechetical instruction must have developed as it did in
          Alexandria. In his treatise addressed to Autolycus, Theophilus quotes an
          earlier work, which seems to have been a sort of chronicle of the history of
          the world from the beginning. He was therefore the first to attempt this kind
          of composition, taken up forty or fifty years later by Julius Africanus and
          Hippolytus. 
             After
          him, the Church of Antioch was ruled by Maximinus, of whom we know absolutely
          nothing, and then by the better known Serapion. His episcopate corresponds,
          more or less, with the reign of Septimius Severus. It was in his time that Pescennius Niger was vanquished, and Antioch so harshly
          treated. Serapion took part in the Montanist controversy, and in this
          connection he wrote his letter to Pontius and Caricus.
          It formed part of a collection of letters like those of Ignatius and Dionysius
          of Corinth. Eusebius, who had these letters before him, gives a curious extract
          from an epistle addressed to the Church of Rhossus in
          Cilicia, on the Syrian coast of the Gulf of Issus. In speaking of the Gospel of
          Peter, Serapion says:— 
             “We,
          my brothers, receive as Christ Himself, both Peter and the other apostles ; but
          as to the works which have been falsely attributed to them, experience teaches
          us to reject these, for we know that they have not been handed down to us by
          tradition. When I was with you, I imagined that you were all steadfast in the
          faith; therefore, without examining the so-called Gospel of Peter, which they
          showed me, I said that, if being forbidden to read it was the only cause for
          your perturbation, it might be read. But now I learn that these people have
          made my words an excuse for adopting heretical views; therefore I shall make a
          point of coming to you soon. Wait for me, therefore.” 
             We
          learn from this account and from what follows, that the heretics, of whom the
          most prominent was a certain Marcianus, had begun by introducing into Rhossus the apocryphal gospel in question, and that when
          once it was allowed to be read in public, with consent of the Bishop of
          Antioch, they used it to support their doctrines. Serapion, in order to get to
          the bottom of the matter, wished to read the Gospel of Peter, and was obliged
          to borrow a copy from the Docetae. St Ignatius had already refuted these heretics,
          who may have had some connection with the sects of Saturninus and Marcion. Docetism
          was always very popular in Antioch. Serapion’s study of the book convinced him
          that the Gospel of Peter was, on the whole, orthodox, but contained strange
          ideas, inspired by Docetism. This is exactly the impression we receive from the
          fragment of this gospel quite recently restored to light by the Egyptian
          papyri. 
             The
          Church of Antioch elected as successor to Serapion, who died about 211, a
          confessor named Asclepiades. Bishop Alexander of Caesarea in Cappadocia, an
          imprisoned confessor, sent from his dungeon by the hand of Clement of
          Alexandria, a letter to the Church in Antioch, highly eulogizing the new
          bishop. This is all we know of Asclepiades; we have no details on his
          episcopate or those of his successors, Philetus and Zebinus.s After them came Babylas, who was bishop until the Decian persecution and has
          been mentioned in that connection.
           
           3. Edessa. 
           Towards
          the end of the 2nd century B.C., the town of Edessa, situated beyond the
          Euphrates, in Upper Mesopotamia, became the capital of a small kingdom,
          independent of the Seleucids, and governed by a native dynasty. Nearly all
          these princes were called Abgar or Manu. Alternately under the influence of
          Parthia and that of Rome, but tending to be drawn in the Roman direction, they
          preserved their independence down to the 3rd century. The organization of a
          province of Mesopotamia, by Severus, with its capital at Nisibis, divided them
          from the Parthian kingdom and prepared the way for annexation with Rome. 
             This
          little kingdom of Osroene was, notwithstanding the
          Macedonian name of its capital, untouched by Hellenism. The language was
          Syrian, and Jews were very numerous. In Gospel days, Izates,
          King of Adiabene (ancient Assyria), and his mother Helen, embraced Judaism.
          Early in the 2nd century, a political change brought to the throne of Edessa a
          branch of the Abgar dynasty, connected with the house of Izates.
          Two or three generations later, Abgar IX, Bar-Manu (179-214), was converted to
          Christianity; his son, Manu, who succeeded him, was also a Christian. Julius
          Africanus was on friendly terms with these princes. The reign of Manu was
          short. Caracalla (216) dethroned him, and sent him a prisoner to Rome. But this
          did not end the kingdom of Osroene, for in the time
          of Gordian III the dynasty of Abgar still survived. 
             The
          conversion of their king had naturally considerable influence on the spread of
          Christianity in these countries beyond the Euphrates. There were several
          bishops in Osroene, even at the time of the Paschal
          controversy (c. 190). The Christian Church in Edessa was a very prominent
          building; its destruction by an inundation (201) is mentioned in the
          description of the catastrophe by the local chronicle. 
             The
          religion which preceded Christianity was one of those cults so common in the
          East, in which the divinity had both a male and a female form. We get an idea
          of it from Lucian's description of the temple of Mabogor Hierapolis. One of its usages was that of religious mutilation: this Abgar,
          after his conversion, strictly forbade. 
             In
          Edessa, as in many other places, legend has usurped the place of the early
          history of Christianity. This began early, for by the end of the 3rd century,
          documents, said to be derived from the archives of the kingdom, were in
          circulation, attributing the king’s conversion to the Savior Himself Abgar,
          being ill, is told of the miracles of Jesus; he writes and invites Him to
          Edessa. Jesus cannot come Himself, but prophesies that Edessa should never fall
          into the hands of enemies, and promises to send someone in his stead to the
          King. So after the Passion, the Apostle Thomas sends a disciple called Addai (Addeas or Thaddeus), who converts the King, and baptizes
          and heals him. The whole kingdom becomes Christian. The first bishops of Edessa
          were Addai himself, and then his two disciples and fellow-workers, Aggar and Palout. Under the
          episcopate of Aggar, a change of sovereigns leads to
          a persecution. Aggar is killed. Palout,
          his successor, having no one to consecrate him, goes to ask consecration from
          Serapion, Bishop of Antioch, who had himself been consecrated by Zephyrinus,
          Bishop of Rome. 
             It
          is unnecessary to point out the historical and chronological difficulties which
          abound in this account. The central fact of the conversion of the kingdom has
          been put back to apostolic days, together with various people and
          circumstances, really belonging to the end of the 2nd century. The Apostle
          Thomas was said from the time of Origen to have preached the Gospel to the
          Parthians. In the 4th century his tomb was believed to be at Edessa, and this
          belief took shape in a basilica, a great resort of pilgrims. 
             But
          the great celebrity of Edessa, in the time of its Christian kings, was
          Bardesanes. Born in 154 A.D., he lived in close intimacy with the Edessa
          princes, and unless Julius Africanus has confounded him with another man of the
          same name, he was like them, a mighty hunter. All that we know of his literary
          productions, reveals a philosopher, brilliant and occasionally sound, versed in
          out-of-the-way learning, and a charming poet. His belief passed through many
          strange phases. Like many other men of ability, the theory of the aeons
          fascinated him for a time. Even when he settled down in a more orthodox faith,
          he still retained traces of his previous Gnosticism. He was an opponent of
          Marcionism, which a certain Prepon had spread beyond the Euphrates, and he also
          combated the Valentinian Pleroma and other heresies of the time. His works, if
          we only had more than the merest fragments, would be the oldest representatives
          of Syriac literature. Of the hundred and fifty hymns attributed to him, only a
          few scraps have come down to us in the sacred songs which St Ephrem wrote to
          rival them. It is very doubtful whether his name should be connected with a
          Syriac apology, addressed to Septimius Severus, and wrongly attributed to
          Melito! The book entitled The
            Book of the Laws of Countries, a dialogue in which Bardesanes takes
          part, is certainly not his, but the work of a disciple. It was perhaps not even
          originally written in Syriac. But the questions of Fate and of astral influence
          there treated, had been discussed by Bardesanes himself, in a treatise On
            Fate written in opposition to Avidas the astrologer, and addressed to a
          certain Antoninus
             Bardesanes
          frequently expressed his ideas in dialogue form. He was both the Plato and the
          Pindar of Aramaic literature! He is accused by those who have read his
          writings, of astrological and Docetic tendencies. 
             But
          Bardesanes just escaped martyrdom. Epiphanius relates that Apollonius, the
          companion— that is, no doubt, the official representative of Antoninus
          Caracalla— summoned him to renounce Christianity, and that he refused. This may
          have been in connection with the political changes, in the principality of
          Edessa, when Caracalla dethroned King Manu, and incorporated the state in the
          Roman province. Bardesanes’ relations with the fallen sovereign necessarily
          involved him in difficulties, under the new regime; this did not hinder his
          writing against the persecution and the persecutors. He was regarded almost as
          a confessor. 
             Nevertheless,
          his fame was not unclouded. The people of Edessa, now more closely connected
          with the churches of the empire, where orthodoxy was gradually taking on a more
          definite shape, took alarm at some of the vagaries of their national poet. As
          usual, no doubt, his disciples went beyond him, and compromised his name. There
          were Bardesanites, and they were heretics. The
          orthodox Christians termed Paloutians, a reminiscence
          of a schism of the time of Bishop Palout. The author
          of the Adamantius, in
          the 4th century, attributes to them a very definite form of Docetism; they
          denied the resurrection of the body, and also that the devil was created by
          God. St Ephrem the Syrian represented the Bardesanites as most wary heretics, who cunningly dissembled their errors under a cloak of
          orthodox language. 
             In
          the other countries of Syria, the towns were Greek, at least officially, for in
          the lower classes, as in the country districts, various Aramaic dialects were
          spoken. The churches in these provinces were essentially Greek in language. It
          was not so in Edessa, where everyone spoke Syriac; it was the language of the
          liturgy and sermons. This fact, combined with its position, fitted the capital
          of Osroene for mission work in the western provinces
          of the Parthian Empire, where Syriac was also spoken. And indeed, the most
          credible legends point to Edessa as the evangelizer of this land. No doubt
          Edessa was also concerned in the introduction of Christianity into Armenia. 
              
                 4. Southern Syria.
           Christianity
          does not appear to have spread so rapidly in the country of its birth, as in
          Northern Syria and in Asia Minor. At the time of the first apostolic preaching,
          the Lebanon and the valleys of the Orontes and the Jordan, with the table-lands
          stretching towards the great Syrian desert beyond, were hardly Hellenized at
          all. Except in the Greek, or partially Greek, coast-towns, and in similar
          settlements in the interior, nothing was as yet spoken but Canaanite or Aramaic
          dialects. The Lebanon was full of ancient temples and sacred streams connected
          with a mythology of much earlier date than Alexander's conquest. In important
          communities on the lake of Tiberias, in the plain of Sharon, and the country
          beyond Jordan, Jewish customs and traditions were still maintained. The
          Samaritans had not disappeared. On the fringe of the desert, the nomadic
          Bedouin tribes either threatened, or withdrew, according to the strength of the
          frontier. Greek civilization, however, made continual progress. By the 2nd
          century, all the small states of the interior had one by one disappeared ; the
          Roman stations, from the Euphrates to the Red Sea, had in their rear, a
          province of their own, where towns, roads, and monuments were springing up,
          together with municipal government, the use of the Greek language, and all the
          uniform organization of Rome. Even the gods were Hellenized. Baal, to his
          surprise, found himself in company with Jupiter. The Greek Aphrodite
          reappeared in Astoreth; she, at least, had come back
          to her own country. 
             This
          progress was all in favor of Christianity. The diminishing number of
          Judaic-Christians did not count for much. It was from the great coast towns,
          Caesarea, Tyre, and Berytus, that the Christian
          missions spread up-country, following step by step the advance of Roman
          civilization. In Hadrian's time Jerusalem, which the Church of the Circumcision
          had had to abandon, was recovered by the Church of the Gentiles. Caesarea,
          Tyre, and many other towns contained important Christian communities. These,
          however, do not appear in history, until the time of the Paschal controversy (c.
          190), in connection with which a council was held in Palestine, as elsewhere.
          Bishop Theophilus of Caesarea, and Bishop Narcissus of Aelia (Jerusalem) there
          met Cassius of Tyre, Clarus of Ptolemais, and several others. Tyre and
          Ptolemais were in the province of Syria (Coele Syria), whilst Caesarea and
          Jerusalem were in that of Palestine. The episcopal Sees were not therefore as
          yet grouped on the lines of the Roman provinces. The synodical letter of the
          bishops of Phoenicia and Palestine shows also that as to the date of Easter
          they were in entire agreement with the Bishop of Alexandria. These countries,
          indeed, were always more closely connected in ecclesiastical matters with
          Egypt, than with the metropolis of the East (Antioch). 
             Eusebius,
          who spent his whole life in Caesarea, and who had ransacked the archives and
          libraries both there and in Jerusalem, betrays no knowledge of the history of
          his church previous to the time of Theophilus. He knows more about Jerusalem.
          The memory of the old bishop, Narcissus, perhaps a little embellished, had been
          handed down to his day by oral tradition. The lists of bishops, whom the
          historian did not succeed in individualizing clearly, give Narcissus fourteen
          Greek predecessors, not to mention fifteen bishops of the circumcision,
          beginning with St James. Rather a long list. Narcissus was elected in the reign
          of Commodus when Eleutherius held the See of Rome, that is about fifty years
          after the foundation of Aelia Capitolina. Eusebius calls the predecessors of
          Narcissus “short-lived”. Narcissus did not take after them, for he lived to be
          about a hundred and twenty years old. In spite of the fame of his holiness and
          miracles, he was the victim of foolish calumnies, so that yielding to the
          attractions of the ascetic life, he fled into the desert. His Hock, having long
          sought him in vain, elected a successor, then another, and even a third, who
          seem to have revived the tradition of their short-lived bishops. At last
          Narcissus reappeared. There were great rejoicings. But the old man was too much
          weakened by age to meet the requirements of his office. God came to his aid and
          sent him Alexander, the wise and learned Bishop of Cappadocia, who governed the
          Church of Jerusalem as assistant to the venerable Narcissus, and when his long life
          ended, succeeded him. Alexander’s episcopate lasted till the Decian
          persecution, and under him ecclesiastical learning flourished at Aelia
          Capitolina, where he founded the library which Eusebius turned to such account. 
             It was not only in Aelia and in the circle of the erudite Bishop
          Alexander, that Christian learning flourished. Caesarea, where Origen had
          already been more than once, became the focus of his teaching after the year
          231; orthodox Gnostic pilgrims flocked thither from the whole Hellenic world;
          scribes and librarians collected and published the discourses of the great
          theologian; his editions of the Bible, his commentaries and other works, were
          classified in many volumes, and formed the nucleus of a library long renowned.
          Not far off, at Nicopolis, the ancient Emmaus, dwelt the celebrated Julius
          Africanus, who, born at Aelia, settled in Palestine after a somewhat wandering
          life. A soldier by profession, he had gone through the Parthian's campaign in
          the army of Septimius Severus; a great hunter, he had scoured the forests with
          the Christian princes of Edessa. He was much interested in antiquities, and in
          the course of his journeys, he saw at Apamea in Phrygia, the remains of Noah’s
          ark; at Edessa, Jacob's tent; at Shechem, the patriarch’s terebinth. He had
          visited Alexandria and its catechetical school, when Heraclas there occupied the seat of the absent Origen. Here he obtained a copy of the
          Hermetic books, which he greatly valued. On his return to Palestine, he took up
          municipal politics in Nicopolis, and even agreed to convoy a deputation of his
          fellow-citizens to Rome, where they wanted to obtain the protection of Elagabalus
          for their town. He was still in Rome at the time of Alexander Severus, for whom
          he arranged a library near the Pantheon. He lived at least until the year 240. 
             The
          literary work of Julius Africanus is of a rather miscellaneous nature. He first
          compiled a chronography in five books, in which the events of secular history
          were arranged in synchronism with Bible history. This was the first attempt at
          a synopsis of universal chronology. Already, other Christian savants, such as
          Justin, Tatian, Theophilus of Antioch, and Clement of Alexandria, had tried to
          demonstrate that the people of God dated from much further back than other
          nations; Julius Africanus put this idea into shape. His book made it possible
          to synchronize sacred and profane history in every century and even in every
          year. Eusebius made much use of this work, which unfortunately is lost in its
          original form. The years were reckoned from the creation, and Julius Africanus
          built up the later part of his chronology by means of the Olympiads. The period
          after Christ was treated very briefly. Nevertheless Eusebius derived the lists
          of bishops of Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch from it. The dates of the Roman and
          Alexandrian bishops were given, and he used them in his chronicle and his
          history. This chronography came to an end in the fourth year of Elagabalus
          (221). According to Julius Africanus, the world was to last 6000 years. Three
          thousand years elapsed between the creation and the time of Phaleg,
          a patriarch who divided time as well as nations. From Phaleg to Jesus Christ was 2500 years. The world, therefore, had but about four
          centuries more to run. This method of computation was also that of Hippolytus.
          The duration of time was regarded as being a great week, each day of which
          lasted a thousand years. This idea was derived from a well-known text. 
             After
          the chronology, Julius Africanus published an encyclopaedic work, the Cestes, dedicated to the Emperor Alexander Severus, and
          containing many thousand observations and precepts. It is an amazing work. The
          author is a believer in magic; and his familiarity with the Hermetic and other
          similar books, taints the whole. His letter to Origen (c. 240 A.D.) on the
          authenticity of the history of Susanna, and his letter to Aristides harmonizing
          the various genealogies of the Gospel, are more consistent with his
          Christianity. 
             In
          the distant province of Arabia also, out of sight between the Jordan and the
          desert, Christianity flourished and manifested intellectual activity. In the
          early days of Caracalla (c. 214 A.D.), Origen visited this country for the
          first time, in strange circumstances. The imperial legate there had written to
          the prefect of Egypt and the Bishop of Alexandria, summoning him to his
          presence. That high official was apparently interested in Christian theology,
          and wished to hold converse with its most illustrious representative. A little
          later on, Beryllus, Bishop of Bostra, made his mark
          by his books and his letters. He also was an expert theologian, but his
          opinions were not very orthodox. From the slight account given by Eusebius, he
          seems to have been influenced by the Christology of the Modalists,
          but rather by the system of Sabellius than that of Theodotus. These errors had
          already been condemned in Rome. In Arabia also they had been strongly opposed.
          Beryllus had repeatedly to embark on controversies with the native bishops, as
          well as with various outsiders. Origen intervened. After long private
          conversations, he engaged Beryllus in a public discussion, and succeeded in
          clearly exposing the bishop’s rather subtle errors, and, all honor to his polemical methods, he induced Beryllus to
          acknowledge and recant his errors. Detailed accounts of all these meetings,
          whether councils or not, were drawn up. This particular incident took place
          during the reign of Gordian III (238-44). 
             Under
          Philip (244-49), or rather during the last years of his reign, Origen returned
          for the third time to Arabia, to refute still other errors. The two doctrines
          of the resurrection of the body and the immortality of the soul had been held
          to conflict with one another. Some held only the former doctrine, to the
          exclusion of the other. A council was held; Origen spoke, and once more had the
          satisfaction of convincing those whom he controverted. 
             Philip,
          the emperor of the day, and his wife, Otacilia Severa, were both natives of the
          Arabian province, and brought up as Christians. They also were in
          correspondence with Origen, who wrote to both of them. Philip was a very
          indifferent Christian. One Easter day, being in Antioch, he presented himself
          at the church door, but Bishop Babylas refused him admission until he had done
          penance, and Philip had to comply with his demands.
             
           
           CHATTER XXII 
           PAUL OF SAMOSATA 
            
                
               BABYLAS
          of Antioch and Alexander of Jerusalem were the most illustrious Eastern victims
          of the Decian persecution. No sooner was this storm over than here, as in the
          West, the problem of the apostates came up. The Roman schism of Novatian had,
          as has been said, made a great stir in the Eastern provinces, where the puritan
          principles championed by Novatian gained many adherents. Fabius, the new Bishop
          of Antioch, who had succeeded the martyr Babylas, made a difficulty as to recognizing
          Pope Cornelius, and his opposition did not stand alone. Over this question the
          bishops of Syria and Upper Asia Minor for the first time took concerted action
          in a manner which became permanent, and which, before long, led to the most
          serious consequences. The Bishop of Tarsus, (Helenus), and the Bishop of CAesarea in Cappadocia, (Firmilian), and the Bishop of
          Caesarea in Palestine, (Theoctistus) invited their
          brother Bishop, Dionysius of Alexandria, to assist at the Council they were
          about to hold in Antioch. The situation was very serious, for the promoters of
          this gathering were opposed to the views of Fabius. Dionysius was little
          inclined to intervene personally in so acute a conflict. He confined himself to
          supporting by letter the lenient side; and in this strain he wrote to the
          Church of Laodicea in Syria, where the bishop was named Thelymidres,
          and to that of Armenia under Bishop Merouzanes. After
          all the solution was simpler than might have been expected. Fabius died, and
          his successor, Demetrianus, forsook Novatian’s party;
          and in Laodicea, Thelymidres, who apparently followed
          Fabius' line, was succeeded by Bishop Heliodorus. We do not know whether the
          Council ever met, and the important point is that peace was restored, and
          Dionysius of Alexandria was able before long to tell Pope Stephen that all the
          churches from Bithynia and Pontus to Arabia and Palestine were now at one. 
             But
          this optimistic report must not disguise the fact that in the 4th century a
          great number of Novatian or Puritan communities existed, at least in Asia
          Minor, and that, from the time of the Council of Nicaea, the Eastern councils,
          and even the Imperial government, had perpetually to devote attention to them.
          This state of things, as it can hardly be accounted for by any later
          proselytizing movement, leads one to suppose that the unity among the
          shepherds, to which the Bishop of Alexandria testified, represented but
          imperfectly the attitude of the Hock, and that in consequence this settlement
          of the difficulties raised by the Decian persecution led to various local
          schisms. 
             Pope
          Stephen, to whom Dionysius of Alexandria wrote, nearly brought about a far more
          serious division by his rash severity. In the reconciliation of heretics, the
          bishops of Upper Asia Minor did not observe the same ritual as did the Roman
          Church. Stephen, who had not hesitated to sever his connection with the African
          Church, on account of a similar divergence, was not less uncompromising towards
          the bishops of Cilicia, Galatia, Cappadocia, and the neighboring provinces. Firmilian was not intimidated; he joined energetically in Cyprian's
          resistance, and the letter which he wrote to Cyprian was indeed little
          calculated to bring about a peaceful solution. However, this dangerous
          quicksand was avoided, as before, by a change at the helm. Stephen's successor,
          Xystus II, took up a less inflexible attitude, and friendly relations were
          resumed. 
             It
          was indeed time, for these unhappy Eastern lands were soon overwhelmed by
          fearful calamities. Valerian had changed his attitude towards the Christians;
          and the leaders of the Church, when the authorities contrived to capture them,
          lay in prison awaiting harsher proceedings. But persecution was not the worst
          calamity impending. The persecuting empire itself was shaking to its
          foundations: on all sides the frontiers yielded before the onslaughts of the
          barbarians; the pirates of the Black Sea landed hordes of Goths upon the shores
          of Pontus, and carried desolation far into the interior. The struggle in the
          far East over the possession of Mesopotamia and the protectorate of Armenia,
          which never ceased for long, now assumed a far more threatening character. The
          Parthian dynasty had been succeeded at Ctesiphon by that of the Sassanids, one
          of true Persian origin, and the movement which brought them in was inspired by
          new enthusiasm for the national traditions of Iran and its religious
          institutions. Already, under the first sovereign, Ardaschir (22441), there had been a hard struggle over Mesopotamia, and the empire had
          with difficulty retained possession of the fortified places. Sapor I., the
          successor of Ardaschir made himself master of Armenia
          in 253. There was now nothing to prevent the Persian cavalry from overrunning
          Cappadocia and Syria. And so they did. The Emperor Valerian hastened to the
          East, and drove the enemy back beyond the Euphrates; but as he went to raise
          the siege of Edessa, he was captured by the Persians, and soon after died in
          captivity. 
             In
          Rome his son Gallienus succeeded him; but in the East, the loss of the emperor
          had disorganized the whole defense. Syria and Asia
          minor lay at the mercy of the Persians. They surprised and seized Antioch,
          which they pillaged and burnt, carrying numbers of its inhabitants into
          captivity. A colony of them was formed in the depths of Susiana. The same fate
          overtook Tarsus and Caesarea in Cappadocia. The Roman army in Asia had ceased
          to exist. But this huge raid ended, as all such operations must end. The conquerors
          returned to their own homes, to enjoy the plunder, and their retreat was
          harassed by bands of professed allies, attracted by the richness of the spoil. 
             In
          the midst of this disorder, a Roman officer, Macrian,
          entirely ignoring Gallienus, proclaimed his two sons emperors. But Odenath, Prince of Palmyra, upheld the interests of
          Gallienus, and having disposed of the usurpers, faced the victorious Persians,
          reestablished the frontiers, and throughout the East succeeded in obtaining
          recognition of his claim to be the Emperor Gallienus' representative. On his
          death, in 257, his wife Zenobia, as guardian of her young son, Vaballath, kept a strong hold on the power her husband had
          claimed, and her own efforts supporting it, extended her authority as far as
          Egypt. In Asia Minor also, she enlarged her borders continually. She held
          Chalcedon, and was just about to seize Byzantium, when Aurelian, who became
          emperor, 270 A.D., thought it time to arrest the conquests of his encroaching
          satrap. After a long siege, the general, Probus, regained possession of
          Alexandria in 270, and this great town was almost entirely destroyed by the
          siege and the hand-to-hand fighting in the streets. But Aurelian found it a
          longer task to quell the energetic Zenobia. Gradually, however, he succeeded in
          driving her back beyond the Taurus, and, having defeated her near Antioch,
          finally (272) forced her to retreat to Palmyra, her refuge in the desert. With
          Zenobia a prisoner reserved for the Roman triumph, the East resumed its normal
          condition. 
             Aurelian
          was hardly settled again in Antioch, when a question was referred to him of a
          totally unexpected kind. He had to determine who was the legitimate Bishop of
          the Christian Church in Antioch. Two claimants contested the See and possession
          of the bishop’s house. We must now turn to the history of this contest which in
          many respects was of considerable importance. Soon after the disaster at
          Antioch, Bishop Demetrian was succeeded by a certain Paul, a native of
          Samosata. He was of humble birth, but very clever and eloquent, and he so
          abused his episcopal position that before long he contrived to amass a
          considerable fortune. Either before or after his elevation to the episcopate,
          he had obtained the post of Receiver General of finances, with a salary of
          200,000 sesterces. Queen Zenobia held him in high esteem, and even from the lay
          point of view, he was one of the most important people in Antioch. This was
          apparent as he stalked through the streets, with a haughty bearing and
          preoccupied air, preceded and followed by a large band of attendants. He
          himself did not forget it, even in Church, where he gave way to the lamentable
          practice of permitting homage to be addressed to the bishop in the place of the
          Divinity, devoting minute attention to the adornment of his throne and its
          accessories, and not only allowing himself to be applauded in church, but even
          permitting hymns in his praise to be sung by a chorus of women. His private
          life was also not beyond reproach : he caused scandal by his association with subintroductae (spiritual sisters). However, as he
          was very indulgent to the weaknesses of his clergy, his worldliness would have
          been forgiven him, if he had not taken up theology. This proved his ruin.
          Zenobia was much attached to Jews and Judaism, and either to please her, or
          pursuing his own bent, he went so far as to teach the people of Antioch a
          doctrine resembling that of Theodotus and Artemas, viz., that Christ became God
          by gradual development and by adoption. The enemies who surrounded him
          complained to the chief bishops of the East. And their complaints did not fall
          on deaf ears. Several councils were held in Antioch, which were not convened by
          Paul. And Firmilian, the famous Bishop of Cappadocia, was the moving spirit of
          this action of the episcopate. With him were Gregory of Neo-Caesarea and his
          brother Athenodorus, and the bishops of Tarsus, Iconium, Caesarea in Palestine,
          Aelia, Bostra, and many others also assisted at the
          councils. Dionysius of Alexandria, though entreated to join them and to come to
          Antioch, excused himself on the score of age and health ; but he wrote
          expressing his views on the matter to the Church of Antioch, and not to the
          bishop, which was significant. 
             It
          was not an easy question to disentangle. Firmilian and his colleagues made two
          journeys to Antioch, with no practical result. Paul's subtle quibbling
          intellect always discovered some loophole of escape; and if begged to mend his
          ways he made fine promises, but did nothing. A third Council, held in 267 or
          268, ended the scandal. Maximus, the successor of Dionysius, was not present;
          nor was Firmilian, for he died on his way there. But a great number of bishops
          (seventy or eighty) assembled from Asia Minor and Syria, not to mention priests
          and deacons. This time they relied on Malchion, a priest of great learning, who
          combined with his ecclesiastical office that of Head of the
          "Hellenic" School of Antioch. Malchion engaged his bishop in a formal
          discussion, in the presence of the Council and a large body of reporters. He
          was sufficiently skillful to get Paul to crystallize
          his hazy ideas, and to make him formulate his tenets. The doctrine to which
          Paul acknowledged was declared untenable. The Council pronounced a sentence of
          deposition, replaced Paul by Domnus, a son of the former Bishop Demetrian, and
          then wrote to Dionysius and Maximus, the bishops of Rome and Alexandria,
          begging them no longer to correspond with the deposed prelate, but with Domnus.
          As to Paul, they added, he might communicate with Artemas and his followers. 
             Paul refused to acknowledge this ruling of the Council. Relying on his
          rather shady popularity, his official position, his party amongst the clergy,
          and, above all, on Zenobia's protection, he continued to consider himself
          bishop, and to hold his own in the episcopal palace. This was how things stood
          when the matter was brought before Aurelian. The emperor decided that the true
          bishop was the one recognized in Italy and at Rome. This was a decision against
          Paul. He was evicted. 
             The
          report of the debate between Paul and Malchion was long preserved. It was still
          quoted in the 6th century. We now possess only a few fragments, some of
          doubtful authenticity. This is the more regrettable, because Eusebius only
          records that part of the synodical letter to Dionysius and Maximus, which
          refers to Paul's moral conduct and character, suppressing all allusion to the
          discussion on his doctrines. One point, however, is established by the
          testimony of the 4th century, namely, that the term omooúsios (consubstantial) which created so much sensation in the time of Constantine,
          was then expressly repudiated by the council, no doubt because it was
          susceptible of a Modalist interpretation. It is also
          clear, from the fragments which have been preserved, that Paul, though
          identifying himself with the arguments of the old adversaries of the theology
          of the Logos, had profited considerably by the general advance in religious knowledge.
          He stopped, it is said, the singing of the old hymns, and fell foul of the old theologians, no doubt because both
          witnessed to a Personal Word. But he had subtilized his conceptions and
          exegesis by intercourse with the masters whom he criticized. And this it was
          precisely what embarrassed his judges; they were disciples of Origen, and they
          found Paul employing the identical expressions used by their master. But the
          similarity was only in expression. Paul cared little for the cosmological
          Trinity of the school of Origen; the Trinity which he recognized was but a
          Trinity of names; as to the Personality of Christ, he looked for it only in His
          human and historical existence. On these two points, however open to criticism
          the systems proposed by his adversaries might be, he was certainly out of the
          line of orthodox Church tradition. 
             
           
           CHAPTER XXIII 
           DIONYSIUS OF ALEXANDRIA 
            
               THE
          obscurity which characterized the history of Alexandrian and Egyptian
          Christianity in the 2nd century, lasted until the eve of the Decian
          persecution. We know nothing of the Bishops Demetrius (189-231) and Heraclas (231-47), except in connection with the story of
          Origen. On the whole, Heraclas seems to have
          maintained his predecessor's attitude towards the illustrious theologian, who
          remained absent from Alexandria. Dionysius (247-64), who succeeded to his See
          after following him as head of the School, is better known than his
          predecessors. Like Cyprian, he left a collection of letters, now lost, of which
          Eusebius has preserved long extracts and analyses. His episcopate coincides
          with a period much disturbed in Church history as a whole, and particularly
          critical in Alexandria. Dionysius was hardly installed when a savage riot broke
          out in the great city. At first, the instigators gave it a religious turn; the
          populace was suddenly inflamed by a ferocious enthusiasm for their threatened
          gods. The local authorities, overpowered or implicated, did not interfere. The
          Christians were persecuted and ill-treated, and their houses pillaged. Of those
          who refused to apostatize, some were stoned and some burned, or thrown from the
          roofs; many fled. After a time, the tumult, though it did not abate, took a
          fresh direction, and civil war made the streets of Alexandria run with blood.
          At this crisis came the news of the accession of the Emperor Decius, and soon
          after, the edict of persecution was published. 
             The
          prefect Sabinus lost no time; a guard was at once dispatched to arrest the
          bishop. He was sought for everywhere except in his own house, from which he had
          never stirred. At the end of four days, he fled with his family and other
          Christians. But the police authorities caught him, and with him arrested some
          of his clergy, Caius, Faustus, Peter, and Paul. Brought back, under escort, to
          Alexandria, he halted in the same evening at the village of Taposiris,
          where he was somewhat dramatically rescued. His son Timotheus was absent when
          he was arrested. On his return he found the house empty; learning what had
          happened, he took to flight, and meeting a peasant, told him of his trouble.
          The peasant was on his way to a wedding. He hurried on, and told the tale to
          the wedding-party; they, like true Egyptians, were delighted to play a trick on
          the authorities, and rushed to Taposiris shouting
          wildly. The centurion and his men were terrified and fled; and the bishop
          himself, taking his rescuers for brigands, was far from comfortable. He had
          begun to hand over his clothes before they made him understand that they had
          come to deliver him, and not to rob him. Then the scene changed. Dionysius,
          believing the martyr's crown to be already his, was unwilling to relinquish it.
          He implored them either to leave him, or to cut off his head and carry it to
          the prefect. But the good peasants would not hear of such a thing; seizing the
          bishop by the arms and legs, they hoisted him on their shoulders and
          disappeared with him. His clergy were also set free. And in a few days they
          were all established in an out-of-the-way corner of Libya, three days’ journey
          from Paraetonium. 
             Thence,
          for long months, the Church of Alexandria was administered. When the worst was
          over, such priests and deacons as were least likely to be recognized, returned
          to the city. Among them are mentioned Maximus, the priest who later on
          succeeded Dionysius, and the deacons Eusebius and Faustus, who had a long and
          useful career still before them. When the persecution still further slackened,
          Dionysius returned to Alexandria himself. 
             Then
          he, like so many others, had to face the question of the apostates. In Egypt,
          as elsewhere, there was a conflict between severity and leniency. Dionysius
          sided with the lenient and was fortunate in having the confessors, not against
          him, but in favor of indulgence. The lapsed were therefore readmitted, but not
          without a penance which the bishop proportioned to the degree of guilt. These
          principles he applied in Alexandria; and also recommended them to the other
          Christian congregations in Egypt, and he zealously defended them against the
          puritanical rigorists of Rome and Antioch. Pope Cornelius, who took the same
          line, was strongly supported in his struggle with Novatian by his brother of
          Alexandria, who wrote urgent letters to the faithful in Rome, to the
          confessors, and to Novatian himself! Dionysius moreover adjured Bishop Fabius
          of Antioch, the Bishop of Laodicea, near Antioch, and the faithful in Armenia
          Minor, not to yield to puritan counsels. 
             The
          persecution under Gallus disturbed this tranquility but did not last long peace was restored under Valerian (August, 253). Shortly
          afterwards broke out the baptismal controversy, in which Dionysius played an
          important part, upholding, with Pope Stephen, the custom of not rebaptizing
          heretics. He refused, however, to break on that account with churches which
          took a different line. This controversy was dying down when Valerian, weakly
          yielding to the fanatical advice of his minister Macrian,
          declared war afresh against Christianity. Dionysius summoned before the prefect
          Tamilian, appeared accompanied by some of his clergy; in one of his letters is
          preserved a verbatim report of his trial; it resulted in his exile to a place
          called Kephro, inhabited only by pagans. The bishop
          took up mission work, and in spite of the bad reception he met with at first,
          he gained converts in this remote place. After a time he was transferred to Kollouthion, in Mareotis, where he was nearer to
          Alexandria. We do not know how he escaped the edict of 258, which ordered the
          execution of all bishops. Although he had endured so much in the persecution,
          there were people in Egypt who upbraided him for having escaped martyrdom. A
          bishop, named Germanus, made such a stir about it that Dionysius thought it
          well to recount his sufferings by way of defense. 
             The
          list was long, but Dionysius had not yet reached the end. Having returned to
          Alexandria, on receipt, no doubt, of the news of Valerian's downfall, he soon
          saw civil war kindled. Some stood by Gallienus; others proclaimed the sons of Macrianus. The town was divided into two entrenched camps,
          with all communication cut off between them. The main street divided them. No
          one passed along it, and it called to mind the image of the desert of the
          Exodus, just as the waters of the port, stained with the blood of the
          combatants, recalled the Red Sea. This internal blockade stopped the bishop's
          communications with his flock; he was obliged to write to them, as if again in
          exile. And even so, it was difficult to get his letters through. It was easier
          to send messages from one end of the empire to the other, than from one quarter
          of Alexandria to the other.
             In
          the end, the whole city declared for Gallienus. Before fresh political
          disturbances set in, it was devastated by a terrible plague, which swept away a
          great part of the population. The Christians were conspicuous for their zeal in
          nursing the sick and burying the dead. It was at least a time of religious
          peace; Gallienus himself wrote to Dionysius and to several other bishops, to
          inform them that he had ordered their churches and cemeteries to be restored to
          them. Naturally the bishop was a strong partisan of this prince, who does not
          usually excite much admiration. In one of his letters, written in 262,
          Dionysius notes that whereas the persecutors had rapidly passed away, the tenth year of the reign of this
          holy and pious emperor would soon be celebrated with rejoicings. 
             During his stormy episcopate, Dionysius still found time and opportunity
          for theology, and thus turned to account the great learning he had acquired
          under Origen, and developed during his headship of the School of Alexandria.
          This School, as I have already said, was suited rather to the intellectual élite than to ordinary minds.
          Even among those who read, there were many who accepted neither the profundity
          of Origen’s Gnosticism, nor the subtleties of allegorical
          interpretation. Their great light was a bishop called Nepos, and his book,
          called The Refutation of the
            Allegorists, was placed by his partisans on a level with the
          Gospels. Its subject was the Millenium, and Nepos set himself to prove that as
          described in the Apocalypse it was not allegorical, but was to be an actual
          fact. Dionysius, uneasy at its success, and the strife it stirred up amongst the
          Christians, went to the nome of Arsinoe, the center of the movement, and called together the priests and
          teachers of the different villages. They brought Nepos book, and quietly and
          honestly discussed it for three days, from morning till night, to such good
          purpose that the Bishop of Alexandria brought them all round, even Korakion, the chief of the Millenarians. Dionysius,
          however, not content with this viva
            voce refutation, published two treatises on the subject, called “On
          the Promises.” Eusebius quotes from it, amongst other things, a long passage
          upon the author of the Apocalypse. It is a piece of fine criticism. According
          to Dionysius, the Apocalypse could not be by the same author as the Fourth
          Gospel, but was the work of another John, not the great apostle. 
             Nepos,
          the opponent of the allegorists, was already dead when Dionysius turned his
          attention to his book. He was apparently Bishop of Arsinoe. Dionysius, who had
          known him personally, had a great opinion of his piety, zeal, and knowledge of
          the Scriptures, and even of his poetical gifts. He had composed a great number
          of hymns sung by the faithful with much profit. 
             Possibly
          this incident occurred in the beginning of Valerian’s reign (254-56). Later on
          Dionysius was occupied with controversies of another kind. 
             Far away to the west of Egypt, between the desert of Marmarica and the Great Syrtis, stretches a high and fertile plain. There from very early
          days, Hellenism had flourished round the brilliant Doric town of Cyrene. Under
          the Roman Empire, Cyrenaica with Crete formed a province quite distinct from
          that of Egypt. The group of five towns—Cyrene, Ptolemais, Berenice, Sozusa (Apollonia) and Arsinoe (Teuchira)—which
          it contained, was often called Pentapolis. There were very important Jewish
          colonies there. Early in Trajan's time they made a revolt, and nearly all
          perished during its suppression. The name of this country appears in the Gospel
          history. It was a Jew from Cyrene who assisted the Savior to carry His cross.
          Others were present on the Day of Pentecost, and some were amongst the enemies
          of St Stephen. Amongst the many converts was that Lucius of Cyrene, who took
          part in the foundation of the Church of Antioch. The Gospel seems to have reached
          Cyrene itself very early. And in Dionysius’ time each of the five cities seems
          to have had its bishop. 
             These
          churches had then a special connection with the See of Alexandria. Dionysius
          wrote to them often, and held himself responsible for them, and above all for
          their teaching. Even before Valerian’s persecution, the controversy which the
          spread of Sabellianism stirred up in Ptolemais had called his attention that
          way. It is not likely that Sabellius ever set foot in Cyrenaica; but his
          writings may have found their way there, and besides, the views identified with
          his name in Rome, had already made a sensation in Asia, Carthage, and
          elsewhere. In Cyrenaica their success was very great: some bishops favored the Monarchian doctrine; in those churches the Word
          was no longer regarded as the Son of God, and distinct from the Father. The
          doctrine of the Trinity became but a matter of words: the terms, Father, Son,
          and Holy Ghost, meant no more than three successive aspects of the Divine Unity
          (Monad) in Creation, Redemption, and Sanctification. The word Son-Father was often employed,
          and fitly expressed their conception of the identity of the Divine Persons. The
          so-called Gospel of the Egyptians was much esteemed by the Monarchians, and
          apparently favoured this view. 
             In
          spite of the support of local bishops, this teaching met with much opposition.
          Both parties agreed to refer the matter to the Bishop of Alexandria. The
          delegates appeared before Dionysius, bearing credentials, and proposed to argue
          the case before him. 
             But
          the Modalists were very simple if they imagined that
          a disciple of Origen could decide in their favor. The Bishop of Alexandria
          would not even hear them; he wrote at once to Pentapolis, hoping to deter those
          who were straying from the truth, and as an opportunity offered he warned Pope
          Xystus II and sent him his letter to the Cyrenians!
          But the Cyrenians turned a deaf ear. The controversy,
          interrupted no doubt by Valerian's persecution, began afresh as soon as peace
          was restored. Dionysius returned to the attack, and wrote letter after letter
          to Pentapolis. In one of these addressed to Ammon and Euphranor, he seems to
          have gone too far, and to have attempted to refute the heretics not only with
          the generally received doctrine of the Church, but also with an exposition of
          the tenets peculiar to Origen’s School. The opponents of the School in
          Alexandria took advantage of this. Without troubling themselves to ask their
          bishop for an explanation, they went to Rome, and denounced him to Pope
          Dionysius, who summoned a synod, looked into the matter, and found various
          doctrinal improprieties in the letter under suspicion, notably three:—The use
          of the term creature, in connection with the Son of God; a theory of the
          Trinity with three such distinct hypostases, that they might be regarded as
          three gods; and finally, a marked repugnance to the term consubstantial.
             The
          Bishop of Rome, in his own name and in that of the Council, sent an impressive
          letter to Alexandria, in which he again condemned the Sabellian errors; and
          then, turning to the arguments used to refute them, without mentioning any
          names, he blamed those who, like the Marcionites, spoke of three separate
          hypostases, or who represented the Son of God as a creature. Their appeal to
          the authority of the Book of Proverbs was not legitimate, for though Wisdom
          says of herself: “The Lord created me,” their interpretation of the text was
          not correct. 
             In
          a separate letter to Dionysius he invited him to explain himself. He did so, and
          in defence of his position sent four books to the pope, his namesake, entitled Refutation and Apology, which
          appear to have set at rest the Roman scruples. 
             This controversy does not seem to have made much impression at the time;
          but a great stir was made about it in the 4th century. The Arians quoted the
          authority of Dionysius of Alexandria. His successor Athanasius, being eager to
          clear him from complicity in it, wrote a whole treatise On the Opinion of
            Dionysius. He carefully explains the suspected letter, but hardly quotes it
          at all, and he takes the opinion of his predecessor, rather, from the Apology    which was an afterthought, and thus interprets the first document
          by the second. St Basil also read both documents; and his verdict was very unfavorable. Holding no brief for former bishops of
          Alexandria, he had no hesitation in pronouncing Dionysius to be a forerunner of
          Arianism in its most pronounced form. The difference between the language of
          the two books in no wise escaped his notice, but he attributes it to the
          instability of the author, whose good faith, however, he does not question. 
             But
          neither St Athanasius’ optimism, nor St Basil’s severity quite corresponds with
          the actual facts. Dionysius was a disciple of Origen; it was with Origen's
          system that he fought the Modalists. Now, this system
          had two aspects. According as the Word is viewed in relation to the finite
          transitory world, or to God, He appears either as distinct from God, and
          partaking in some degree of the character of a created being; or else, as
          co-eternal with God, and deriving from the divine substance. The Modalists might be met by the first aspect; and the second
          was calculated to reassure those who were disturbed by the excessively clear
          cut lines of demarcation drawn between the different manifestations, or
          hypostases, and by their subordination. The transition from one aspect to the
          other involved no contradiction; they were linked together in Origen’s system;
          orthodoxy was safeguarded by the juxtaposition of complementary doctrines. But
          the whole system was academic; it formed no part of the teaching of the Church;
          it might even be said that the Church ignored it. When men of action like Pope
          Dionysius came across isolated fragments of the system, they did not trouble to
          put them back in their context, or to judge of them in relation to the whole
          system; they estimated them on their own merits, according to the ordinary
          teaching, not of the schools, but of the Church. Hence such incidents as the
          controversy between Dionysius the pope and Dionysius the bishop. 
             Quite
          at the end of his career, the great Bishop of Alexandria was, as we have seen,
          invited to the first Council of Antioch, to judge Paul of Samosata. He was no
          longer fit for so long a journey; but he gave his opinion in writing. And
          perhaps Eusebius, the Alexandrian deacon, who appeared at one of the first
          councils, came as his representative. Eusebius was held in great esteem on
          account of his fine attitude during the Decian persecution. Being one of the
          earliest to return to the town, he played an important part in the government
          of the persecuted flock. Under Valerian, he stood as a confessor before the
          prefect Aemilian, with his bishop, and shared Dionysius' exile. In one of the
          wars which desolated Alexandria, no doubt that described in the letter from
          Dionysius to Hierax, he did good service. The insurgents were cut off in the
          quarter of Bruchion. Among their leaders was a
          Christian named Anatolius, a great mathematician. When he saw the corn
          beginning to fail, it occurred to him to appeal to the deacon Eusebius in the unbesieged part of the town, and to get him to ask the
          Roman general to allow the deserters of Bruchion to
          pass out. Eusebius was held in high consideration, even in the official world;
          and his request was granted. Then Anatolius assembled the insurgent council of
          war, and after having vainly tried to persuade them to capitulate, he got them
          to allow all the non-combatants to pass out. A great many passed out, the
          Romans not showing themselves too strict as to the age or sex of the fugitive.
          They were welcomed by Eusebius, who supplied their pressing necessities.
          Afterwards Eusebius started for the Council at Antioch. He never returned to
          Alexandria. The Church of Laodicea detained him on his return, and having just
          lost their bishop, they chose Eusebius as his successor. 
             Anatolius,
          having compromised himself, no doubt during the recent insurrection, thought it
          best to leave Alexandria, although he had a good position there. He excelled in
          all the sciences, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, physics, logic, and
          rhetoric. His fellow-countrymen had chosen him as head of their school of
          Aristotelian philosophy. At Caesarea in Palestine, he received a warm welcome
          from the Bishop Theoctenus, who consecrated him to be
          his successor. But Anatolius went to the last Council of Antioch, in 268, and
          there met with the same fate as did his friend Eusebius who had just died; the
          good folk of Laodicea seized on the already consecrated Anatolius, and kept him
          as their bishop. 
             
           
           CHAPTER XXIV 
           EASTERN THEOLOGY AFTER
          ORIGEN AND PAUL OF SAMOSATA
           
            
               DIONYSIUS
          of Alexandria was succeeded by the priest Maximus, who, having distinguished
          himself much during the Decian persecution, openly confessed the faith, and was
          exiled under Valerian. In his time took place the final condemnation of Paul of
          Samosata, of which he received the official notification. No more is known
          about him, and Theonas who succeeded him (282), is no better known, though he
          also held the See for eighteen years, till A.D. 300. Then came Bishop Peter,
          who lived to see the Diocletian persecution, and was one of its most
          illustrious victims. 
             The School was still closely in touch with the Church, and still adhered
          faithfully to the doctrines of Origen. After Dionysius, Theognostus seems to have directed it. He rewrote the First Principles,under the title of Hypotyposes,
          a name already used by Clement. Photius has left us an analysis of this work
          which is divided into seven books. From the description and appreciation of it
          given by Photius, it was evidently in strict accord with the teaching of
          Origen. St Athanasius and St Gregory of Nyssa have preserved some fragments for
          us, but they regard it very differently. St Athanasius quotes from it orthodox
          statements, whilst St Gregory of Nyssa considers that it favors the Arians. 
             Pierius,
          who succeeded Theognostus, belonged to the college of
          presbyters. Like Origen he cultivated plain living and high thinking. He was a
          celebrated ascetic and a distinguished preacher, being known to later writers
          even more by his sermons than by his teaching in the schools. His principal
          work was a collection of exegetical homilies, delivered during the night of
          Easter Eve. Photius, who read it, notices the archaism of his formulas, and
          regrets that he should have spoken so ill of the Holy Ghost. Whatever
          justification there may be for this criticism, Pierius had a great reputation in his own day; his contemporaries called him the second
          Origen. He lived so long that he survived even the great persecution, when his
          most illustrious disciple, Pamphilus of Caesarea in Palestine, died for the
          faith (309). Pierius wished to write his life, and,
          according to some traditions, himself died a martyr, with his brother Isidore.
          St Jerome, however, says that he retired to Rome and lived there till his
          death. 
             During
          the years just before the persecution, the School had as its head Achilles,
          another scholar who was also a presbyter. Indeed, after the martyrdom of Bishop
          Peter he became bishop like Heraclas and Dionysius
          before him. Eusebius makes much of his virtue and austerity; but says nothing
          of his doctrine, details of which would have been of special interest, as at
          that moment fierce attacks on the theology of Origen were impending. Bishop
          Peter wrote books on the soul, and upon the resurrection in which he made
          formidable assaults on some of Origen's most important positions. 
             The
          subtle form of religious thought of which the School of Alexandria was the
          principal exponent, could only, as I have said before, appeal to the few. And
          though this illustrious School was generally presided over by priests of the
          Church, several of whom were raised to the episcopate, the Christian masses, as
          a whole, were unaffected by it. The spread of the Gospel in the interior of
          Egypt, which was very rapid in the 3rd century, brought under the influence of
          Christianity people who were but slightly, if at all, Hellenized, and who found
          it difficult to adapt themselves to this highly rarefied atmosphere of
          philosophic speculation. Besides, the doctrines of the School, as summed up by
          Origen, rather disquieted even the cultivated Gnostic Christians on whom it
          conferred such marked distinction. It was possible even for those who had
          received a brilliant education in philosophy to realize that this advantage
          possessed but a very indirect spiritual value, and that salvation is not won by
          theology. Moreover, as the history of Anatolius shows, the Platonism, old or
          new, upon which the School relied was not the only kind of philosophy in vogue
          in Alexandria. It was possible, and probably it was not unusual, to develop
          religious instruction on the traditional lines, without perpetual side-glances
          in the direction of Valentinus or Basilides. Allegorical interpretation did not
          appeal to everyone. As we have seen, one bishop, Xepos,
          opposed it openly. Without it how were Origen's systems to be reconciled with
          the Bible? The faithful who denounced to Rome certain tenets of their Bishop
          Dionysius must have been people of some standing in Alexandria. 
             And
          it was this party in the Church of Alexandria, intellectual, cultivated people,
          but caring more for religion than theology, who now gained the upper hand in
          the person of Bishop Peter, and who, rather later on, were represented again by
          the Bishops Alexander and Athanasius. 
             In
          Palestine, the tradition of Origen still held the field at Caesarea. A rich
          Christian of Berytus, Pamphilus by name, having
          renounced the position in his native country to which his fortune and good
          birth gave him a right, devoted himself to theological studies. He came to
          Alexandria, where Pierius helped him to develop his
          talents for theology and asceticism; then he established himself at Caesarea,
          where he was admitted into the college of presbyters. His chief occupation was
          to transcribe and correct manuscripts of the Bible; but he also copied those of
          Origen, and drew up a catalogue of his works, and of the other books in the
          library left at Caesarea by that great scholar. By his side worked a most
          intelligent and painstaking young Christian called Eusebius. Eusebius, during
          the fifteen or twenty years preceding the great persecution, ransacked with
          incredible patience all the libraries in Caesarea, Aelia, and elsewhere, for
          the benefit of the great works on history and apology of which the scheme was
          simmering in his mind. Eusebius could not have known Origen; Pamphilus may
          perhaps have seen him during his childhood. But they were both enthusiastic
          disciples, and whenever the theories of their Master were attacked they
          hastened to defend him. Pamphilus wrote an Apology in five books, to which
          Eusebius added a sixth. 
             The adversaries, indeed, against whose attacks they had to defend him,
          were already legion. Without mentioning Modalists,
          such as Beryllus, or Paul of Samosata, the ranks of the orthodox furnished more
          than one type of assailant. One of the most distinguished of these was
          Methodius, bishop of the little town of Olympus in Lycia. He was, for his time,
          a very highly educated man, and a great reader of Plato, whose dialogues he
          loved to imitate. We have a "Banquet" of his, an echo of that of the
          Athenian philosopher; but the speakers are virgins, and they sing the praises
          of virginity and not love. The treatises of Methodius, on free-will, on life
          and reasonable actions, on the resurrection, on creatures, on leprosy, on
          leeches, on different kinds of food, although lost in the original as a whole,
          are known to us, either in Greek fragments, or in a Slavonic translation.
          Others, such as his books upon the pythoness, upon the martyrs, against
          Porphyry, have entirely, or almost entirely disappeared. The variety of his
          work, which includes exegesis and apology, metaphysics and morality, shows his
          versatility. Several of his dialogues, especially those on the resurrection and
          on creatures, contain a very lively protest against the doctrines of Origen.
          Eusebius, therefore, in his ecclesiastical history, does not mention Methodius,
          though he was obliged to speak of him in the Apology.
          According to St Jerome, Eusebius there reminds Methodius that formerly he had
          entertained a very different opinion of the great doctor. It is most probable
          that the Bishop of Olympus, though criticizing his errors, could not but admire
          the genius of Origen. 
             But
          Methodius himself, as not infrequently happens, laid himself open to very
          severe criticism. Photius says very truly that the Banquet contains expressions
          that are not at all doctrinally correct; he even supposes charitably that
          various Arian or other interpolations had been introduced. This is scarcely
          probable; but Methodius wrote before the language, or even the ideas of
          theology had attained the precision they subsequently acquired from the
          theological debates of the 4th and 5th centuries. In spite, however, of all his
          peculiarities, the name of Methodius still deserves respect. The world was
          grateful to him for having trounced Origen, and for having extolled virginity;
          and he laid down his life for the faith. 
             In
          Antioch the difficulties had not all vanished with the deposition of Paul of
          Samosata. Domnus, his successor, appointed by the Council, appears to have held
          the See but a short time; and so it was with Timaeus, who came after him. The
          episcopate of Cyrillus, on the contrary, lasted until the persecution, more
          than twenty years. We know nothing of the government of these bishops, except
          that they were, not unnaturally, rather severe on the partizans of Paul, who had organized a small church of their own, still mentioned even at
          the time of the Council of Nicea. The opposition had
          also a school, that of the priest Lucian. 
             Lucian
          was a really learned man; his works on the text of the Old Testament, which he
          corrected from the original Hebrew, was highly esteemed; he was a Hebrew
          scholar, and his version was adopted by the greater number of the churches of
          Syria and Asia Minor. He occupied himself also with the New Testament. 
             His exegesis differed widely from that of Origen. In Antioch,
          allegorical interpretation was not in fashion; the text was by way of being
          interpreted literally. The theological trend of this school is shown by the
          well-established fact that Lucian was the originator of the doctrine, which
          soon became so famous as Arianism. Around him were grouped, even at the time we
          now speak of, the future leaders of this heresy, amongst others Arius himself,
          Eusebius, the future Bishop of Nicomedia, Maris, and Theognis. It was, they
          found, necessary to abandon the theories of Paul, and to admit the personal preexistence of Christ, in other words the Incarnation of
          the Word. But they granted as little as possible. The Word, according to the
          new doctrine, was a celestial being, anterior to all visible and invisible
          creatures; He had indeed created them. But He had not existed from all
          eternity; He was created by the Father, as an instrument for the subsequent
          creation. Before that He did not exist. He was called out of nothing.
             We
          cannot deny that this theory greatly simplified the problem of the Procession
          of the Word, a difficult problem to solve which many different explanations had
          been propounded during the previous two centuries, though none had been
          definitely accepted as the right interpretation. Hut this simplification was
          only obtained at the expense of one of the most essential articles of faith,
          that of the absolute Divinity of Christ. This dogma, handed down by tradition,
          cultivated by piety, consecrated by worship, and sealed by the blood of
          martyrs, was the corner-stone of all Christian teaching. Neither Origen nor
          Hippolytus, nor Justin, nor any of the many other orthodox teachers, not to
          mention the Gnostics, had ventured to ignore it. Its strength of resistance was
          soon to be proved. 
             For
          a time the system does not appear to have excited any apprehension. Its
          influence was confined to the schools, and it did, as a matter of fact,
          represent an improvement upon the theories condemned in the last councils,
          besides which great care was taken to clothe it in orthodox phraseology. It was
          not till long after the death of its author that it made such a stir in
          Alexandria. 
             Nevertheless,
          it appears that Lucian was included in the condemnation of Paul. The bishops
          Domnus, Timanis, and at first even Cyrillus, would
          not admit him to communion. However, Cyrillus afterwards accepted Lucian's
          explanations, and restored the doctor both to communion and to his position in
          the priesthood. It was as a priest of Antioch that Lucian was arrested in 312,
          and suffered martyrdom. 
             And,
          indeed, all or nearly all the heads of these various schools of thought laid
          down their lives for the faith; greatly as they differed from each other on
          many points, here one spirit animated them. Bishop Peter of Alexandria,
          Pamphilus, Methodius, and Lucian himself, all sealed their attachment to the
          common faith of Christians with their blood; and all of them now enjoy in the
          Church the honor which is accorded to the martyrs.
          This does not, of course, imply that all their doctrines were equally correct,
          or that their individual errors mattered little to Christianity. But it shows
          at least that, whatever their theology, when the great trial came, they all
          acquitted themselves as brave men and convinced Christians. 
             
           
           CHAPTER XXV 
           CHRISTIAN PRACTICE 
            
                
               IN
          some circles, these theological disputes undoubtedly made a stir, and on
          ecclesiastical literature they left deep traces, which we should have less
          difficulty in calling to life again, if they had not early been effaced by the
          quarrels of the following centuries. They did not, however, greatly affect the
          general body of Christians. The event most likely to have attracted attention,
          the deposition of the Bishop of Antioch, was, after all, only of local
          interest. After the condemnation of Paul of Samosata, events soon resumed their
          ordinary course. 
             And
          it is this ordinary routine of life that claims attention at this moment, on
          the eve of the last great persecution, and of the official triumph of
          Christianity. We will glance at Christian society in the 3rd century, and take
          account of its converts, its moral and religious life, its organization, and
          its government. 
             Tertullian says in his Apology,
          that a Christian is not so born, but that he becomes so: fiunt non nascuntur christiani.  This must not be taken literally. From the
          time of Septimius Severus, a number of the faithful were Christians by birth,
          because, their parents being Christians, they received baptism in their
          infancy, and contracted, without any personal knowledge of it, the most solemn
          responsibility as to faith and morals. The Church had no hesitation in the
          matter, being firmly persuaded of the truth of her faith and her hopes, and
          convinced that, for the neophyte in the cradle, the education of the family
          would advantageously replace the long probation imposed upon adult converts. 
             For,
          indeed, adult converts were not admitted without being proved in the
          Catechumenate, an institution which, towards the end of the 2nd century, we
          hear of almost everywhere. Converts who embraced Christianity, after attaining
          years of discretion, were not allowed to join the general body of the faithful
          at once. Initiation was only granted at the end of a prescribed time, during
          which they learnt what was the real meaning of Christianity and its doctrines,
          and of the many obligations they proposed to take upon themselves. And not only
          did they learn, but they also began to live the Christian life. Thus they tried
          their strength, and the Church kept her eye upon them, and was able to judge if
          their perseverance might reasonably be reckoned on. The catechumens were
          already considered as Christians; they shared the name, and in time of
          persecution, they shared also the risks of the faithful. In the Christian
          assemblies they might take part in the singing, the reading of the Scriptures,
          and in certain of the prayers; but not in the celebration of the Mystery of the
          Eucharist and several other rites, such as initiation and ordination. 
             When
          the catechumens were sufficiently prepared, they might present themselves for
          baptism. This they usually did; but they were not obliged to receive it
          immediately, and some persons put off taking any definite engagement. 
             From
          the time of the apostles, the rite of initiation included two principal parts:
          the bath, or baptism with water, and the laying on of hands. The first rite
          conveyed the special gift of remission of sin; it was the symbol of the
          purification of the soul, by conversion and grafting into Jesus; the second
          rite carried with it sanctification by the descent of the Holy Ghost upon the
          soul of the neophyte. As time went on, other ceremonies were introduced.
          Tertullian speaks not only of baptism and the laying on of hands, but also
          mentions unction, the consignation or imposition of the sign of the cross, and
          lastly, a mixture of milk and honey given the newly initiated to drink. And as
          he adds that all these ceremonies were practised by the Marcionites, they must
          date back at least to the first half of the 2nd century. 
             Baptism was always preceded by a special course of preparation : it
          generally took place during the Feast of Easter; the weeks beforehand were
          employed in finishing the instruction of the catechumens, who were now no
          longer considered simple catechumens, but were called in Latin competentes.
          They learnt the rule of faith or Creed, and received instruction upon it. 
             At
          baptism they were required to renounce publicly, before the whole Christian
          assembly, Satan, his pomps, and his works, which
          meant, in fact, paganism, its worship and its lax morality. Then they declared
          their faith in Jesus Christ, and in token thereof they recited a profession of
          faith. 
             The
          formula of the Creed was then, throughout the Church, that called the Apostles’
          Creed. The form used in our day differs but slightly from that already
          traditional in Rome at the beginning of the 3rd century : 
             “I
          believe in God, the Father Almighty; and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our
          Saviour, born of the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary, crucified under Pontius
          Pilate, and buried, rose again on the third day from the dead, ascended into
          Heaven, sitteth at the right hand of the Father; from
          whence He shall come to judge the living and the dead; and in the Holy Ghost,
          the holy Church and the forgiveness of sins, and the resurrection of the body”. 
             Tertullian
          was familiar with this form of the Creed, which, during the 3rd century, passed
          from one Church to another, and finally prevailed everywhere. It is
          characterized by division into three articles (which correspond to the three
          Divine Names of the baptismal formula), a short epitome of the whole Gospel
          history, contained in the second article; and by the mention, in the third, of
          the Church, of baptism (remission of sin), and of the resurrection. There are
          many reasons for the belief that this Roman Creed was drawn up long before the
          time when we first hear of it. 
             The
          first article shows no trace of any reference to the heresy of the Gnostics;
          God is there called simply Almighty, without its being thought necessary to
          point out that He was the Creator. It seems clear that this would have been
          otherwise if the religious authorities who drew up this formula had seen the
          Gnostic peril threatening. We need not, in fact, hesitate to place it as early
          as the first half of the 2nd century. Even earlier than that there must
          certainly have been brief summaries of the Christian preaching; we find traces
          of them in the letters of St Ignatius and in the pastoral epistles; but we have
          nothing to prove that they were either as complete as our old Roman formula, or
          arranged in the same way.
             The
          Christian faith as formulated in this brief and simple summary, which was
          intelligible to all, was sustained and defined by perpetual instruction, which
          chiefly took the shape of reading the Bible with homiletic commentaries. By the
          use of spiritual interpretation many Old Testament texts could be used for the
          instruction of the faithful, which otherwise hardly lent themselves to
          edification. In the beginning, the Church appears not to have discriminated
          much with regard to biblical literature. The sacred books actually used in the
          synagogues were adopted without heeding the fact that all the synagogues had
          not the same sacred library. Hence arose variations and uncertainties. Soon,
          when the writings of the New Testament came to be added to those of the old
          Bible, these increased considerably. We have no certain knowledge of the
          details of this state of confusion. But very soon a process of elimination
          began; the number of canonical gospels was fixed at four, and that of the
          epistles of St Paul at thirteen. A complete canon, a list of all the books
          received by the Church as sacrcd and canonical,
          appeared for the first time in Rome towards the end of the 2nd century. This is
          called the Muratorian Canon. To tell the truth, this document is rather
          enigmatical, as only the end of it exists, and it is still a disputed point
          whether it was written in Greek or in Latin; it can, therefore, scarcely be
          considered an official document involving the responsibility of the Roman
          Church. But at least, it testifies to certainty reached on some points, and to
          other questions still undecided in Rome when it was written. It acknowledged as
          canonical the four gospels, the thirteen epistles of St Paul, the Acts of the
          Apostles, the epistles of St John and St Jude, and two Apocalypses, that of
          John and that of Peter. Strong opposition existed, however, to the admission of
          the latter. The Shepherd was mentioned, but was set aside as too recent. Its
          author could neither be included amongst the prophets, nor amongst the apostles;
          he had written at a time, still recent when his brother Pius occupied the
          episcopal throne at Rome. Other writings, such as the epistles of St Paul to
          the Laodiceans and the Alexandrians, arc classed as heretical, and resolutely
          set aside. 
             Naturally
          the books of actual heretics were not read in the Christian assemblies. But,
          between such condemned productions and the Holy Scriptures, there was a
          considerable margin of debatable ground, and here various compositions, less
          clearly defined in character, found a place; some were orthodox but of doubtful
          authenticity or imperfect authority, and others had suspicious tendencies
          which, however, were not very pronounced. Here and there, however, thanks to
          men's simplicity, strange or even suspected books crept even in to public
          worship. In other places they were only read privately. The curiosity of the
          little world of Christians led them to give too ready a welcome to gospels
          which were not officially recognised, and especially to the pious romances
          about the apostles which claimed to be genuine history. Of these romances, one
          named The Acts of Paul seems to be the most ancient. It was certainly
          most uncalled for, the true history of St Paul being already well known, from
          the canonical book of the Acts. Quoted, however, by Hippolytus and Tertullian,
          and classed by Origen and Eusebius among the appendices of the New Testament,
          this extraordinary work found a place in some copies of the Bible. Even after
          it was compromised by the enthusiasm of the Manicheans and the Priscillianists, it still escaped more than partial
          proscription. That the charming episode of Paul and Thecla formed part of it is
          now an established fact; and also the apocryphal correspondence of St Paul with
          the Corinthians, as well as the account of the martyrdom of the apostle and the
          celebrated legend of the milk which flowed from his decapitated head. These
          fragments formed part of a vast whole, in which were described the adventures,
          the preaching, and especially the miracles of St Paul, much in the style of the
          Acts of the Apostles. The characters also arc much the same, but treated with
          incredible freedom. It is difficult to understand how such an account could
          have been offered to those acquainted with St Luke’s. The author is much too
          fond of miracles; but the characteristic feature is his doctrine. It has
          nothing in common with Gnosticism, which it expressly repudiates and condemns.
          But continence is insisted upon with a pertinacity unknown in the usual
          teaching. It appears as if constituting the very essence of Christianity. “Blessed,”
          says St Paul, “are those who keep their flesh pure, for they shall become the
          temple of God. Blessed are the continent for God will speak to them. Blessed
          are those who renounce the world... Blessed are those who, having wives, live
          as though they had no wife... Blessed are the pure bodies of virgins, ... etc. “These
          principles are perpetually brought out in the narrative. War is waged for a
          particular moral code, of a severity unknown in the Gospel. 
             The Acts of Paul were composed, about the time of Marcus Aurelius, by a
          priest of Asia. Tertullian tells us that the religious authorities of the land
          did not appreciate this singular document, and that the author, although he put
          forward in defense his zeal for the Apostle Paul, was
          deprived of his priestly position. The book was not then actually suppressed;
          but we are glad to know that the Church did not recognize its own teaching in
          this bold distortion of facts, and this exaggerated moral code. 
             Still
          less was Church teaching expressed in other apostolic romances almost as
          ancient as the Acts of Paul, but even more offensive. I mean the Acts of
          John, of Peter, of Andrew, and of Thomas, which appear to have been in
          circulation from the first years of the 3rd century. These three Acts, or at
          any rate the first two, are closely connected; some critics attribute them to
          the same author, a certain Leucius or Leucius Charinus, who, according to others, composed only
          the Acts of John. This last book is absolutely heretical, being tainted with a
          most accentuated Docetism, with references to the Ogdoad, the Dodecad, and the Pleroma. The freedom of some of the
          stories verges on indecency. The Acts of Peter are less objectionable; the
          Docetism is there less marked. It was the same, as far as we can judge from a
          few fragments, with the Acts of Andrew. These writings all share a very marked
          tendency to asceticism—a horror of marriage and of wine. St Peter and St Andrew
          were put to death, they declare, because they commanded married women to refuse
          their husbands all conjugal rights. They forbid wine, even in the Eucharist,
          which is celebrated with bread and water alone. 
             The
          Acts of John, of Peter, and of Andrew, were written in Greek; they made use of
          various local traditions current in Asia, in Rome, and elsewhere. St Andrew,
          with St Peter and St Matthias, evangelizes the coasts of the Black Sea; his
          very fantastic adventures terminate with his martyrdom at Patras. The last
          episode of the history of St John is that of the Metastasis, in which
          the aged apostle descends into the tomb without completely tasting death. The
          history of St Peter develops the account, already accepted in some circles, of
          the Roman controversy between St Peter and Simon Magus, and also that of the
          crucifixion of the Apostle, head downwards! 
             In
          the Acts of Thomas we take leave of the Greek world. This apostle
          carries the Gospel to India, and his legend was written at Edessa, in the
          Syriac tongue. But notwithstanding this different origin, the Acts of Thomas
          are inspired by much the same spirit as are the other apostolical romances.
          Asceticism is represented as being the very essence of religion. Here and there
          a Gnostic tendency is revealed, especially in some of the hymns which in our
          version have been less corrected than the rest of the text. It is exactly what
          was to be expected, from the Bardesanite atmosphere
          in which it probably originated. 
             Fragments
          only of these apocryphal histories have reached us. The original versions could
          never have been tolerated. In the 4th and 5th centuries, they were, in
          addition, compromised by the use the Manicheans and Priscillianists made of them. They were re-edited, the most shocking features suppressed, but
          all the marvelous adventures, in which the populace
          took delight, were preserved. From this process editions resulted which were
          almost orthodox, and whence, for many centuries, the hagiography of the apostles
          was derived. 
             In
          whatever form the Gnostic heresy in these writings may have been combined with
          orthodoxy, it is quite clear that they all have the same original trend towards
          the Encratite tendency, which condemned all sex relations, even in the marriage
          state, and the use of strong meats, flesh in any form, and wine. There is no
          question here of individual abstinence, but of a general rule for all: every
          Christian must be an ascetic, an absolutely chaste celibate, an Encratite. This
          idea was not new : it had appeared in apostolic times. The First Epistle to
          Timothy condemns it energetically, and from that time it was undoubtedly
          connected with unorthodox views of the Creator and Creation. In the 2nd
          century, these ideas found expression in various forms of Gnosticism and in the
          teaching of Marcion. This was far from being a recommendation for asceticism;
          but rather a reason for viewing it with suspicion, even when it seemed
          inoffensive. There may perhaps have been Encratites adhering to the orthodox faith; but they are very rarely spoken of without the
          revelation of some taint of heresy. St Dionysius of Corinth appears to have
          been much troubled at this tendency. St Irenaeus connects the Encratites with Saturninus, with Marcion, and specially
          with Tatian, who must have taught them to doubt the salvation of Adam, and to
          believe in the aeons. Clement of Alexandria quotes, as one of their
          authorities, a certain Julius Cassianus. This Cassian was a teacher of
          Docetism, precisely as were Saturninus and Marcion. However, Hippolytus knew Encratites who, with regard to God and to Christ, thought
          as the Church did; he does not connect them with Tatian. 
             We
          do not hear that the Encratites ever formed organized
          communities. There were undoubtedly small groups in which the Eucharist was
          celebrated and received, according to the ritual of the sect. Usually they
          mixed with other Christians, either orthodox or Gnostic. One of the martyrs of
          Lyons, Alcibiades, seems to have inclined for some time to the Encratite
          persuasion. It was, in reality, not so much a doctrine as a rule of life, which
          people carried out more or less strictly, and for various reasons. No doubt it
          is due to the influence of Encratism that in the 3rd
          century the custom obtained in some places, of celebrating the Eucharist with
          bread and water only. St Cyprian had to oppose it in Africa. The Passion of the
          martyr Pionius of Smyrna (250), represents him as
          practising this custom. 
             In
          the 4th century there were still Encratites. St
          Epiphanius notices them in the large towns, such as Rome and Antioch, and
          especially in Asia Minor on the borders of the Isaurian group, in the provinces
          of Cilicia, Isauria, Pamphylia, Pisidia, and devastated Phrygia. Some of them,
          known by the name of Apostolics or Apotactites, added to the original observances the practice
          of voluntary poverty. They all had a great respect for the Apocryphal Acts of
          the Apostles, and other such productions. 
             Although
          the doctrines of Encratism, the abstinence, that is
          to say, on principle, from certain kinds of food, and from all sexual
          relations, were proscribed, the Church nevertheless allowed exercises of
          mortification, such, for instance, as fasting, a practice inherited from
          Israel. Very early there were two days of "station" in each week,
          Wednesday and Friday. Hermas was familiar with them ; and they are mentioned in
          the Teaching of the Apostles. On those days, the chief meal was later,
          and the food was more scanty and less appetizing. At Easter a very rigorous
          fast was observed. Limited at first to one or two days, it finally spread to
          the whole week before the great festival. On particular occasions, the bishops
          invited their people to observe an extra fast. All these were public
          observances; but in private the faithful fasted when and as they wished. 
             Another
          form of orthodox asceticism was the practice of voluntary celibacy. This was,
          of course, never imposed upon anyone. But it was very early adopted in the
          Church as a perfectly free and supererogatory practice, by both men and women,
          whose decision was well known. These persons made a profession of virginity. In
          certain cases, as in that of Origen, they went too far; but such exaggerations
          were repudiated by the general feeling. Those who embraced a life of celibacy,
          whether men or women, did not seclude themselves from the world. They still
          lived with their families, and shared in the ordinary life of Christians.
          Monasteries are of later date. However, it was not possible but that there
          should be some special connection between persons attached to the same ideal
          view of practical life. The virgins, of both sexes, were well known to each
          other throughout the different cities and the different churches. They
          associated by preference with each other. Hence arose certain abuses. Sometimes
          virgins living, for one reason or another, away from their families, associated
          themselves with a protector of the same profession, but of a different sex, and
          aroused protests from ecclesiastical superiors. 
             But
          apart from abuse, the sacrifice entailed by such a profession was highly honored in Christian society, and even outside. The
          Christian Virgins were the glory of the Church. 
             But
          this orthodox and optional asceticism was only for the elect few. Ordinary
          Christians found the common moral code sufficiently difficult, and did not
          always live up to the Christian standards they were educated in, or which they
          had freely taken on themselves. When, in very early days, the Shepherd of
          Hermas preached repentance with so much originality, the situation exposed was
          not unusual. As years went on, the number of Christians increased. Acts of
          virtue were multiplied, and so were sins. Hence arose difficulties more and
          more pressing and varied. Casuistry was developed, and the institution of
          penance, which at first displayed only its essential features, soon grew more
          definite. 
             It was founded upon this very simple principle, that a society has the
          right to exclude those of its members who gravely break its laws. A Christian
          who broke the promises of his baptism was banished from the Christian
          community; excommunicated. If, touched by repentance, he determined to change
          his ways, he could beg for readmission, and if his conversion appeared
          genuine, he was readmitted; but not as a regular member of the community : he
          was ranked among the penitents, a special class, similar to that of the
          catechumens. Like the latter, the penitents could only assist at the first part
          of Divine worship. Like the catechumens, they were subjected to a strict
          supervision, intended to test the reality of their repentance. Moreover, they
          had to submit to a system of expiation, proportioned to the gravity of their
          offence. If their faults had not been very serious, it might happen that at the
          end of a longer or shorter period they were entirely reconciled to the Church.
          They then took their old place amongst the rest of the faithful. But there were
          cases, such as those of homicide, adultery, and apostasy, for which the time of
          expiation lasted until the death of the sinner. We have already seen that Pope
          Callistus relaxed this very severe rule, and allowed penitents guilty of sins
          of the flesh, to be reconciled before their last moments. The writings of
          Hippolytus and Tertullian expressed the opposition of the rigorists, but in
          practice the Roman view prevailed everywhere. With regard to intentional homicide
          and, above all, apostasy, the Church was less indulgent. When the persecutions
          were over, and there had been many apostasies, the Church accepted, as
          extenuating circumstances, the torments of the rack and the Are, exile, loss of possessions, imprisonment, and even fear, and a situation
          which otherwise would have become very complicated was compounded by a rapid
          expiatory penance. However, the old rule was maintained for those who, without
          any such extenuating circumstances, had been guilty of the sin of idolatry,
          especially in its most characteristic form, that of sacrifice. 
             For
          it was not only in time of persecution that Christians were tempted to
          compromise with paganism. Even when the magistrates left the faithful in peace,
          they still had to live in an atmosphere permeated by the old forms of religion.
          The claims of their family, their neighborhood, or
          trade, might all involve them in lamentable concessions. Certain professions
          were full of perils, such as that of a soldier, or a schoolmaster, a painter,
          or a sculptor. The longer the time of tranquility lasted, the more complicated became the relations between the world and
          Christian society. Opinion on both sides became less bitter; the faithful
          gained confidence in the good will of the State, and the heathen were reassured
          as to the dangers to Christianity. Few positions were considered incompatible
          with Christianity, or even with the office of priest or bishop. St Cyprian knew
          many bishops who accepted the management of property, who frequented fairs,
          practised usury and took proceedings in cases of eviction. We have seen that
          Paul of Samosata united the duties of Bishop of Antioch with those of a high position
          in public finance; his adversary, Malchion, was director of the Hellenic school
          at Antioch, a most extraordinary position for a priest on duty. The
          mathematician Anatolius, head of the Aristotelian School at Alexandria, was
          raised to the episcopate. Towards the end of the 3rd century, the manager of
          the imperial manufactory of purple dye, established at Tyre, was a priest of
          Antioch. The imperial household, from the time of Nero to that of Diocletian,
          always included many Christians. Ultimately they accepted not only financial
          managerships, but also municipal and even provincial magistracies. What do I
          say? There were even believers in Christ who became flamens, that is, pagan
          priests. The government in later times became so obliging, that for a so-called
          Christian who accepted such offices, the religious obligations attaching to
          them were relaxed. He could be high priest at the shrine of Rome and Augustus,
          without offering sacrifice to these official deities! 
             This
          kind of toleration indeed verged on the absurd, from all points of view. The
          State, or municipality, which permitted Christian flamens to dispense with
          sacrificing was stultifying its own institutions. Better to have abolished them
          altogether. As to the Christians who consented to take up such priestly
          offices, they must have been Christians of peculiarly wide views. At the
          Council of Elvira, this state of things was censured, but the censure was in
          reality of a very mild type in spite of its apparent severity. They contented
          themselves with drawing attention to certain cases, and reproving grave
          abuses. It would, perhaps, have been better to condemn entirely, and without
          mercy, this serious defection from elementary Christian principles. But
          doubtless, at the end of the 3rd century, it was already too late for such
          puritanism. 
             The record of this Council, taken with certain pages in the
          ecclesiastical history of Eusebius, enables us to appreciate the moral
          condition of Christianity on the eve of the last persecutions; but over and
          above that it is a document of great interest. The ecclesiastical history of
          Spain, apart from vague traditions of the preaching of St Paul, is scarcely
          represented in the early days, except by a few isolated facts relating to the
          Decian and Valerian persecutions. These have been mentioned before. At the
          Council of Elvira (Granada) the Spanish Church is revealed on a much ampler
          scale. Besides about twenty bishops,a good number of
          churches were represented by priests. All the names preserved cannot be
          identified, but their number shows the spread of Christianity in Spain at that
          time, especially in the south. 
             The
          account of this Council also proves that, if among Iberian Christians
          worldliness had made lamentable progress, the heads of the Church had not lost
          sight of the ancient high ideals, and that they were not afraid to have
          recourse to the severest penalties in defence of morality. Seventeen of the
          eighty-one canons, promulgated by the Fathers assembled at Elvira, terminate
          with the severe formula : nec in finem dandam esse communionem.
          This is not to be interpreted to mean that the episcopate of Spain devoted to
          eternal damnation all the guilty persons included in this sentence, or even
          that the Church excluded them entirely from her fold. They were admitted, in
          the inferior position occupied by penitents, but the Church refused to exercise
          for them her power of external and complete absolution, leaving the acceptance
          of their repentance to God. 
             
           
           CHAPTER XXVI 
           THE CHRISTIAN SOCIETY 
            
                
               THE
          Christians, like the Jews, were grouped together in local communities, governed
          by a hierarchy, of which the three orders, bishops, priests, and deacons,
          existed, as has been seen, from apostolic times. It was quite essential that
          these local communities, these churches, should be mutually united; they
          considered themselves, in fact, members of one body, which included the whole
          of the faithful in Christ, and formed the Church—no longer local but
          universal—the Catholic Church. 
             Where, then, did the local Church begin and end? What principles
          determined its extent? An answer meeting every case is less easy to And than might be imagined. As a rule, when a Church was
          organized in the capital-city, its jurisdiction was identical with that of the
          city. But this was not the case everywhere. The Christians of Vienne, for
          instance, seem to have been at first very closely associated with those of
          Lyons. In Spain, in the middle of the 3rd century, the same bishop governed the
          faithful of Leon (Legio) and of Astorga (Asturica),
          and this combination continued many centuries. The province of Scythia, which
          contained a considerable number of towns, had never any bishop except the
          Bishop of Tomi. That part of Thracia which borders on
          the Bosphorus, and formed, in the time of Diocletian, the province of Europe,
          had still, in 431, only four bishops, each ruling over the Christians in two
          cities. Until the beginning of the 3rd century, the Church of Alexandria was
          the only Episcopal Church in Egypt; and there are certain indications which
          lead us to believe that Rome held the same position in Italy, and Lyons in the
          Celtic province of Gaul. This does not, of course, imply that all the
          Christians in Egypt, in Italy, and in Celtic Gaul, were concentrated at
          Alexandria, Rome, or Lyons. They were scattered throughout the whole country in
          more or less isolated groups, which only became autonomous and completely
          organized gradually. And even so, these Daughter-Churches did not attain a
          footing of perfect equality with their Mother-Church. Their dependence showed
          itself differently in different places. In some places the new foundation was
          not given so complete an organization as that of the Mother-Church. The bishop
          of the latter continued to be their bishop, and ruled them through an
          intermediary, some priest, or even a deacon. Elsewhere, in lands where there
          were few towns, and the branch churches were in large villages and other
          country places, their superintendents were called Chorepiscopi. At the Council of Elvira were
          present many priests from town districts which apparently never had a bishop.
          So also many Chorepiscopi mostly from Syria or the eastern provinces of Asia Minor, took part in the
          Greek councils of the 4th century. Even where all the local churches, whether
          in large or small towns, had a complete hierarchy, in Southern Italy, for
          instance, in Africa, and in Egypt, their bishops were always more or less
          subordinate to the bishop of the Mother-Church whence they originated. 
             These relations resulted quite naturally in the organization of churches
          which were not simply local, but, in some sense, provincial. This last term,
          however, must not be taken literally. For nowhere, before Diocletian, certainly
          not in the West, is there in the grouping of churches the least indication of a
          desire to reproduce the lines of the imperial province. The Bishop of Carthage,
          or at least his Council, presides over all the African provinces—Proconsular,
          Numidian, and Mauritanian. Italy depends entirely on the See of Rome; the See
          of Alexandria is the ecclesiastical center for both
          Egypt and Cyrenaica, although in civil affairs these countries were separately
          administered. Here, the connection between the churches had nothing to do with
          the lines of the civil administration, but arose solely out of the
          circumstances of their evangelization, which again depended on geographical
          conditions. In other places where the churches were almost on a par as to
          origin, their bishops were sometimes grouped around the senior in age or
          standing. In the time of Marcus Aurelius, Bishop Palmas of Amastris presided over the episcopate of one part of the province of Bithynia-Pontus. In
          the African provinces this custom was long maintained : and there, except in
          Proconsular Africa, the metropolitan authority was never in the hands of the
          bishop of the civil center. 
             On
          the other hand, that arrangement was adopted almost everywhere in the Grecian
          part of the empire, though only towards the end of the 3rd century, after
          Diocletian had rearranged the provincial districts. In each of the new
          provinces, the bishop of the capital became the head of the episcopal group,
          and the limits of the ecclesiastical province followed those of the imperial
          province. This was an innovation. The Council of Nicaea, it is true, confirmed
          the new arrangement; but it allowed certain exceptions which followed the old
          lines. In the West the new arrangement was not carried through without
          opposition, especially in Italy and Africa, where the ancient metropolitan
          rights of Rome and Carthage had to be respected. 
             But
          to return to the local churches. The primitive hierarchy had quickly become
          complicated by the addition of other offices to those of bishop, priest, and
          deacon, and variations inevitably arose. In Rome, by the middle of the 3rd
          century, there were forty-six priests, seven deacons, seven sub-deacons,
          forty-two acolytes, fifty-two inferior clergy, exorcists, readers, and
          doorkeepers. The Christian population of the town was spread over seven
          regions. The number of regions seems to have been arranged to At in with that
          of the deacons, sub-deacons, and acolytes; each region having one deacon, one
          subdeacon, and six acolytes, all employed in the organization and
          administration of charity. More than fifteen hundred poor people were dependent
          on the community. As to the exorcists, readers, and doorkeepers, they assisted
          in the celebration of divine worship, and the preparation of candidates for
          baptism. 
             The center of ecclesiastical administration, the actual
          place where the business of the Roman community was transacted, appears to have
          remained outside the city during the whole of the 3rd century. It moved,
          probably, from the Via Appia when Constantine installed it at the Lateran, and
          appears in primitive times to have been established on the Via Salaria. In the
          town itself, however, there were already a number of Christian centres. It was
          the same in Alexandria, where fairly early, priests appear to have been
          attached to definite churches, and to have had more autonomy than in Rome. 
             Except
          in the great towns, there were usually only two centers,
          the cemetery and the clergy-house. The cemetery was a private burying-place,
          intended only for members of the community. As for the clergy-house, it was the
          residence of the bishop, and provided him with an administrative center, where also he put up Christian travelers,
          and frequently also sick persons. It was there also that in a large hall,
          approached by a cloistered court, the religious meetings were held. At the end,
          in an apse, sat the bishop, surrounded by the college of presbyters. A table or
          altar served for the celebration of the Eucharist, a platform (ambo) for the
          reading of the Scriptures, which then held a position of much importance in
          these assemblies. 
             The
          Eucharist was always the chief act of worship. In the beginning it was
          celebrated at the end of a corporate meal. This is what we call the Agape. In
          the 2nd century, the Agapé was already distinct from
          the Eucharist. It took place in the evening, while the Eucharist was celebrated
          at the morning meeting. A corporate meal, however frugal, was only suitable for
          restricted groups : as soon as the churches became crowded assemblies, it would
          be difficult to organize such banquets, so as to secure order and decorum. The Agapé was still kept up, but less as an expression of a
          real corporate life than as a memory of the past, and also as a work of
          charity; but soon no one went to it except the poor and the clergy, and the
          latter took part in it rather as part of their duty than for their own benefit.
          Its recurrence did not coincide with that of the ordinary liturgical service.
          The Agapé became more and more rare, and
          finally fell into disuse. 
             In
          the general Christian community, the clergy already formed a pretty distinct
          class. There was, indeed, no other class except that of catechumens, who had
          not yet attained the position of initiated, and penitents, who had lost it. But
          the confessors, and those who led lives of voluntary celibacy, soon acquired a
          special position. We have already seen how coolly the confessors of Lyons and
          Africa treated their religious superiors. The fact that they had not denied
          Christ, and had suffered for the faith, entitled them to charitable assistance,
          to take part in ecclesiastical functions, and especially to public
          consideration. Of this they took an unfair advantage. Those who made profession
          of celibacy, virgins especially, had a no less opinion of themselves: this,
          public opinion encouraged. In the Church special places were assigned them. The
          praise of their profession, in sermons and books, kept well within the bounds
          of orthodoxy; it was no longer inspired by dualistic theories, and all
          criticism of the creation was avoided. Nevertheless, the inevitable comparison
          between the profession of virginity, and the marriage state, easily led to
          discrediting the latter. And in this, the best intentioned people were tempted
          to go too far. 
             Such
          a state of things was not without danger to ecclesiastical discipline. By dint
          of being so much vaunted by others, and so self-satisfied, the confessors and
          virgins were forming an aristocracy in Christian society, which might be
          tempted to dispute with the hierarchy the right to govern the Church. We shall
          see later how this situation developed, and how the difficulty was solved.
          Before the 4th century, it had already had one important result—clerical
          celibacy. Christian opinion had early become more or less exacting on this
          point, and the clergy felt that they must yield to it if they did not wish to
          endanger their own influence. And, indeed, from the moment it was admitted that
          celibacy represents a more perfect ideal than marriage, it was inevitable that
          men should expect the clergy to be taken from among those in the condition of
          higher perfection, and to persevere in that state. 
             In Rome, at the time of Callistus and Hippolytus, the rigorists forbade
          the clergy to marry under pain of deprivation. The Council of Elvira (c. 33) goes farther; it forbids
          all those clergy who had been married before ordination to live with their
          wives. This law was imposed in Rome, at the end of the 4th century, but only on
          bishops, priests, and deacons. What the official custom was before the
          Diocletian persecution, it is difficult to say exactly. In the East, also, the
          discipline actually now in force, and so long in existence, was only arrived at
          gradually. Contemporary documents show no custom as uniformly established at
          the period under discussion. In some places the desire is expressed that the
          bishop should not be married, or should live with his wife tike a brother, and that priests also should observe some restraint in these
          relationships. Elsewhere the ordination of celibates seems to be objected to.
          And finally there are places where there seems no idea that the case of the
          clergy as to marriage was in any way different to that of ordinary Christians.
          These variations show plainly that the institution of obligatory celibacy was
          only beginning. 
             But gradually the discipline of the Church became fixed. In the lapse of
          time, habits—whether received from the first founders, or introduced little by
          little as circumstances required—acquired in every Church the force of
          consecrated custom, of ecclesiastical rule. The customs of the great churches,
          the Mother-Churches, where the tradition went back farther, and the experience
          was more varied, were copied by the branch churches and the less important
          communities. These great churches, it is true, seem seldom to have taken the
          trouble to agree on a common usage but from this, no great want of uniformity
          resulted. Thanks to the frequency of their intercourse, and thanks also to the
          fact that the process of development in each sprang from the same principles,
          and took place under nearly the same conditions, the discipline established
          everywhere was perceptibly uniform. 
             The ecclesiastical authorities were in no hurry to codify Church law. At
          the Council of Nicaea, and long afterwards, there is a talk of rules and
          canons; these terms can scarcely mean anything but a commonly accepted
          tradition, without distinct definition. However, before the 4th century, little
          books appeared in which were collected and classified, not only general
          principles of Christian morality, but a certain number of disciplinary rules on
          the hierarchy, public worship, and Church discipline. These little codes,
          anonymous to us, were generally placed under the patronage of the apostles. We
          have already met with one very ancient book of this sort called the Teaching of the Apostles. To
          the 3rd century belong, apparently, the Ecclesiastical
            Canons of the Holy Apostles, the Didascalia of the
            Apostles, and the Canons of Hippolytus. This last compilation seems
          to have had links with Rome; the Ecclesiastical Canons seem to have originated
          in Egypt; and the Didascalia carries us to Syria. We
          must be careful not to consider these collections as the absolutely exact
          expression of a discipline actually in force, though no doubt what the authors
          had under observation had considerably affected them; but we have no guarantee
          that what they saw was not amplified here and there to suit private wishes and
          sentiments. These little books gave expression to the universally prevalent
          notion that everything which the Church possessed, in the way of good
          traditions and useful institutions, was derived from the apostles. This same
          feeling, in different shapes, is met with in all the Christian writers who are
          drawn to reflect upon the constitution of the Church. In the 3rd century, no
          more is heard of inspired persons, prophets, and itinerant teachers. After the
          defeat of Montanism and Gnosticism, the hierarchy was practically everything.
          It was through her bishops that the Church was united to the apostles ; they
          represented tradition and authority; and they alone were qualified to interpret
          doctrine, and to guide the faithful. 
             This
          position was well expressed in the local hierarchy. The choice of his own
          people, and the consecration bestowed either by the Mother-Church, or by neighboring bishops, having installed him in due form, the
          bishop became at once the indisputable head of his Church. The faithful had
          only to follow him to be sure of walking in the right way. 
             But,
          as above the local Church there was the universal Church, so above the bishop
          there was the episcopate. It took time, however, to give a tangible expression
          to this idea. It was not until the reign of Constantine that the Church
          introduced the (Ecumenical Council, an institution which, it must be
          acknowledged, was never very workable, and never succeeded in taking a place
          among the regular organs of Church life. 
             The
          episcopate was—with regard to current necessities—the group of neighboring bishops, or the supreme bishop, if there was
          one in the country. Thus, for the election and consecration of bishops,
          recourse was had to the heads of the nearest churches; if it was a question of
          Italy or Egypt, the Bishop of Rome, or the Bishop of Alexandria was appealed
          to. In some places all the bishops of a vast district assembled at councils
          held regularly once or twice a year. Thus united, the episcopate of that region
          arranged disputes, legislated on new points, and, if necessary, took
          disciplinary measures against any of their members who had strayed from the
          path. 
             But
          above these provincial organizations, there was, to speak the truth, nothing
          but a very strong feeling of Christian unity, and the special authority of the
          Church of Rome. 
             This
          was felt, rather than defined : it was felt first of all by the Romans
          themselves, who, from the time of St Clement, never had any hesitation as to
          their duty towards all Christendom; it was felt also by the rest of he world, so long as the expression of it did not conflict
          with some contrary idea, determined by circumstances. In the exercise of her
          moral authority, an exercise which no one could have defined, the Roman Church
          was led sometimes to support men and sometimes to cross them. As long as she
          did not cross them, there were no expressions sufficiently strong to express
          their enthusiasm and respect, and even the obedience they felt incumbent upon
          them. In the event of conflicting opinion, as apparently, in the times of popes
          Victor and Stephen, then men did not consider the prerogatives of the See of
          Peter so self-evident. But in the ordinary course of events, the great
          Christian community of the Metropolis of the world, founded at the very origin
          of the Church, consecrated by the presence and the martyrdom of the apostles
          Peter and Paul, kept its old place as the common centre of Christianity, and,
          if we may so express it, as the business centre of the Gospel. The pious
          curiosity of all the faithful, and of their pastors, turned incessantly towards
          the Church in Rome. Everywhere people wanted to know what was being done and
          taught there; if necessary they found their way there. The founders of new
          religious movements tried to ingratiate themselves there, and even to get hold
          of the ecumenical authority by slipping in among the leaders. The charity of
          the Romans, kept up by a wealth already considerable, reached in times of
          persecution, or ordinary calamity, to the most distant provinces, such as
          Cappadocia and Arabia. Rome kept an eye on the doctrinal disputes which
          agitated other countries; it knew how to bring Origen to book for the
          eccentricities of his exegesis, and how to recall the powerful Primate of Egypt
          to orthodoxy. The situation was so clear that even the pagans were fully
          conscious of it. Between two candidates for the episcopal Sec of Antioch, the
          Emperor Aurelian saw at once that the right one was he who was in communion
          with the Bishop of Rome. 
             And
          yet, once more, these relations were insufficiently defined. The fast
          approaching day, when centrifugal forces come into play, will bring regret that
          the organization of the Universal Church was not developed so far as that of
          the local churches. Unity will suffer. 
             
           
           CHAPTER XXVII 
           THE REACTION AGAINST CHRISTIANITY AT THE END OF THE THIRD CENTURY 
            
                
               As
          in other things, so in religion, the 3rd century in the Roman world was a time
          of crisis. After the long peace and the brilliant prosperity of the Antonines, the empire was again to suffer from civil wars,
          half-mad or ephemeral princes, political assassinations and military
          revolutions. To crown all, the frontiers gave way on all sides, the provinces
          were invaded, and Eastern and Northern barbarians spread everywhere. At times
          the intervention of a strong hand restored order, but never for long. And at every
          such pause the decadence, the loss of strength, and the general dislocation of
          the Roman Empire were apparent. Then, from the sadness of earth, men's eyes
          were raised to heaven, for no one now thought of treating the gods lightly, and
          even philosophers became religious. But heaven was full of enigmas. The old
          gods of Greece and Rome lived only in the books of mythology; their neglected
          worship was fast falling into disuse, except of course in the country places,
          always conservative. The religion of Rome and Augustus had nothing serious
          about it save the public games for which it formed a pretext. The gods of the
          East still held their ground. Isis and Serapis were not without worshippers.
          And still greater numbers (locked to the shrines of the Syrian gods; the
          Jupiter of Doliche in Commagene,
          the Syrian goddess of Hierapolis, the famous god of Emesa, and the god of
          Heliopolis (Baalbeck) still maintained their
          popularity. But the most popular of all these foreign gods was the Persian
          Mithras, who now demands attention. 
             The
          great national god of the Persians was the god of heaven, Ahura-Mazda (Ormuzd). With him was adored Mithras, the god of light,
          Anahita, the goddess of the earth, and divers others. The liturgy of this
          religion consisted of sacrifices, libations, and prayers before a perpetual
          fire. Before the Zoroastrian reformation it was very simple; then it was
          complicated by the elaborate ritual to which the Avesta bears witness. 
             The
          Persian Empire, in extending westwards, propagated this cult. One of its first
          halting-places was Babylon, where star-worship and magic were already of
          ancient date. There the religion of Mithras picked up various foreign elements,
          which it assimilated as it could, and then passed on to the eastern regions of
          Asia Minor, Armenia, Pontus, Cappadocia, and Cilicia. Here it took deep root,
          without, however, entirely supplanting the old faiths. At the end of the 4th
          century, there were few places in Cappadocia where the Magians, with their
          strange rites and their sacred fires, were not found. So St Basil tells us; and
          Theodore of Mopsuestia, later still, thought it necessary
          to overwhelm them with a formal treatise. 
             If
          Mithridates, who had control of the military force of those lands, had
          prevailed against Rome, probably the Persian religion, or, at any rate, the
          worship of the god whose name he bore, would have extended far west. This was
          not to be. Nevertheless Ormuz and Mithras still held their own in the countries
          where they had obtained a footing. For long the Romans left these lands in the
          hands of their native princes, without attempting to alter their political or
          religious institutions. In the end, however, the change came. Towards the end
          of the 1st century of our era, Rome annexed Asia Minor as far as the Euphrates.
          Provincial government was introduced, the country received Roman officials, and
          the Roman army took possession. 
             From
          this moment, the diffusion of Mazdeism began, in the empire, under the form
          known as the Mithraic cult. Many soldiers were either enlisted from Pontus or
          Cappadocia, or were quartered there for a long time. The traffic in slaves
          brought in to the empire, and especially to Rome, many natives of those
          provinces, who made their way in the different departments of the
          administration. Thus introduced, the religion of Mithras spread with
          astonishing rapidity, all along the Roman frontier, from the mouth of the
          Danube to that of the Rhine, and even as far as distant Britain. It was early
          known in the neighborhood of the legions quartered in
          Spain, and also in Africa, as well as in Rome, and in several parts of Italy.
          In Greece, however, on either side of the Aegean Sea, the native gods held
          their own against their Persian rivals. And so it was in Syria and in Egypt. 
             The
          Mithraic cult was practised by confraternities, and celebrated in subterranean
          caves, in the depths of which was a sculptured representation of Mithras
          killing the bull. The god, in Persian dress, stands out against the background
          of a cavern, hewn in the living rock, a symbol of the Armament whence shines
          forth the celestial light! He holds beneath him a bull, which he stabs in the
          shoulder, a symbolic sacrifice, representing, according to legend, the creation
          of the world. These mysteries, with many others, were revealed by degrees to
          the initiates. They were divided into seven classes, each having its own name :
          there were the Crows, the Occults, the Soldiers, the Lions, the Persians, the
          Couriers of the Sun, and the Fathers. The head of the Fathers was called the
          transit from one class to another, involved many quaint ceremonies, not unlike
          those of our freemasons. 
             To
          judge from the size of their sanctuaries, the number of initiates in each group
          must have been small. But then there were many groups. In Rome alone, about
          sixty Mithraic chapels arc known. This form of worship, no doubt on account of
          its popularity with the soldiers, was in good repute with the emperors. In the
          3rd century, the imperial government tended more and more to adopt, in
          principle and form, the traditions of the absolute monarchies of the East, and
          then all Persian customs were fashionable at the Court, in religion, as in all
          else. And Mithras was very accommodating; his religion in no way excluded any
          other cult. 
             The
          paucity of documents makes it difficult to define wherein Mithraism, as
          imported from Asia Minor, differed from the little known primitive religion of
          Persia, or from Zoroastrianism, as shown in the Avesta. In Babylon it had
          already undergone modifications, and it could not but be influenced by Hellenic
          polytheism. Many of the Persian gods had been identified with those of Greece :
          Ormuz was recognized in Zeus, also god of heaven; Anahita was discovered to be
          closely related to Venus or to Cybele; and so on. Mithras himself was found to
          be personified or represented by the deified Sun, and this identification stood
          the cult in good stead in the 3rd century, when, owing to various influences,
          sun-worship acquired great importance. 
             The connection established between Mithraism and the old official
          worship of the Magna Mater was of considerable importance. In the sanctuaries of Mithras, there was no
          place for women. The religion of Mithras was a religion for men, a religion for
          warriors, organized under the command of a god, to wage perpetual war against
          the spirits of evil. The ceremonies of the Phrygian goddess, however, might be
          attended by women. And on that plea women gained admittance to the Persian
          cult. 
             The
          horrible rite of the Taurobolia, the bath of blood, appertained to the worship
          of Cybele. Those who submitted to it descended into a pit covered in by a
          wooden lattice-work, on which a bull was sacrificed. The victim’s warm blood,
          as it streamed down over the head and body of the initiate, was supposed to
          purify from all moral stain. 
             An alliance with such forms of worship might make Mazdeism attractive to
          those swayed by the gross rites of oriental paganism, but all who were repelled
          by horrors, and those who were being drawn, whether consciously or not, towards
          Monotheism and pure religion, must certainly have been alienated. In itself,
          however, the religion of Mithras contained elements—in theology, morality,
          ritual, and in its doctrine of the end of all things—bearing a strange
          resemblance to Christianity. The Christians themselves perceived this. As mediator
          between the world and the Supreme Divinity, as creator, and, in a certain
          sense, as redeemer of mankind, the advocate of all moral good, and the
          adversary of all the powers of evil, Mithras certainly does present some
          analogy with the Logos, the creator and the friend of Man. The followers of
          Mithras, like the disciples of Christ, held the soul to be immortal, and that
          the body would rise again. Closely united to each other by a common religious
          bond, the Mithraites entered their confraternity by a
          baptismal rite; other ceremonies of theirs closely resembled confirmation and
          communion. Both religions observed the Sunday, the Day of the Sun. December 25,   natale Solis invicti,
          was a feast-day to the followers of Mithras, as it became to the Christians.
          Mithraism had its ascetics, of both sexes, like the Christian Church. 
             But Mithraism had no equivalent for the Bible, nor for Jesus Christ. The
          Avesta did not belong to it. Mithras, the mythical god, the personification of
          one of the elements of the material world, had no footing on earth. The most
          subtle interpretation can find no more in him than in the Greek gods, Apollo,
          Zeus, and the others. No doubt behind Mithras was Ormuz, whose pantheon can be
          reduced to Monotheism. But this does not really differentiate his from the
          Greek pantheon. Leaving on one side the Jews or Christians, who had other
          reasons for not accepting the Mithraic cult, the pagans themselves must finally
          have discerned that, taking one set of gods with another, it was better not to
          traffic with the strange deities of barbarians and other enemies of the empire,
          but to adhere to those of their ancestors. This was what the Greeks, the
          Egyptians, and the Syrians did. In the military stations of the Rhine, the
          Danube, and the Atlas, the Mithraic movement certainly met with great success,
          during the 2nd century of our era; but simply because there it encountered no
          religious opposition. When Christian missions spread to these parts, Mazdeism
          soon began to decline. In Rome, Mithras and Cybele clung to life till the very
          end. They were the last to go down before the attacks of the conquering faith.
          In 390, the sacrifice of the Taurobolium was celebrated close to the Vatican,
          at the very doors of the basilica of St Peter.
             The
          worship of Mithras was, in fact, sun-worship; it had that in common with the
          cults of Syria. And together they represented all that, in the ordinary
          pantheon, still retained a spark of life. This was no doubt why the Empress
          Julia Domna and her learned friends attempted, directly or indirectly, to
          foster the religion of the Sun, regarded as the most natural symbol of
          divinity. 
             This
          idea was revived by the Emperor Aurelian, as soon as he had succeeded in
          pacifying the empire at home, and in restoring his frontiers. Needless to say,
          he did not attempt to close the temples of Jupiter or Vesta; but he founded by
          their side a new sanctuary of the Sun, and its magnificent buildings soon arose
          upon the Campus Martius, to the east of the Via Flaminia; a whole college of
          priests was appointed for its service, with the same privileges as the ancient
          corporation of the priestesses of Vesta. The emperor apparently intended the
          gods of Numa and the Tarquins to die of old age, and wished to give official
          sanction to those religious aspirations which seemed to draw men towards the
          Supreme Divinity, symbolized by the great luminary of the sky. Did he hope thus
          to stop the progress of Christianity? Everything points to it; for the founder
          of the temple of the Sun lost no time in persecuting the Church, and if death
          had not stopped him, his new god would have made many victims. 
             After
          he was gone, the worship of the Sun was still officially maintained ; but it
          does not seem to have had much influence on the course of events. 
             
           NEO-PLATONISM
               
           Neo-Platonism
          represents a far more serious movement. In the time of the Severi, the founder
          of this movement, Ammonius Saccas, was teaching in
          Alexandria. A select, but very varied audience resorted to his lectures. Among
          them were Christians like Heraclas and Origen.
          Longinus, the celebrated rhetorician, also belonged to this School, together
          with another Origen and a certain Herennius; but the
          most famous of all the disciples of Ammonius was Plotinus. A native of Lycopolis, in Upper Egypt, Plotinus began to attend the
          lectures of Ammonius about the time (232) that Origen left Alexandria to settle
          in Palestine. After the death of his master in 243, Plotinus took part in the
          expedition of the Emperor Gordian against the Persians; he wished to study
          their wisdom and learning, and also that of India. The expedition failed; and
          Plotinus returning from the East settled in Rome, where he was soon surrounded
          by a group of disciples. We hear of a Tuscan, Gentilianus Amelius; of a native of Palestine, Paulinus; of a poet, Zoticus; a physician, Zethos, who came from Arabia; of Castricius, on whose
          estate, near Minturnus, the master usually spent the
          summer; and finally, of the celebrated Porphyry, born at Tyre, who became the
          biographer and editor of Plotinus. The senators came to hear him; the Emperor
          Gallienus himself, with his wife Salonina, sometimes appeared amongst his
          audience. They promised to support the establishment in the Campagna of a
          colony, where life should be regulated by the rules of Platonism. But the
          project came to nothing, and Plotinus died in 270. He was a philosopher who
          lived up to his principles, austere in his life, and contemptuous of the world
          and literature. His disciples venerated him as a saint. His lessons usually
          took the form of conversation, without any attempt at elegance of style, and
          when rather late (about 263) he began to write, it was without regard to
          language or orthography. He wrote, moreover, only in detached fragments.
          Porphyry, one of his latest disciples, was charged by him to collect and
          publish these. This collection is called the Enneades and Porphyry prefaced it with
          the life of his master. 
             There
          we learn, amongst other things, that Christians, and especially Gnostic
          Christians, sometimes frequented the School of Plotinus. His philosophy,
          however, was too religious in the "Hellenist" direction for sincere
          and orthodox Christians to feel at home with him. With Gnostics, the way was
          freer; they met in transcendental theology. The Gnostic admirers of Plotinus
          seem to have been neither Valentinians nor Basilidians,
          but representatives of some Syrian system, a distant offshoot of Simon and
          Saturninus. Their leaders were named Adelphinus and
          Aquilinus. 
             Ammonius and Plotinus, like the Gnostics, had a synthetic system which,
          although at first taught with some mystery, soon became much the fashion.
          Thanks to Neo-Platonism, Hellenism could at last boast of a theology. No doubt
          some elements in it were old: Pythagorus, Zeno,
          Aristotle, and Plato, Plato especially, were all looked up to in the school as
          spiritual forefathers. Their books formed a sort of Bible, a sacred text, a
          theme for commentators. Philo, although his name was not used, no doubt
          contributed some elements to the new system, which indeed has some very
          characteristic features in common with that of the old Jewish master. 
             It
          speaks of three constituent elements in the Divine nature, emanating one from
          the other, and passing down from the abstract to the concrete, from the simple
          to the composite, and from absolute perfection to varying degrees of
          imperfection. Behind all, is absolute essential Being, without determinateness
          or properties, ineffable and inaccessible to thought. It is the first single
          cause of all being in others; and thus, all other beings are It, and It is the
          whole being of every being. In the second degree comes Intelligence (you?),
          which is also the Intelligible, an image of the Supreme Being, capable of being
          known, but of an absolute unity. This is the prototype of all other beings.
          Last comes the Soul which emanates from the Intelligence as the Intelligence
          emanates from absolute essential Being. The Soul animates the world; it must,
          therefore, be capable of diversity; it includes individual souls. The visible
          world proceeds from it; and some only of these souls are attached to individual
          bodies. But unfortunately harmony does not reign amongst the elements of the
          world; and the soul does not fully control the body. Hence follows disorder. 
             Being,
          having become more and more imperfect by becoming concrete and diversified,
          must be brought back to perfection. This effort to return begins with virtue;
          at first social, civic virtue, which adorns the soul but is not sufficient to
          deliver it; then asceticism, or purifying virtue, which brings it back to
          goodness. Thus purified the soul is able to attain to the sphere of the
          Intelligence by the exercise of reason. As to absolute essential Being, as
          reason does not reach it, no one can be in touch with it except through
          ecstasy. This can be cultivated; and when ecstasy results, the soul sees God.
          But this is rare. Plotinus, during the six years that Porphyry was with him,
          only attained four times to this immediate communion with the Supreme Being. And
          Porphyry himself only reached it once in his whole life. 
             Religion breathes through all this system; but it is not apparent, at
          first, how it could be harmonized with polytheism, or with Hellenic worship.
          Plotinus, who was tenacious of the religious side of his philosophy, found a
          way out of the difficulty. The True God, the only True God, must always remain
          absolute Being; but Nous is already a second god; and the ideas (logos) which He includes are also
          divine beings; as are the constellations, and so on. And thus for the common
          people, the old Pantheon remained, but one or two higher storeys were built
          upon it. This symbolical interpretation was applied to mythology, to worship,
          to idols, to divination, and even to magic. 
             This
          baser part, this compromise with the ideas and practices of the old religion,
          must have grown up after Plotinus. Jamblicus, in the
          beginning of the 4th century, transformed the whole into a theurgic system. And
          in this form Julian received it. 
             Taken
          as a whole, Neo-Platonism represents the last effort of Greek philosophy to
          explain the mystery of the world, and this effort was deeply religious, not
          only because it adapted itself to traditional religion, but also because of the
          mysticism at its root. What Philo, three centuries before, had accomplished for
          Judaism, Plotinus did for Hellenism. Philo had shown that it was possible to
          be, at the same time, a Jew and a philosopher. Plotinus brought the old Greek
          philosophy into touch with mysticism ; he reconciled it to some extent with
          religion, and at the same time he enabled religion to stand well with
          thoughtful men. 
             The
          thoughtful gladly welcomed the new system. To many no doubt it appeared a
          convenient rival to Christianity. But this pagan Gnosticism was in reality
          better calculated to cut the ground from under the feet of Gnostic Christianity
          than to be any serious menace to the orthodox Church. The God of Plotinus was
          too far from man, and too difficult of access ; for evangelistic purposes the
          writings of ancient and modern philosophers could not be compared with Bible
          history, nor the many lives of Plotinus with the Gospels. Platonism remained
          the luxury of the few. The Church scarcely noticed it, but continued to inveigh
          against the idols and sacrifices of paganism without troubling as to the
          philosophy which might lie behind them. However, all Plotinus' ideas were not
          rejected; Christian thinkers of the 4th century and later, often made good use
          of them. If the new philosophy decided Julian, with his weak convictions, to
          throw over Christianity, it had quite the opposite effect on St Augustine, and
          through him, and through the Pseudo Dionysius the Areopagite,the theology of the Middle Ages was widely influenced by neo-platonism. 
             But to return to early days. Before the death of Plotinus, Porphyry, on
          account of his health, had retired to Lilybaeum, in Sicily. There, he compiled
          the Enneades,
          and wrote his fifteen books against the Christians, the most important weapon
          devised by the ancients against Christianity. From every point of view,
          Christianity had made much progress since the time of Celsus, and most
          especially in philosophy. It had produced Origen. Porphyry had known that great
          Christian teacher, and knew his writings. He knew also that the First Principles but
          imperfectly represented the doctrine of the Church. The doctrines of Creation
          and of the End of all things, of the Incarnation, and the Resurrection, as
          understood in the main Church, did not square with the Pantheism of the new
          School. And the sacred books of the Old and New Testament were always there to
          give a handle to the Greek spirit of criticism. At the request of his master,
          Porphyry had tried his hand against certain books of visions, attributed to
          Zoroaster, which the Gnostics made much use of in their discussions. Now he
          attacked the Christian books. Of this work only fragments remain. Suppressed by
          the Christian emperors, these writings of Porphyry disappeared; and, strange to
          say, so did also the refutations by Methodius, Eusebius, Apollinaris, and
          Philostorgius. In the Apocritica of Macarius Magnes, a few
          pages have, however, been preserved, taken by him either direct from Porphyry,
          or from some intermediate plagiarist. The little which remains gives an idea of
          the close and pitiless criticism of the disciple of Plotinus. He does not
          condemn everything. He does not find fault with Christ, for whom he had, on the
          contrary, profound respect but with the evangelists, and, above all, with St
          Paul, for whom he has a special antipathy. He sees clearly where Christianity
          might be harmonized with Hellenic wisdom, on such points, for instance, as
          Divine Unity, the Monarchy of God, the likeness of the angels to inferior
          deities, and the use of temples and churches. 
             The
          book of Porphyry had a great vogue. It had to be refuted at once. This task was
          undertaken by Methodius, the learned Bishop of Olympus in Lycia, and the
          hard-working Eusebius of Caesarea. But they did not hinder the success of
          Porphyry's book, and as long as there remained learned heathen, it was used as
          a weapon against Christianity. 
             Porphyry’s career was long. He wrote many half philosophical, and half
          religious books, and died only in 304. By that time his adversaries, the
          Christians, were treated as enemies by the government, and attacked by other
          weapons than his.
             By
          the end of the 3rd century, all the old religions seemed bound together against
          the steadily increasing progress of Christianity. All that Roman Asia had
          produced of strange cults and mysteries, rallied around Mithras, the Sun, and
          Cybele, and the mythology and philosophy of Hellenism supported each other
          against the common foe. As if that were not enough, a new religion now came
          from Persia. From old Babylon in its last days there sprang a new and vigorous
          growth—Manichaeism. 
             Mani,
          the founder of this movement, was born near Ctesiphon, the winter residence of
          the Parthian kings, in 215-16. His father, Fatak-Babak, was a native of
          Ecbatana in Media (Hamadan); his mother belonged to the then reigning family of
          the Arsacids. Fatak was early converted to the
          religious views of the Mugtasila, a baptizing sect on
          the Lower Euphrates, resembling the present-day Mandates; he went to live
          amongst them, taking with him his son. To Mani, at the age of twelve, came a
          revelation of his doctrine, but he did not declare it till much later. He
          preached first in the royal palace, during the festivities in honour of the
          coronation of Sapor I. (242 A.D.). 
             Mani
          gave himself out distinctly as being charged with a mission to men from the
          True God, as Buddha had been in India, Zoroaster in Persia, and Jesus in the
          West. His success was not great. The Mazdean clergy
          would not hear of a reform which threatened the Zoroastrian religion. As for
          King Sapor, he was so unsympathetic that Mani had to go into exile. He lived
          for many years in lands to the north and east of the Persian Empire. His
          religion spread rapidly, either by his own efforts or those of his disciples,
          in Khorassan, in Touran (Turkestan), in China, and
          India; it even found many adherents in the heart of Persia. 
             Returning
          to Ctesiphon, after thirty years of exile, he succeeded in winning over Peroz,
          the brother of Sapor, who arranged an interview for him with the sovereign.
          Sapor promised toleration to his communities, and even gave hopes of his own
          conversion. The influence of the priests of the Sacred Fire, led, however, to a
          reaction. Mani was imprisoned. The death of Sapor (272) set him free, for the
          short time that Hormizd reigned, but he was again arrested by King Bahrain. In
          276-77 the prophet was crucified at Gundesapore, near Susa. His body was Hayed,
          and his skin, stuffed with straw, was fastened to one of the city gates, which
          long bore the name of the gate of Mani. From that time the Manichaeans suffered
          cruel persecutions. 
             The
          tragic end of its founder did not stop the progress of the new religion. From
          that moment it spread rapidly towards the West, and invaded the Roman Empire.
          Eusebius in his Chronicle dates the first appearance of Mani from the fourth
          year of Probus (279-80). He must allude to the first spread of Manicheism to
          the west of Persia.
             Once
          on Roman ground, Manichaeism assumed new characteristics, with an affinity to
          Christianity, which then was strong in Syria and even the adjacent provinces.
          Eusebius says the Manichaeans gave out that their prophet was the Paraclete
          promised in the Gospel, and associated with him a company of twelve apostles.
          But these details are only of secondary importance. Manichseism was in no sense a Christian heresy, an irregular offshoot from the Gospel; it
          was, in fact, a new religion. And it was not a national religion; it rose
          counter to the official worship of Persia, Zoroastrianism or Mazdeism, before
          subverting the Buddhists of India, and the Christians of the Roman Empire. It
          was a religion with pretensions to universality. And its teaching was as follows
          :— 
             There
          are two essential principles, essentially opposed to each other, light and
          darkness. They are conceived of as two kingdoms. In the first kingdom reigns
          the Supreme God, from whom radiate ten or twelve virtues, Love, Faith, Wisdom,
          Goodness, etc. This kingdom has a heaven and an earth, both filled with light.
          Below is the domain of darkness, without God or heaven, but with an earth.
          There Satan dwells with his demons, who form his court, as the bright aeons
          form that of the God of Light. 
             On
          one side these kingdoms touch, and there they meet in perpetual battle. Once
          Satan succeeded in invading the kingdom of light. From God and the Spirit on
          His right hand issued a new being, primitive man, and God dispatched him
          against Satan. For a moment Satan triumphed. Then God came to the rescue, with
          His angels, and repaired the defeat of primitive man. Satan was driven off. But
          lie had had primitive man for some time in his hands, and had robbed him of
          some particles of light. Hence, a mixture of light and dark elements, which
          propagated its kind. Primitive man arrests the progress of evil, but what is
          done, is done. 
             With
          the complex elements already existing, God formed the actual universe, a
          mixture of good and evil. It includes a series of heavens, governed by angels
          of light. The sun and the moon are brighter than the rest. In the sun dwells
          primitive man; in the moon, his syzygie, the
          mother of light. Though the world is made by God, working, it is true, with
          imperfect elements, man is the creation of Satan and his acolytes. Satan placed in Adam, the first of
          the race, all the elements of light that he had stolen. Eve is formed like
          Adam, but with much fewer particles of light; she is the temptress, the
          instrument of perdition. Cain and Abel are the fruits of her intercourse with
          Satan himself; Seth was the real son of the first human couple. He soon became
          the object of his mother's hatred; her evil intentions, however, came to
          nothing. Eve, Cain, and Abel fall into the power of hell; but Adam and Seth, on
          the contrary, were translated, after their death, into the kingdom of light. 
             Thus humanity is tormented by the struggles of these two elements,
          present in each sex, though unequally. The captive light tends to escape. The
          demons try to keep it back by the passions, by error, and by false religions,
          notably that of Moses and the prophets; while the spirits of light aid it to
          escape. To effect this, knowledge of the truth is of the utmost importance, and
          therefore messengers were sent from God—Noah, Abraham, Zoroaster, Buddha, and
          Jesus. By Jesus, however, must be understood a Jesus incapable of suffering (Jesus impatibilis),
          a celestial eon, who, at the beginning, came to succor Adam in his struggle against Eve and Satan; not the historical Jesus, who was
          only a false Messiah of the Jews, inspired by the devil. Of these divine
          ambassadors, Mani was the last and best. 
             As
          the elements of light disengage themselves from men, they return, by way of the
          zodiac and the moon, to the sun. Thence, after a final purification, they
          ascend to the kingdom of light itself The bodies, and also the souls of the
          non-elect, remain in the kingdom of darkness. When all the light has returned
          to its source, the world will come to an end. 
             From
          this anthropology it follows that men are good or bad by nature, in proportion
          to the light or dark elements they contain. The only moral outcome of this is,
          logically, a rigorous asceticism. The chief end of life is to hinder the decay
          of the elements of light in oneself, to facilitate their disentanglement, and
          to work for the annihilation, or attenuation, of the others. War is declared
          with the world of sense. The disciple of Mani is marked with three seals, on
          the mouth, on the hand, and on the breast. The first forbids impure words,
          animal food, and the use of wine. Vegetables, the Manichaeans were allowed to
          eat, but not to which means that someone else had to gather the fruits and
          herbs which were to serve for their meals. The seal on the hand forbids contact
          with anything impure; and that on the breast, all sex relations, even marriage.
          They had many fast days, one day in every four, and Sunday always. They were to
          pray four times a day, turning towards the sun, the moon, or the pole-star. 
             Such asceticism is evidently quite unattainable by ordinary mortals; it
          was only practised, therefore, by a few, by the Elect who were, indeed, the only true Manichaeans.
          The common people, the hearers, might live like everyone else. The Elect helped on their
          salvation; and they saw to the comfort of the Elect. In the Manichaean society, the elect take
          the place of monks, confessors, and saints. Above them, however, there was a
          hierarchy of priests and seventy-two bishops, and above all, twelve doctors.
          One of these was their head, a sort of Manichean pope. He was supposed to live,
          and often did live, in Babylon. 
             The
          worship was very simple; it consisted only of prayers and chants. A festival in
          March, the Feast of the Bema, commemorated the death of Mani. A richly adorned
          throne was set up on five steps, symbolizing the five degrees of the hierarchy:
          hearers, Elect, priests, bishops, and doctors. No one sat on it; but all
          prostrated themselves before it. 
             Many
          different elements certainly went to make up this combination of doctrines and
          practices, and their association was not always original. It was not for
          nothing that Mani and his father lived so long with the Mugtasila.
          The sacred book of their descendants, the Mandaites of our day, shows that in
          the doctrine of these baptizers there was a certain blending of old Babylonian
          legends with the teachings of the Bible. A strange form of Christianity,
          recalling that of the serpent-worshipping sects, and Elkasaism especially, must have arisen in the 2nd century, upon the ruins of the old
          Chaldean civilization. The Jews were very numerous in these countries. Mani,
          like the Mandaites, teaches dualism, radical, essential, and eternal. Many
          traits in his celestial beings recall the Babylonian gods and heroes, Ea, Marduk, Gilgames, etc. The dominant idea of light may
          come from the Iranian religion. The Bible supplied many names. It differs from
          the Gnostic sects, which always give a prominent position to Jesus, in that
          Mani has no concern with the Gospel. He himself is the only teacher and
          revealer. 
             He left behind him various writings, afterwards suppressed by the
          authorities, Christian, Mazdean, or Mussulman. The Fikristenumerates seven of the more important: the Secrets, the Giants, the Precepts for hearers,
          the Schapourakan, the Life-giver, the Pragmateia, the Gospel. The last of these was written in
          Persian, the others in Aramaic. Some of them are quoted by Christian
          controversialists, especially by the author of the Acts of Archelaus, and by St
          Augustine. Augustine devoted one of his books to the refutation of the Epistola Fundamenti,
          which is identical with the "Precepts for Hearers." The
          "Gospel" had nothing in common with the Christian books of that name,
          except its title. Besides these treatises, a great number of letters, written
          either by Mani himself, or by his first successors, were collected. 
             We
          need not follow the progress of the new sect, either towards the East, where,
          in spite of persecution, it continued to spread, until the time of the Mongol
          invasion; nor to the West, where, though proscribed both by State and Church,
          it gave trouble to both for ten centuries by its ever renewed vitality. The
          point to notice now, is the extraordinary welcome this religion, imported,
          though it was, from the hereditary foe of Rome, received on the soil of the
          empire. Thirty years after the death of Mani, Eusebius was much distressed at
          its success. About the same time (296), the Emperor Diocletian decreed the
          severest penalties against the Manichaeans, the stake for the leaders, death
          for all the rest (except the honestiores, who were to be sent to the mines of Phaenus or Proconnesus);
          confiscation for all. All their books were to be burnt. 
             Thus
          persecuted, the Manichaean sect had to conceal its existence, and to behave as
          a secret society. When Christianity became the dominant religion of the empire,
          the Manichaeans feigned Christianity, and even orthodoxy, adopting the language
          and practices of the Church, and combining them, as best they could, with their
          own observances. 
             The rapidity with which Manichaeism overran the Western lands, seems to
          indicate that it absorbed the surviving 2nd century Gnostic heresies. In its
          dualism, its morality, and perhaps even by an actual historic link, it had some
          affinity with the old Syrian gnostic sects, and stepped naturally into their
          place. But it did not absorb them so completely, but that, in Egypt at the end
          of the 4th century, there still remained little groups, bred up on ophite
          doctrines, and poring over the terrible rigmaroles of which the  Pistis Sophiais an example. In spite of all, these men were Christians. Jesus still was to them
          Master and Saviour; they were not easily to be persuaded to regard Him as an
          emissary of the devil. The Bardesanites and the
          Marcionites, more in earnest, and not so far removed from orthodoxy, stood
          firm; they held their ground in Syria and Mesopotamia for a long time. In the
          4th century there were still many Bardesanites at
          Edessa; and in the following century, Theodoret, the Bishop of Cyrrhus, found more than ten thousand Marcionites to
          convert in his diocese alone. The last Gnostics were drawn into the orthodox
          Church rather than to the religion of Mani.
           
           JUDAISM.
               
           As
          to the Jews, their opposition to Christianity, shown from the very first,
          became more and more inveterate. They recovered at last from the catastrophes
          that overwhelmed them incessantly between the reigns of Nero and Hadrian. But
          the massacres at the end of Trajan's reign, which were the penalty they paid
          for their revolts in Egypt, Cyrene, Cyprus, and Mesopotamia, no doubt
          diminished the importance of their communities in these countries. In Judaea
          the same results followed the war of Vespasian, and more specially the defeat
          of Bar-Kocheba (135). The Jews had to leave the
          country; they were no longer allowed to approach the ruins of Jerusalem, or the
          colony of Aelia, which was rising on the site of the Holy City. Other colonies
          were founded in Judaea and Samaria, Neapolis, Emmaus (later Nicopolis), Diospolis, Eleutheropolis. The
          land of Judah and Ephraim now passed finally from the sons of Jacob to the
          children of Edom.' 
             The remnant of Israel concentrated itself west of Judaea, at Jamnia (Jabne), a place on the Philistine coast, south of Joppa.
          Johanan-ben-Sakka, and Gamaliel the younger, are mentioned as their leaders.
          Thanks to the toleration of the governors, they achieved some measure of
          self-organization. The Sadducean aristocracy had perished in the insurrection;
          a feeble remnant took refuge at a distance, chiefly in Mesopotamia, where there
          still existed Jewish or Judaizing princes. The Temple was destroyed; and the few
          priests and Levites who remained, soon died out. Only the Pharisees and the
          Scribes, or Doctors of the Law, remained. The government devolved on them, and
          being no longer free to concern itself with politics, became purely religious.
          The Sanhedrim, formerly the principal organ of political life, could not be
          reconstituted. The old name, however, was sometimes given to a council, of
          which the president, in the long run, acquired considerable importance, and was
          distinguished, more or less officially, by the title of patriarch. As in all
          the other Jewish colonies, the leaders had charge of the civil jurisdiction.
          And they occasionally usurped the criminal jurisdiction also. The Jews in all
          lands supported this organization by their offerings, and the persons called apostles sent to collect them,
          held at the same time a sort of visit of inspection. 
             The
          religious life now became very narrow. The day of liberal Jews, who coquetted
          with Hellenism and with the government, was past and gone for good. There is no
          longer any desire to stand well with other nations, nor to make proselytes.
          That field is left to the Nazarenes. The Jews retired within themselves,
          absorbed in the contemplation of the Law; their joy being to observe its
          minutest directions. No doubt there are points in which it can no longer be
          observed, but who knows that the old worship will not someday be
          re-established, and the Temple rise again from its ruins? Meantime, rules
          enough still remained observable, to give a definite object to their fidelity
          and daily food to their religious life. 
             The
          Law was everything to them. The canonists expressed the enthusiasm it inspired
          in commentaries, and the Scribes continued their work in exile. At Lydda (Diospolis), not far from Jamnia, a Rabbinical School of
          great importance grew up. About the middle of the 2nd century the School of
          Tiberias took its place. 
             The
          National Council, with its president, was transferred to Tiberias, and there
          the Jewish Patriachs lived during the 3rd and 4th
          centuries. At that time, flourishing Jewish colonics again filled Galilee. We
          hear of those of Capernaum, Sepphoris, Diocaesarea, Tiberias, and Nazareth; the Land of the Gospel
          was covered with synagogues, the ruins of which still remain. The first
          collection of Commentaries on the Law was made there. The Mishna, the most
          ancient, dates from the end of the 2nd century. It contains at least two
          thousand maxims, or solutions of knotty points, by noted Rabbis, from
          Johan-ben-Sakkai down to Judas the Saint, a
          contemporary of Marcus Aurelius and Commodus. Judas is regarded as the author
          of the Mishna. This treasury of legal wisdom soon acquired an authoritative
          position, and forming, like the Law itself, a basis for farther discussion,
          gave rise, in its turn, to two more collections of commentaries. One of these,
          compiled in Galilee, far on in the 4th century, is called the Talmud of Jerusalem;
          the other dates from the next century and from the Jewish schools in Persia,
          and is known as the Talmud of Babylon. 
             Outside
          the Palestinian center, the Dispersion, far away from
          the religious authorities who replaced the abolished priesthood, spread
          continually, without proselytism, merely by the
          natural increase of the race. This growth was at one time jeopardized by
          Hadrian's edict forbidding circumcision. It was impossible for the Jews to
          submit to such a prohibition. Their indignation broke out in fresh revolts, so
          that Antoninus revoked the prohibition, and simply forbade circumcision to any
          but the children of Jews, a regulation enforced also by Severus. 
             The
          isolation of the Jews was thus encouraged by government, and, at the same time,
          it continued to show them toleration, so that they spread more and more,
          occupying themselves in mean employments and petty trade. In the 4th century,
          there were Jews everywhere. And the bishops were disturbed by the close
          intercourse between them and the Christians, who were at times inclined to take
          part in their feasts, and to adopt their customs.
             The
          men of letters continued the controversies of Aristo and St Justin. The same
          vexed questions perpetually recurred. The Christian aim being to prove the
          Gospel by the Old Testament, they were much annoyed when the Jews would not
          accept their allegorical interpretations, and even questioned their quotations. 
             Once
          there had been Greek-speaking Jews who were able to take part in such
          controversies, and the Septuagint version had been made for their use. In the
          2nd century, being discredited by the use Christians made of it, it was
          discarded in favor of more literal translations. The translation of Theodotion
          is a revision of the Septuagint, according to the Hebrew version then received
          in Palestine; that of Aquila was an entirely new version, of excessive and
          repelling minuteness. Controversialists could thus set one version against
          another. In the end, however, the Hellenic clement was entirely eliminated; and
          as the Jews had abandoned the Septuagint, so they abandoned Aquila and
          Theodotion, and in their religious services used the Hebrew text exclusively. 
             Paganism
          old or new, exotic or national, mystic philosophies, new-fangled religions, and
          old-fashioned Judaism—all these forces, at the end of the 3rd century, opposed
          Christianity. Another power, apparently more formidable though only of
          intermittent hostility, was that of the Roman State. It was finally to be
          utterly vanquished, and become the servant of the victorious Gospel. Hut this
          change was not accomplished without a terrible struggle, which must now be
          considered. 
             
            
               
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