|  | READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |  | 
| ST. HILARY OF POITIERS310 – 367BY
 JOHN GIBSON CAZENOVE
 
         CHAPTER I. The Country and the Age of Hilary
          
              
             PREFACE.
          
             The biographies contained in this small volume are
        based, like the rest of the series, upon a study of the original authorities.
        These are, in the case of St. Hilary, most especially the very considerable
        writings which he has left us. In the case of St. Martin, we have to depend
        almost exclusively upon the comparatively small treatises of Sulpicius Severus;
        for St. Gregory of Tours, though greatly extolling him, tells us hardly
        anything concerning Martin’s earthly career, and the poems of Paulinus of Perigueux and of Venantius Fortunatus are
        little more than reproductions in verse of the prose narrative of the earlier
        biographer.
         It is right to confess my obligations to the authors
        cited in the notes, not only for the particular information therein mentioned,
        but also for much general light upon the topics discussed. Let me add a word of
        gratitude, for what are sometimes called side-lights, to Dean Merivale’s “History
        of the Romans under the Empire”; to “Les Cesars” of Count Franz de Champagny; to the “Heathenism and Judaism” and to “The
        First Age of the Church” of Dr. Von Dollinger;
        and to the Commentary of Bishop Lightfoot on the Epistle of St. Paul to the
        Colossians. I have also made free use, sometimes for elucidation, sometimes for
        confirmation of conclusions reached independently, of the “Dictionary of
        Christian Biography” which is in progress under the editorship of Dr. William Smith and Professor Wace; more particularly of
        the articles on Damasus and Liberius, and of my own
        contributions on Hilarius Pictaviensis and Martinus Turonensis.
         The very mixed character of the Emperor Maximus
        is coloured with a more romantic tint than is discernible in the
        pages of Sulpicius and of the pagan historian Pacatus in
        the poem entitled “The Dream of Maxen Wledig”,'
        which forms one of “The Visions of England” depicted for us by Sir. Francis
        Palgrave. The fact that the poem is inspired by “The Mabinogion”, the
        collection of the legends of that highly poetic country, Wales, may suffice to
        account for the apparent discrepancy. If any of my readers are induced to
        compare the two portraits, they may perhaps be inclined to think that of the
        Latin historians the more probable. But in any case they will, if I mistake
        not, feel grateful for the reference to a book which, over and above its poetic
        merits, is so full of instruction and suggestiveness to all students of
        history.
          
             J. G. C.
             Edinburgh, Mid summer, 1883.
             
         
         CHAPTER I. THE COUNTRY AND THE AGE OF HILARY.
              
             It was permitted by God’s providence that at the time
        when His Son, for us men and for our salvation, came down from heaven, heathen
        Rome should be the mistress of the world. But to reach this pinnacle of earthly
        greatness had been a long and arduous task—a task achieved by hard-won triumphs
        against able and often formidable enemies.
         Among the opponents of the pre-eminence of Rome, the
        Gauls were for many centuries the most uncompromising. Their opposition, it is
        true, was of a wayward and fitful character. The different tribes of the race
        did not often act in concert; and, even when they did so, their harmony was
        soon broken. No Gallic general can be said to have attained the high position
        won by Pyrrhus of Epirus, far less that achieved by Hannibal, in a career of
        anti-Roman warfare. Even Brennus, the chieftain of the Gauls, who in BC 390
        captured and burnt Rome, did not remain in central Italy long enough to
        consolidate his conquest.
         But while the rivalry of other enemies, as of
        the Epirote and the Carthaginian, was comprised within a
        comparatively limited period of time, that of the Gauls was enduring and
        persistent. The Celtic tribes in that part of northern Italy which the Romans
        called Cisalpine Gaul, as well as those who occupied so large a portion of the
        country now known to us as France, continued for more than three centuries to
        be the watchful and unsleeping foes of Rome. They looked out for opportunities,
        and when they saw them were not very scrupulous about breach of treaties. The
        sudden and irregular character of the Celtic attacks was of that kind which the
        Romans specified by the name of a tumult; and, as a Gallic tumult was an event
        which might happen at any moment, a special fund of money was kept in the
        Temple of Saturn in order to meet such an emergency.
         A day, however, was to come when the long duel between
        these powers was doomed to cease. Cisalpine Gaul was humbled and reduced to a
        Roman province about BC 200, soon after the defeat of
        Hannibal. About 150 years later that remarkable man, who has been justly called
        the greatest and most versatile of all Romans, Caius Julius Caesar, in a series
        of campaigns, which lasted for nine years, completely subdued the whole of the
        Further Gaul. We must not pause to consider the character and the motives of
        the conqueror. But it seems only fair to remark, that when it is asserted, and
        perhaps truly, that a million of Gauls may have perished in fighting against Caesar,
        it is a mere assumption to imply, as is often done, that these warriors would
        have died a natural death if they had escaped the sword of Rome. With the
        exception of those who had been civilized by the influence of the Roman
        province in the southeast (the district subsequently known as Provence), the
        inhabitants of Gaul were a nation of fighters, and the men struck down by
        Caesar would have perished in domestic feuds or in some of their almost daily
        battles with the Germans. That this great feat did subserve the
        further plans of the ambitious conqueror is, of course, quite undeniable. No
        part of Caesar’s career seems to have produced a deeper impression on the
        imagination of the Roman people. The treasure preserved in the Saturnian temple
        was appropriated by Caesar on the occasion of his triumphant entry into Rome,
        in BC 49, after he had crossed the Rubicon. To the protest of the
        tribune, Metellus, that it was a deed of sacrilege to touch this fund for
        any purpose except to repel a Gallic invasion, Caesar was able to make the
        swift and proud retort, “the fear of a Gallic invasion is for ever at
        an end; I have subdued the Gauls”
         From that date Gaul not merely accepted the yoke of
        Rome, but enlisted her sons in Roman armies, and eagerly studied Roman
        literature and Roman law. Caesar, with that wondrous power of fascination which
        he exerted alike over friends and foes, raised a legion composed of his former
        adversaries, which bore a lark upon its helmets and was known, from the Celtic
        name for that bird, as the Legio Alauda.
        Under the rule of Augustus, the quickness of the native Gallic intellect
        displayed itself in an eager adaptation of the language and the arts of their
        conquerors. Six or seven cities became famous for military manufactures, such
        as the red cloth worn by Roman soldiers. Medicine and philosophy were likewise
        sedulously cultivated, but of all studies rhetoric was among the most popular.
        The contests of the bar especially delighted the litigious and loquacious
        spirit of the Gauls. Arles, Toulouse, and Vienne were conspicuous as seats of
        classic literature; Lyons was celebrated, as a Roman biographer and satirist
        inform us, for its rhetorical contests; and the Latinity of Gaul, though
        somewhat deficient in that severity of taste which marked the style of the best
        models in Rome, yet often undoubtedly displayed a character of really rich and
        copious eloquence.
         The contest at Lyons embraced both Greek and Latin
        composition. Marseilles, believed to have been founded by Greeks, was esteemed
        to be the headquarters of Grecian culture in Gaul; and traces of some knowledge
        of Greek remained for four or five centuries in the southeastern part of the
        country.
             The above facts will be found to bear upon the next
        great event in the history of the country; an event of far more importance than
        even its conquest by Caesar; although, humanly speaking, that conquest was its
        necessary prelude. We refer to the introduction of the Christian religion into
        the land. The Christian faith must have penetrated Gaul at least as early as ad
        170; for by ad 177 we find a religious colony from Asia Minor or Phrygia
        settled on the banks of the river Rhone, and keeping up in the Greek language a
        correspondence with the mother Church in the Eastern clime from which it
        sprang.
             The occasion of this correspondence was a terrible but
        a very glorious one. The philosophic Stoic, the last of that school, the
        virtuous Marcus Aurelius, was then seated on the imperial throne. But this
        emperor, though he may not have originated the fearful persecution of the
        Christians which broke out at Lyons and at Vienne, virtually encouraged it by
        the rescript which he addressed to the local authorities. The fearful details
        of the cruelties exercised upon the sufferers, and the constancy with which they
        were borne, have been powerfully narrated by many modern historians. But it is
        not easy to surpass the simple pathos of the original letter preserved for us
        in the pages of Eusebius. Here it must suffice to remind the reader, as a proof
        of the way in which all ranks were blended by their common faith, that while
        the aged Bishop of Lyons, Potheinus, who
        perished in that persecution, was a man of station and culture, yet its
        heroine, the greatest sufferer of all, was the lowly Christian slave, Blandina.
         Gaul had already proved a fruitful soil for the spread
        of the new creed. This violent persecution, so nobly met, greatly intensified
        its power, and afforded a new illustration of the often-quoted maxim of
        Tertullian, “The blood of martyrs is the seed of the Church”. During the
        succeeding century the Christians of Gaul, though always liable to outbursts of
        popular fury, appear to have enjoyed comparative tranquility.
         But the latest and fiercest of the persecutions (which
        broke out in AD 303 and lasted for nearly ten years), the one
        commanded by the Emperor Diocletian, at the instigation of his colleague
        Galerius, embraced in its wide range alike the most eastern provinces of the
        empire and the western province of Gaul. Happily the governor,
        Constantius Chlorus, was not only of a mild and tolerant disposition, but
        also cherished in his inmost heart a very great respect for Christians. He was
        compelled, indeed, for the sake of appearances, to do something. The overthrow
        of a few churches, which had already been much damaged, and the forcible
        closing of some others marked the extent of his interference. Not only did he
        refrain from any cruelties towards persons, but he acted in a way which showed
        the value which he placed upon consistency. Summoning to his presence those
        among his officers who made a profession of Christianity, he inquired of them
        what would be their conduct, if he should find himself obliged to enforce the
        imperial decrees, and to call upon those around him to offer sacrifice, or at
        least incense to the heathen gods. Some of them announced that, though such a
        proceeding would be most painful to their feelings, they would not like to
        disobey the emperor, and were prepared to yield the point. Others declared,
        however much they might regret finding themselves placed in such a dilemma,
        nothing should induce them to render homage to the pagan deities. The governor
        dismissed them without any remark. But, somewhat to the surprise of both sets,
        it was soon found that promotion and places of trust were bestowed, not upon
        those who had expressed their willingness to yield, but upon those who had
        avowed their inability so to act. Constantius explained to private friends,
        that he could not confide in the loyalty professed towards an earthly master by
        men so ready to betray Him whom they professed to regard as a heavenly one.
         Constantius Chlorus, who for two years (AD 305-6)
        ruled as emperor conjointly with Galerius, died at York, in the imperial palace
        of that city, in AD 306. We are not surprised to learn that
        under his tolerant rule Christianity had made considerable progress in Gaul,
        and that by the close of the fourth century there were not less than twenty
        bishoprics in this important province. The Gaul of that date, it may be
        observed in passing, was rather more extensive than the France of our own days,
        and constituted as much as one-twelfth part of the mighty Roman empire.
        Constantius was succeeded by his son, Constantine, the first emperor who made a
        public profession of Christianity and mounted the cross upon the imperial
        diadem. That the symbol of agony and shame should be thus exalted in the sight
        of men was the outward mark of a vast revolution—a revolution alike in the
        world of thought and of action—a revolution social and political as well as
        spiritual.
         The motives and the character of Constantine were
        mixed. He remained, both as a politician and in his domestic affairs, cold, and
        too often cruel. He put to death his rival, Licinius, in AD 322,
        not wholly perhaps without excuse, but still in such wise as to lay himself
        open to the charge of bad faith. A few years later he also executed his own
        son, Crispus, whom he believed to have conspired against him. But the
        subsequent conviction that Crispus was either innocent, or at least less guilty
        than had been supposed, led Constantine into furious indignation against his
        second wife, Fausta, who had been the chief accuser of her stepson.
        Accordingly, Fausta also was put to death, as, what heathens would have called,
        a sacrifice to the manes of Crispus.
         If deeds of this nature had been committed by a
        heathen emperor, they would have excited comparatively little attention; but
        that one who professed himself a Christian should thus act has, not
        unnaturally, drawn down upon Constantine's memory far severer comments, most
        especially from the heathen annalists of his reign, Zosimus and Aurelius
        Victor. For our part, we gladly adopt on this subject the observations of an
        historian of our day:— "We must frankly admit that Constantine, who yet
        warred with the faith of a Christian, and often conducted his government in
        accordance with the light shed by the Gospel, nevertheless, avenged his private
        wrongs with the rigor, and often with the cunning, of a Roman emperor of the
        old creed. History has a right to notify, in his case, with astonishment and
        severity, vices which were familiar to his predecessors. It is one
          additional mark of homage which she renders to his character and his faith".
           From the same historian we borrow the
        following masterly and candid summary of the general character of the chief
        human agent in that great revolution, which embraced in its operations the
        important province of Gaul. He observes, that before we answer the question
        whether Constantine, in his conversion, was actuated by shrewd political
        calculation or by a feeling of true faith, we must determine what we mean by
        faith. Of that sincere and living faith which is associated with penitent
        compunction, amendment of life, conquest of passions, detachment from the
        prizes of earth, Constantine had but a very imperfect grasp until his death-bed
        sickness. He remained ambitious, and was (as we have observed) too often cruel.
        But to admit thus much is very different from saying that Constantine did not
        really believe and reverence the Christian religion. The acceptance of
        Christianity by a sovereign far from being, on merely human grounds, a sure
        road to power, was a great risk. It alienated more than half his subjects from
        him; it snapped the link with all the memorials and traditions of the empire;
        it involved him in very serious political embarrassments. Even the hesitating
        manner in which he interfered with the internal discussions of the Church
        betokened his scrupulousness; for in matters of state he was accustomed to
        command without debating. With all these pledges of conscientious conviction
        before us, it seems impossible for impartial judges to doubt the sincerity of
        Constantine.
             "The glory of men is for the most part increased
        by the importance of the events with which they are mixed up, and more than one
        famous name has thus owed its celebrity to a fortuitous combination. But the
        destiny of Constantine has been precisely the reverse of this. In his case, on
        the contrary, it is the greatness of the work which dims the reputation of the
        workman. Between the results of his reign and his personal merits there is by
        no means the ordinary proportion between cause and effect. To be worthy of
        attaching his name to the conversion of the world he needed to have joined to
        the genius of heroes the virtues of saints. Constantine was neither great
        enough nor pure enough for his task. The contrast, but too manifest to all
        eyes, has justly shocked posterity. Nevertheless, history has seen so few
        sovereigns devote to the service of a noble cause their power, and even their
        ambition, that it has a right, when it meets with such, to demand for them the
        justice of men and to hope for the mercy of God."
         Constantine, whose acceptance of Christianity put a
        stop to all further persecution from heathens (save during the brief episode of
        the reign of his grandson, Julian the Apostate), died in AD 337,
        having first moved the seat of empire from Rome to the famous city on the Bosphorus,
        which is still called after him, Constantinople. The empire, as many of our
        readers will remember, was divided among his three sons—Constans, Constantius,
        and Constantine II. Gibbon's judgment on their capacities for swaying the rod
        of empire is well known. He ranks in this respect a celebrated ecclesiastical
        leader (though from the sceptical historians point of view
        "his mind was tainted by the contagion of fanaticism") far above all
        three: "Athanasius displayed a superiority of character and abilities
        which would have qualified him far better than the degenerate sons of Constantine
        for the government of a great monarchy." This threefold rule did not long
        endure. Before three years had passed away, Constantine, making war upon
        Constans, was defeated and put to death. For ten years (340-50) Constans and
        Constantius were joint emperors; but in AD 350 Constans was
        slain by Magnentius, and then Constantius in turn, slaying the usurper, became
        sole emperor, and ruled the provinces formerly under the authority of his
        brothers.
         The condition, then, of the Gaul of the fourth century
        was that of a large province of a mighty empire, which had derived a portion
        indeed of its earlier intellectual culture from Greece, but which was now organized on
        Roman principles in all that concerned its temporal government. The system of
        taxation of the public domains, of roads traversed by imperial posts, of
        enlistment and management of the army, was all administered from Rome. Some few
        judicial and municipal liberties were left; but even these were falling more
        and more under the influence of the central authority. At the time of which we
        speak, these institutions, which were pagan in their origin, remained
        essentially such; for not only were large tracts of Gaul un-Christianised, but
        even in the Christian parts society had not been in any wise leavened by
        Christian principle. Nevertheless, there existed among the Christian portions a
        freedom of thought and of action unknown among the functionaries of the civil
        administration. The civil authorities were jealously watched from Rome, but the
        rulers of the Christian society were (excepting in times of persecution) left
        very much to themselves. It will be seen, however, from the following narrative
        that Constantius acted in this respect differently from former emperors.
         Meanwhile, the progress of Christianity had been
        troubled by something worse perhaps than heathen persecution. The heresy of
        Arius—that is to say, the denial of the central truth of the Christian faith,
        the full divinity of Christ,—had by this time spread into Gaul, and had been
        adopted by some even among the bishops of the Church. The favour of
        the court was also largely extended towards it.
         Such was the Gaul of the fourth century, in which
        Hilary's lot was cast. To what extent the Celtic blood permeated ancient Gaul
        is a question much disputed. But it was certainly the dominant race. Different
        tribes of this family had often a capital town, which in time lost its prior
        name, and was called by the name of the clan. Thus, for example, the city which
        in Caesar's "Commentaries" is Lutetia of the Parisii became Paris; Avaricum of
        the Bituriges became Bourges; and
        Hilary's home, once called Limonum of
        the Pictones or Pictavienses, at an early period became Pictavi, and thence Poictiers or Poitiers
          
             
         CHAPTER II. OUTLINES OF THE CAREER OF HILARY.
              
             There are three questions to which we expect some
        manner of reply when we take up the biography of any man of note. In the first
        place, we desire to ask, What were the outward facts of his career? Secondly,
        what was the influence of his age upon him? Thirdly, what was his influence
        upon his age? In the case before us, the answer to the last of these questions
        must be gathered from our narrative and criticisms taken as a whole. But some
        reply to the first, and even partially to the second, of these queries may be
        briefly given here, although they will be treated with greater fulness in
        the course of our succeeding chapters.
         The outward facts of Hilary's career may be summarily
        stated as follows :—He was born in or near Poitiers in the early part of the
        fourth century. We do not know the exact date, but it may probably have been
        between AD 315 and 320. The parents of Hilary were pagans,
        people of high station, who gave their son an excellent education. While still
        a young man, he became a Christian. He married, and had one child, a daughter,
        by name Abra. In AD 353 he was elected, while yet a
        layman, to the see of his native town. As bishop he contended
        earnestly against Arianism in Gaul. Three years later we find him exiled to
        Phrygia by the emperor. There, too, he did his best, by writings and by
        influence in councils, to struggle against Arians, but at the same time to make
        peace, if possible, with the semi-Arians. He found time to compose commentaries
        on parts of Holy Scripture, and a treatise on the Holy Trinity. In AD 360,
        after an exile of more than three years, he was allowed to return home. He did
        not, however, reach Poitiers until the year 362, when he rejoined his wife and
        daughter. In AD 364 he made a journey into Italy to confront
        the then bishop of Milan, Auxentius, whom he regarded as hypocritical. In
        the year following he returned to Poitiers, and died there peacefully in AD 368.
         In an earlier period of the Church's history, Hilary's
        courage and outspokenness would probably have enrolled him among the martyrs
        put to death by heathen rulers. In the later middle age he might possibly have
        remained a layman, and tried to interpenetrate judicial or political duties
        with Christian principles. But he was born too late for the struggle against
        heathen persecutions, and too soon for the attempt to Christianise the
        work of a statesman. His friends and neighbours showed a true
        instinct when they selected him for the office of a bishop, although they could
        not have foreseen the deep and far-reaching penetration of his future
        influence.
         Whether Hilary did not, like many good men, see but
        too keenly the evils of his own times, and fancy
        that the former days had been better than they really were;
        whether he fully realised the power of those good influences around
        him which cooperated with holier aids to save him from the falsities, first of
        heathenism and then of heresy, may be doubted. But it will be seen, that the
        very perils and trials, arising out of the temper and circumstances of the age
        in which his lot was cast, brought out the nobler elements of his character;
        and that, though he may have been betrayed into excess of denunciation of at
        least one adversary, he deservedly earned, alike by his charity and firmness,
        the honourable title of "Confessor", bestowed on those who
        struggled for the faith, though they may not have been called upon to resist
        even unto blood.
          
              
             CHAPTER III. THE YOUTH OF HILARY.
              
             Hilary is one of those men whose writings, though they
        cannot fairly be charged with egotism, yet do tell us a good deal about
        himself. His largest, perhaps his most important work, the treatise on
        "The Holy Trinity", composed during his exile in Phrygia, supplies
        considerable information respecting his youth.
         His parents, as we have said, were pagans; nor do we
        know whether in their later day they followed the example of their son in
        embracing Christianity. But they gave him the best education, which they could
        obtain for him in the Western Gaul, of their time. This education, if we may
        judge from results, must probably have included some tincture of logic and of
        mental philosophy. It evidently embraced also a certain measure of acquaintance
        with Greek, and, above all, with rhetoric, and with the Latin language and
        literature. Hilary became in time a deep thinker; and, if his powers of
        expression are not always found adequate to his powers of thought, some
        allowance must be made for the difficulty of the subjects which he treats, and
        the inferiority of the Latin to the Greek language in the enunciation of those
        problems which arise out of philosophy and theology.
             A severe critic, belonging to the period of the
        Reformation, the celebrated Erasmus, pronounces Hilary somewhat deficient in
        simplicity and severity of style. Erasmus admits, however, that these gifts
        were seldom acquired by any writers of Latin, except those who were native
        Romans, or who had resided from their youth upwards within the city of Rome.
        There is, no doubt, some ground for this criticism. Indeed, it had been
        partially anticipated by St. Jerome. Even when that Father of the Church calls
        Hilary "the Rhone of eloquence", he was, probably, suggesting the
        idea of a stream, which is often turbid as well as swift and impetuous. Indeed,
        in another passage Jerome complains of Hilary's periods as being often too
        lengthy, and, consequently, unintelligible to any but learned readers.
         Endued with a temperament which seems to have been by
        nature lofty, and possessed of no mean amount of intellectual culture, Hilary,
        while yet a very young man, yearned for knowledge of another kind. He longed to
        know what was the source, and what the end, of all his thought and action.
        Merely to enjoy the ease and plenty which his station in life afforded him was
        to rise but little, if at all, above the brute creation around him. But he
        must, he felt, be intended for something which was beyond their reach. For
        example, the desire to attain to truth was in itself a pledge of superiority
        over the animals. Then there was also the attempt to cherish what all, even
        among the wiser heathen, admitted to be virtues; such as, for instance, courage
        and temperance. With these Hilary learnt to class, he tells us, the passive
        graces, such as patience and gentleness. But was it to be supposed that all
        these energies of the head and of the heart were to cease with the ending of
        this life? He could not think so. A future life to come, at least as happy as
        that of earth, in all probability much more so, seemed to him a natural
        conclusion of a career of goodness upon earth. Now such a prize could come from
        one source only—namely, from a Supreme Being. The very notion of "gods
        many and lords many", the error known as polytheism, had always appeared
        to him a manifest absurdity.
         Let us pause here for a moment. We are all, in some
        degree, the creatures of our age. We are all, in a measure, influenced by what
        surrounds us. But this is an influence of which we are only partially
        conscious. Hilary, as we have already implied, does not seem to have suspected
        how much he may have been indebted to the atmosphere of thought around him. His
        appreciation of the gentler and passive forms of virtue is unpagan. The same must be said respecting his perception of
        the absurdities involved in the heathen recognition of many gods. It is absurd;
        for no one of such beings can really be God. One of the great attributes of a
        really Supreme Being is almightiness,—the possession of a power which is
        unlimited, save by His goodness, or by laws in the world of intellect which He
        has made and constituted as part of Himself. But the heathen, as a rule, did
        not perceive this absurdity. They read in Homer, how a goddess favoured Ulysses
        and Diomed to the extent of letting them obtain the mystic horses of
        Rhesus, but how Apollo at this point woke up and prevented them from taking the
        chariot. Or they learnt from his imitator, Virgil, how Eolus, god of the winds,
        let loose the gales to please Juno, but was sternly rebuked by Neptune when
        these breezes made a storm upon the ocean. That Hilary was struck by the
        incongruities of such a system was most probably owing to a fact repeated in
        all ages, the indirect impression made by movements in the world of thought
        upon those who do not consciously support or sympathise with such
        movements. Most justly has Dean Merivale remarked of Christianity,
        even in its earliest age, that "when it counted its converts by thousands
        its unconscious disciples were millions."
         Reason and conscience, aided by the atmosphere of
        thought around him, had led Hilary thus far. But he now began to feel the need
        of something more, to experience the truth of what, many centuries after, was
        to be expressed by a celebrated English poet:
             Dim, as the borrowed beams of moon and stars
             To lonely, weary, wandering travellers,
             Is reason to the soul; and as on high
             Those rolling fires discover but the sky,
             Not light us here, so reason's glimmering ray
             Was lent, not to assure our doubtful way,
             But guide us upward to a better day.
             Dryden, "Religio Laid."
          
             Happily for Hilary the means of attaining to this
        better day were accessible. He was able to obtain and to study the Holy
        Scriptures; the Old Testament, probably in the famous Greek translation known
        as that of the Seventy (the Septuagint), made at Alexandria at least two full
        centuries before the Christian era; and the New Testament in the original
        language. However imperfect and unequal the Septuagint version may be, it was a
        mighty instrument in the way of preparing the world for the spread of the Gospel.
        Hilary found in the books of Moses and in the Psalms abundant assistance in his
        desire to know God.
             But this knowledge was not unmixed with fear. He was
        deeply conscious of much weakness, both in the body and in the spirit; and the
        thought of the Creator in relation to His creatures was one of reverential awe,
        as well as love. There came in, for his consolation and guidance, the books of
        the new dispensation. The works of Apostles and Evangelists supplied what the
        Law and the Prophets could not give. Hilary was especially drawn to the Gospel
        of St. John. Its clear and emphatic language in the Incarnation of
        the Eternal Son was, to his mind, eminently encouraging and satisfactory.
         It need not surprise us to find, that one who had thus
        mastered the leading principles of true religion, both natural and revealed,
        should desire to enroll himself as a member of that
        community with which he was already identified in heart. About ad 350, as
        nearly as we can make out—in other words, about the middle of the fourth
        century—Hilary formally renounced paganism, proclaimed himself a Christian, and
        was thereupon duly baptized.
         There are other questions connected with this change
        which we should be glad to answer if we could. For example, Hilary, at the time
        of his conversion to Christianity though still tolerably young, was already
        married and had an infant daughter.
             Was his wife a Christian by birth, and had her
        influence and example anything to do with his change of creed? We cannot say.
        But such evidence as we do possess seems to render it probable that she was
        not. Hilary appears to be a very honest writer, and far from reticent in his
        disclosing the circumstances of his life or his feelings wherever he sees any
        reason for proclaiming them. Some six years after his conversion, he was doomed
        to a separation of nearly six years from both wife and daughter. No correspondence
        between him and them has come down to us, saving one letter to the daughter,
        who was named Abra. The reference to his wife in this letter (we are
        ignorant of her name) is tender and respectful. But, if she had been an agent
        in reclaiming him from heathenism, it would probably have been noticed
        somewhere, either by Hilary or by those who have furnished us with the
        materials for his biography.
         Did his wife become a Christian at the same time with
        her husband? Here, again, we lack definite information. But we may almost
        safely assume that she did. The daughter was evidently nurtured in the faith
        from the earliest time that she could remember.
             For the next three years of his life, Hilary lived as
        a good and devout Christian layman. His example was a thoroughly edifying one
        to those around him. On one point he saw reasons, in after-years, to change his
        habits. This point was what would now be called a question of casuistry. Those
        Holy Scriptures, which had been his guide to truth, and, under Providence, the
        chief means of his conversion, seemed to him at first to inculcate the greatest
        possible separation, in all matters of social intercourse, from Jews and from
        heretics. Hilary, in his later days, relaxed the severity of his rules in this
        respect. His experience of life taught him, that by meeting with those who held
        false or erroneous doctrines he gained opportunities of influencing them for good.
        Sometimes a process, which ended in conversion to the true faith of Christ, was
        thus commenced; and in other cases he was at least able to soften and to
        conciliate opponents.
             By casuistry in its good and proper sense—it has often
        been abused and so got an ill name—is meant the application of the general
        principles of religion and morality to individual cases, more especially to
        cases of apparent difficulty. Neither of the courses pursued by Hilary can be
        called wrong. Each case must be judged on its own merits. There are men, who
        are conscious that such intercourse as Hilary at first shunned either irritates
        them, or else leads them into dangerous concessions. They do well to avoid the
        temptation, and they can plead many Scriptural examples and precepts on their
        side. Such passages as the Second Epistle of the loved disciple, and some even
        in the writings of St. Paul (such as Titus III. 10; 1 Cor. V. 11) lend
        countenance to such a course of life; to say nothing of the examples of men who
        were specially called to live apart from the world, such as Elijah, Elisha, and
        the Holy Baptist. But there are, undoubtedly, other men and women who possess
        the rare gift of being in the world, and yet not of the world, who can really
        imitate that part of the conduct of the Apostle of the Gentiles, wherein he
        describes himself (1 Cor. IX. 19-23) as becoming all things to all men in the
        hope of at least saving some. The talents and opportunities of Hilary were such
        as to fit him for such a line of conduct, and consequently to justify him in
        adopting it.
         As a layman, Hilary held a position of some kind not
        unsuited to his rank and education. He was either one of the officers attached
        to the court of the Governor of Gaul, known as curiales,
        or else a municipal magistrate. There is a great charm and beauty attendant on
        the course pursued by many of God's commissioned servants, who, like a Samuel
        in the Mosaic dispensation, or a Timothy in the Christian, have been trained
        from their very childhood in such a way as to prepare them for the duties of
        the sanctuary. But it must not be forgotten, that many of those not so trained
        have brought with them into the service of the ministry many useful
        acquirements capable of sanctification and most efficient for the propagation
        of the faith, and the building up of Christ's Church,—tact, knowledge of the
        world, habits of order, authority, and perception of the best ways of
        influencing for their good the men and women around them. The knowledge of
        Greek literature as well of a holier lore, and the possession of the rights of
        Roman citizenship, contributed not a little to the efficiency of that most
        illustrious propagator of truth, once known as the persecutor, Saul of Tarsus.
        The annals of the early Church furnish a long list of martyrs, of apologists,
        of missionaries, of bishops, and confessors, who came forth (to adopt an image
        of St. Augustine's) out of Egypt, laden with its spoils; who brought to their
        new duties their knowledge of philosophy, of rhetoric, or of human law and
        government. Hilary of Poitiers has no claim to a place among those trained from
        infancy to be teachers for priests and rulers of the Church; but he has a claim
        to a high and honored position in the catalogue of
        those who, having been originally among the children of this world, have, by
        God's grace, won their way into the ranks of the children of light.
         That which happened to St. Ambrose and to some other
        distinguished converts to Christianity during the first four centuries fell
        also to the lot of Hilary. From being merely a layman, he was invited by his
        friends and fellow-citizens to become the bishop of his native town. That such
        suddenness of elevation would, in most cases, prove perilous, both to the
        person so advanced and to the diocese intrusted to his charge, can
        hardly be doubted. But there are exceptions to all rules, and the case of
        Hilary is one of them. He thoroughly justified the choice.
         
         CHAPTER IV. FIRST YEARS OF HILARY'S EPISCOPATE.
              
             The predecessor of Hilary in the see of
        Poitiers died in AD 353. It is believed, that his name was
        Maxentius, and that he was brother to another prelate of great piety,
        afterwards known as St. Maximin of Treves. The commencement of Hilary’s
        episcopate dates from the same year (353). He had not courted this promotion;
        but the objections arising from his humility had been overruled. In addition to
        the usual duties of the episcopal office, two subjects engaged the especial
        notice of the new bishop. Of these, one was the want of a continuous commentary
        on some book of the New Testament; the other, the contest against Arianism.
         At this period Christians, who understood Latin only,
        and not Greek—and this was the condition of the great majority of Christians in
        Gaul and throughout the Western Church generally—did not possess any commentary
        on an Epistle or Gospel. They could read, indeed, forcible apologies for the
        faith against heathenism, and many excellent tractates upon various Christian
        duties; but they had no complete explanation of any single book of the New
        Testament.
         It is justly reckoned among the most eminent claims of
        Hilary to our regard, that he was the first among the divines of the West who
        perceived this want, and attempted to supply it. He published a commentary in
        Latin on the Gospel of St. Matthew. It must be remembered, that what we now
        call the modern languages could hardly yet be said to exist for any literary
        purposes. Latin in the western part of the Roman Empire, and Greek in the
        eastern, were the two languages known respectively to the largest number of
        people. For an account of this work, as also Hilary's comments upon the Psalms,
        we must refer the reader to a later chapter. It must be enough to say, for the
        present, that Hilary by this act laid not only Gaul, but all the Latin-speaking
        Christian communities, under an obligation. Brought to knowledge of the truth
        by study of the Scriptures, he was anxious to help others to a rightful
        understanding of their meaning.
             The contest of Hilary against Arianism must also form
        the subject of a separate consideration. But a few words must be said in this
        place respecting the position of the Arians in Gaul.
             The see which of all others took the leading place in
        this province, that of Arelas (now known as
        Arles), was unfortunately at this period occupied by a vehement Arian. His name
        was Saturninus, and he is conspicuous as being the chief opponent,
        throughout the whole period before us, of the Bishop of Poitiers, the chief
        defender of the orthodox faith in Gaul. Hilary shows, as a rule, so much
        consideration for opponents, that we are bound to believe that he is not
        speaking without warrant, when he describes this or that adversary as
        exceptionally violent and unscrupulous. Another writer, Sulpicius Severus,
        quite agrees with Hilary in his accounts of Saturninus. He was assisted by
        two other prelates, named respectively Ursacius and
        Valens. Their reputation is somewhat fairer than that of Saturninus. But
        their course of action, if less violent than his, was decidedly more
        inconsistent and uncertain. So completely had, by this time, the great name of
        Athanasius become associated with the defence of the faith, that the attacks or
        support of the truths enshrined in the Nicene Creed were frequently combined
        with the condemnation or the acquittal of the famous Bishop of Alexandria.
        Now, Ursacius and Valens, at a council held
        at Milan in AD 355, first voted for the acquittal of
        Athanasius, but subsequently changed their minds, and supported a vote for his
        condemnation. There are moments when the treatment of a man affects the public
        mind far more keenly than the discussion of a doctrine. This changefulness on
        the part of these two bishops seems to have alienated many from their cause. A
        clear majority of the bishops of Gaul separated themselves from the communion
        of Ursacius, Valens, and Saturninus,
        and recognised Hilary as their leader in the work of "earnestly
        contending for the faith once for all delivered to the saints."
         It may well be asked, How did Hilary arrive so soon at
        a position of such prominence? The see of Poitiers was not a leading
        one, such as that of Arles, nor so famous as many others in Gaul, as, for
        example, those of Lyons or Vienne. He had been little more than two years a
        bishop, and had by no means courted eminence. All that can be said is, that
        Hilary seems to have carried with him a natural weight of influence. That his
        social position, his good education (so much above that of the majority), his
        knowledge of the world, all contributed to this result, is highly probable. But
        these gifts would not have sufficed, had not his brother-bishops been convinced
        that they had found in him a defender of the faith at once resolute, able, and
        charitable. They waived the considerations of the position of the see of
        Poitiers, and the short tenure of the episcopate by its bishop. Justly, it
        would seem, has a famous German writer of this century applied to Hilary the
        remark which Gibbon has made with reference to his contemporary, Athanasius,
        that "in a time of public danger the dull claims of age and rank are sometimes
        superseded."
          
             CHAPTER V. HILARY IN EXILE.
              
             The power of sending obnoxious persons into banishment
        was one of the most terrible possessed by the Roman emperors. In the case of an
        accusation involving the risk of capital punishment, we know that "it was
        not the manner of the Romans to deliver any man to die before that he which was
        accused had the accusers face to face, and had licence to answer for
        himself concerning the charge laid against him" (Acts xxv. 16). But in the
        case of exile no such fairness was maintained. Augustus sent into banishment, far
        from Rome, into the frozen regions of the banks of the Danube near the Black
        Sea, the celebrated poet, Ovid; and to this day no one knows what was the real
        cause of the sentence passed upon him. Utterly different from the lax and too
        often immoral pagan poet as was the pure and high-souled Christian
        prelate, there is this much in common between the two cases, that we are
        ignorant in both of them of the real grounds of the imperial wrath. Augustus
        did, indeed, specify a charge—namely, the bad tone of Ovid's poetry; but that
        this was the real ground of offence has not found credence with a single
        historian, ancient or modern. Constantius, the emperor, who made Hilary an
        exile, never vouchsafed to explain the precise charge on which the sentence was
        based. From private sources, Hilary found reason to think that Saturninus of
        Aries, who had won the ear of Constantius, had persuaded the emperor, not
        merely that the Bishop of Poitiers was a dangerous and turbulent person, in a
        political point of view, but that he had been guilty of some crime which was
        morally disgraceful.
         The sentence was passed upon Hilary in AD 356,
        shortly after a council of bishops had been held at Beziers (then called Biterra), in the province subsequently known as
        Languedoc. Saturninus probably presided at this meeting. Hilary, with
        some orthodox bishops, was present : but he declares that he was refused a
        hearing. In fact, as at many other provincial councils held at this period, the
        Arians were clearly in a majority.
         During the previous year, Hilary had received a visit
        from one who was, like himself, a convert to the Christian faith. The name of
        the visitor was Martin. He is generally regarded as a pupil of Hilary; and it
        is very possible that Hilary, who was by far the more highly educated, even if
        not the senior, may have been able to do much for Martin in the way of
        instruction. But this learner was already making himself a name by his zeal and
        eloquence, and his visit was looked upon as a fresh testimony to the fervor and the orthodoxy of Hilary. In after-times,
        Hilary's friend was destined to be known as St. Martin of Tours, and to become,
        of all saints, the most popular in the traditions of his native land. Nor
        was this favorable estimate confined to
        Gaul; it crossed the Channel, and spread in Britain. To this day, one of our
        oldest ecclesiastical buildings is known as the church of St. Martin, in
        Canterbury. The strength thus lent to Hilary was further increased by the changeful
        conduct of the Arians, Ursacius and Valens,
        to which reference has already been made. Many who had been inclined to
        Arianism were repelled by this wavering line of procedure, and had rallied
        around Hilary. But it pleased God's providence that his leadership in Gaul
        should, as we have seen, be rudely interrupted.
         Hilary was ordered by Constantius to betake himself to
        the province of Phrygia, in Asia Minor. Rarely, indeed, was any attempt made to
        disobey an imperial mandate of this nature. Hilary, like most victims of such
        orders, went straight to the province pointed out to him, and remained in
        Phrygia for somewhat more than three years,—from the summer of 356 to the
        autumn of 359.
         The Bishop of Poitiers was one of those persons to
        whom idleness is insupportable. He contrived to send orders, from time to time,
        to the clergy of his diocese. They were thoroughly loyal to him; and his
        wishes, when known, were as completely carried out in his absence as when he
        was in the midst of his flock. Not being, by the terms of his sentence,
        absolutely confined to one spot, Hilary took advantage of the liberty allowed
        him to examine into the state of religion in such parts of Asia Minor as he could
        reach. His impressions were exceedingly unfavorable;
        and he has not left us a good report of his brother-bishops in that province.
        Part of the evil prevalent arose from misunderstandings. On the one hand, the
        bishops in Gaul imagined that their brethren in Asia were right-down Arians.
        This was a mistake. They were mostly semi-Arians. The Asiatic prelates fancied,
        on the other hand, that the bishops of Gaul were lapsing into the error known
        as Sabellianism. The consideration of these errors must form the subject of a
        separate chapter. For the present, it is enough to say that Hilary took great
        pains to remove these mutual misapprehensions, and that his efforts were
        attended, though not immediately, with a very considerable measure of success.
         Meanwhile, some more local councils were held, two
        at Sirmium (now called Szerem),
        in Sclavonia, and one at Ancyra, in Galatia. We
        may suppose from the tone of these gatherings, as compared with others of the
        three years previous, the current of opinion among Christians was undergoing
        some change. For whereas, between the years 353-356 inclusive, councils held at
        Aries, at Milan, and at Beziers, had all proved Arian, two of those named above
        had been semi-Arian, which was an improvement; and
        one, the first of Sirmium, could almost claim to have been orthodox in
        character. It is, however, possible that these differences depended upon
        circumstances connected with place rather than with time.
         But neither communications with friends in Gaul, nor
        interviews with Christians in Phrygia, nor attention to the affairs of these
        councils, could suffice to fill up all the leisure time of a bishop who had now
        no diocese to administer, except indirectly, nor ordi nations
        nor confirmations to hold, nor, it would seem, any sermons to deliver.
         The consequence was, that Hilary undertook the
        composition of two very important treatises, of which we must say more
        hereafter—his books on Synods ("De Synodis"),
        and that upon the Holy Trinity ("De Trinitate").
        The former, which is chiefly historical, is an olive-branch stretched out to
        the semi-Arians—one of those conciliatory treatises which, in modern times, is
        known as an Irenicon. The latter, a much larger and more important
        composition, is to a large extent positive in its teaching; but several of its
        books are occupied with answering objections, and those objections are almost
        exclusively Arian ones.
          
             CHAPTER VI. THE QUESTIONS AT ISSUE.
              
             Before any one can convince himself that it
        is his duty to encounter danger, and possibly death, for the sake of a
        particular doctrine, he must needs satisfy his own heart and conscience on two
        questions. The first is, whether the religion for which he meditates a combat
        is worth preserving; the second, whether the doctrine which is assailed is an
        essential part of that religion.
             On the question, Whether Christianity is worth
        preserving, we possess, in our day, a mass of evidence which in earlier ages
        did not exist. Many thinkers, who do not commit themselves to the acceptance of
        the Christian faith, acknowledge the wonderful amount of good which it has
        effected for the human race. Even Gibbon, at the commencement of the chapters
        intended to undermine its influence, admits that it is the religion professed
        by "the most distinguished portion of human kind in arts and learning, as
        well as in arms". The beauty of the character of its Founder has
        been recognised by unbelievers, such as Rousseau and J. S. Mill. Its
        extraordinary influence in the correction of social vices has been portrayed
        with much fulness, and with the most earnest desire to be fair, by Mr.
        Lecky. This learned and gifted writer, while stating all that seems to him most
        faulty or deficient in Christian tenets and practices, maintains that
        Christianity revolutionised public opinion in regard to the sanctity
        of human life, the universality of human brotherhood, the value of purity.
         In the age of Hilary, Christianity had not had time to
        leaven society, and much of the argument in its favour was
        consequently inaccessible. One thing, however, Christians had, which we rarely
        possess, in the way of demonstration of their superiority. They had besides
        them the actual working of paganism. A Christian writer of our own time has
        declared that it is almost necessary to have lived in non-Christian lands in
        order to appreciate the work of Christianity. In the Europe of the fourth
        century the manners, the rites, the morals of paganism were still a living
        reality. It is not necessary to exaggerate those evils, or to forget how
        painfully short of its own ideal Christian life has constantly fallen. But the
        contrast, nevertheless, is great and deep. Hilary could have no hesitation in
        answering the question whether, even on grounds short of the highest,
        Christianity was worth preserving.
         The second question may possibly present, or, at
        least, seem to present, greater difficulties. It is not to be denied that, from
        time to time, some assault of controversy has been thought likely to endanger
        the very citadel of Christianity, which, on further investigation, has been
        proved to be a mere attack upon an outwork, and an outwork, moreover, of which
        the retention is of little importance. Even so great a man as St. Augustine
        imagined that to admit the existence of people living at the antipodes would
        imperil the Christian faith. How far the Copernican system of astronomy lies
        under condemnation among our Roman Catholic fellow-Christians may be a moot
        point. That when taught by Galileo it caused profound alarm, and that he was in
        some measure persecuted for his proclamation of it, is unquestionable. Again,
        many learned and excellent persons in our own day have regarded as a vital
        question, the precise theory adopted by us respecting the mode in which the
        sacrifice of our Lord's death wrought the redemption of the human race. Others,
        again, have used language which would almost seem to imply that the entire
        fabric of Christian doctrine would collapse, if the commonly accepted date or
        authorship of a single book of the Bible were found to be incorrect.
         There are not wanting those, especially among sceptics and
        bystanders, who maintain that the solemn truth, of which Hilary in the West and
        Athanasius in the East were the most conspicuous champions, is a question of
        this nature. This is not the place for an elaborate refutation of a grave and
        deadly error; but it must be observed, that the opposite conviction, namely,
        that the divinity of our Lord is the central truth of our holy faith, is the
        conviction of the overwhelming majority of those who profess and call
        themselves Christians. So completely is this the case where definitions in
        accordance with it have been given, that it would be almost impossible to
        detect from internal evidence to what denomination of Christians the writer
        belonged. "The Christian religion", writes one, "that is to say,
        the redemption of men by a God made man". Or, again, in the fuller
        statement of another, "What is, in fact, Christianity? what is its
        fundamental position, the base, the substance of all its doctrines? What is the
        Gospel, that is to say, the news which it announces to the world? It is that,
        in consequence of an original and hereditary enfeeblement, man—every man
        without distinction—had lost the power of fulfilling, and even of knowing his
        duty, and would, consequently, perish without a chance of safety if God had not
        come in human form to reopen to him the sources of virtue, of pardon, and of
        life. Therein lies the sum of Christianity. It is only Christians who sign that
        creed". In like manner, a poet of this age in speaking of another poet,
        Robert Browning, describes him as one who "holds with a force of personal
        passion the radical tenet of the Christian faith—faith in Christ as God—a
        tough, hard, vital faith, that can bear at need hard stress of weather and hard
        thought."
         Once more. "The essence of the belief is the
        belief in the divinity of Christ. Every view of history, every theory of our
        duty, must be radically transformed by contact with that stupendous
        mystery. Unsectarian Christianity consists in shirking the difficulty
        without meeting it, and trying hard to believe that the passion can survive
        without its essential basis. It proclaims the love of Christ as our motive,
        whilst it declines to make up its mind whether Christ was God or man; or endeavors to escape a categorical answer under a cloud of
        unsubstantial rhetoric. But the difference between God and man is infinite, and
        no effusion of superlatives will disguise the plain fact from honest minds. To
        be a Christian in any real sense, you must start from a dogma of the most
        tremendous kind, and an undogmatic creed is as senseless as a statue without
        shape, or a picture without color. Of the authors of
        these words, two are Christians; but the last two quotations are taken from
        writings of avowed unbelievers in Christianity.
         The position of dogmas in the scheme of Christian
        doctrine has been not inaptly likened to that of the bones in the animal frame.
        Of course, such a comparison must needs remind us that the skeleton is not the
        man; veins and arteries, nerves and muscles, organs of the senses, flesh and
        skin, and much besides, are needed for the completeness of the structure into
        which its Maker breathed a soul. Hut certainly the boneless creatures, such as
        the jelly-fish, occupy a low place in the scale of creation, and a religion
        without dogmas would resemble them. To dwell on dogma only would result in an
        equally imperfect sort of religion. Such a religion would be cold and dry.
             It must also be conceded that from time to time there
        has been manifested in almost every Christian community a tendency to erect
        into a dogma some tenet which, at the best, can only be regarded as a pious
        opinion. This is a real infringement upon Christian liberty, and it inevitably
        does harm in many ways, more especially by throwing suspicion on the dogmatic
        principle. That the borderline may in some cases be difficult to draw is
        undeniable, but, generally speaking, a dogma may be defined as "a fundamental
        principle of saving truth, expressed or implied in Holy Scripture, taught by
        the Church Universal, and consonant to sound reason". It may well be
        doubted whether any corporate body can be held together without some essential
        principle or set of principles correspondent to dogma. Certainly it must be
        difficult to name any religion that has lived and energised, apart from
        the dogmatic principle. In a drama of the last century, "Nathan the
        Wise", its author, the celebrated Lessing, appears to suggest that the
        good specimens of the Mahometan, the Jewish, and the Christian religion
        therein portrayed prove the unimportance of dogma. It is somewhat singular that
        he should have drawn representatives of the three most dogmatic religions in
        the world, the Jewish, the Mahometan, and the Christian. All three repose
        upon the basis of belief in the unity of the living God, a future life, and
        judgment to come.
         We may seem to have wandered very far from the fourth
        century and the city of Poitiers, and the eminent bishop of whose life and
        times we are treating; but we are convinced that a realisation of the
        continued prominence and importance of certain questions in our own day must
        help us in the attempt to appreciate fairly the conduct and character of the
        men of earlier ages. To throw ourselves back by a vigorous effort of the
        imagination into times in many respects, so unlike our own is, indeed, most
        desirable, The task, however, though well worth essaying, is not always easy.
        But this much we may all be able to perceive, that a question which is vital in
        the nineteenth century may well have been as vital in the fourth century. If,
        indeed, we have made up our minds that Christianity is not worth preserving,
        then martyrs, confessors, reformers of all time have made a woful mistake, and we cannot possibly sympathise with
        them, far less feel gratitude to their memories. In like manner, if we can
        persuade ourselves that it is unimportant whether our Lord be simply a
        creature, or God Incarnate, then, of course, those who underwent persecution on
        behalf of His Godhead must be regarded as foolish men, who contended for a
        shadow.
         But we are writing specially for those who believe in
        the Christian faith, and who accept as among its most fundamental tenets the
        doctrine of the Incarnation, as well as that of the Holy Trinity. At the risk
        of some seeming repetition, it will be necessary to set down here the Catholic
        faith on each of these verities, and the particular deflections from them
        against which Hilary made it the business of his life to contend.
             And, in the first place, as concerns the Holy Trinity.
        The following are among the leading propositions concerning the Great Being
        whose creatures we are. God is One. He has existed from all eternity. Nothing
        can have come into being without His good-will and pleasure. Consequently,
        those who imagined that matter is eternal—a common mistake among the
        heathen—were, though perhaps not always intentionally, denying God's
        Almightiness; for, if anything has existed without His good-will and pleasure,
        it is evident that He is not Almighty. There was, then, a long eternity, when
        as yet created things were not, and God reigned alone—alone, but not solitary,
        for that in the Oneness of the Godhead there was ever intercommunion between
        the three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. "Before the mountains were
        brought forth, or ever Thou hadst formed the earth and the world,
        even from everlasting to everlasting, Thou art God". But there never was a
        time when the eternal Father had not with Him His image, the eternal Son; just
        as—if such poor earthly illustrations may be pardoned—a twig growing by the
        waterside has from the first its own reflected image ever by it. There never
        was a time when there did not proceed, from the Father immediately, from the
        Son mediately, the Holy Ghost. The Father is the One God, the Son is the
        One God, the Holy Ghost is the One God; and yet the Father is not the Son, nor
        the Son the Holy Ghost, nor the Holy Ghost the Father. Further, though all
        three Persons are of one substance, power, majesty, and eternity, yet is a
        certain priority of dignity conceived to reside in the Father, forasmuch as He
        is represented in Holy Scripture as being ministered to by the Son and the
        Spirit, but never as ministering; as sending, but never sent; as begotten of
        none, proceeding from none, being the source and origin of Godhead.
         What are the mistakes on this lofty theme to which
        even devout and believing minds are liable? They are two. It is possible to
        dwell so much upon the separate work of each Person as virtually to make three
        Gods. This is the error knon as Tritheism.
        A tendency in this direction is probably exhibited by persons who allow
        themselves to regard the Son as the more merciful, the Father the more severe;
        for this at once introduces into the Divine Being a separation of will.
         The other error seems to arise from a wish to escape
        from mystery. And yet it would in reality be an argument against the truth of
        any representation of the Divine Nature, if it involved an entire freedom from
        mystery. Even our own finite and created natures have about them a great deal
        of mystery,—"we are fearfully and wonderfully made". How, then, can
        we expect that revealed truth concerning the Creator should be devoid of
        mystery? We cannot, indeed, believe that which is contrary to reason; but we
        surely may be ready to accept that there is that which is above and beyond
        reason.
         Now, this other error lies in regarding the threefold
        Personality as being only an exhibition of the same Being, so to speak, in
        different relations to us. These erroneous teachers spoke of the Triune Godhead
        in language which, in fact, represented God as One Person. They said, according
        to Epiphanius, that as in one man there is body, soul, and spirit; so the
        Father resembled the body, the Son the soul, and the Holy Ghost the Spirit.
        Such was the teaching of a heretic of the second century, named Sabellius;
        whence the error itself is commonly termed Sabellianism. As, however, it
        would involve the unscriptural inference that the Father had suffered on our
        behalf, it was also sometimes known by a word expressive of this tenet. This
        other name was Patripassianism, and its
        adherents were accordingly sometimes called Patripassians and
        sometimes Sabellians. A profound thinker of the
        Middle Ages, the great schoolman Aquinas, declares that we are all tempted
        sometimes towards imagining too great a separation, sometimes too great an
        identification of the Persons of the ever-blessed Trinity, and that thus the
        human mind, if it be not watchful, may alternately be swayed in the direction
        of Tritheism and in that of Sabellianism. There is, probably,
        much truth in this remark, and the caution is one for which we should be
        grateful.
         It would not have been necessary to introduce the
        subject of Sabellianism into this sketch, but for the fact to which
        reference has been made—that the bishops of Gaul, who supported Hilary in his
        struggle against Arianism, were suspected of that error. The suspicion seems to
        have been a thoroughly erroneous one. It probably arose from a misunderstanding
        of the Greek term Homousion, which,
        though it means of one substance, or of one being, was
        never intended by the Greek-speaking theologians to indicate Oneness of
        Personality.
         But the second great truth of the Gospel Revelation,
        the Incarnation of our Lord, was the main subject of debate at this time.
        Christianity brought before the world an idea, an institution, and a Person.
        The idea, if we may attempt to grasp the leading idea of a religion so profound
        and far-reaching, may, perhaps, be stated thus,—a blending of the human with
        the divine, which should be recognized as at once pure and reverent,
        awful and merciful, subduing and elevating, historical and yet eternal. It is
        almost needless to observe, that the attempts made to reach such an idea in
        other religions all fail in some of these particulars. The legends of Greece
        and Rome are too often the very reverse of pure. The incarnations of Vishnu,
        narrated in Hindoo records, are neither reverent nor enduring. How
        completely the historic element is lacking to them may be gathered from one
        single fact, that we do not know the date, nor anything like the date, of any
        one of those Sanskrit books which are regarded by Hindoos as
        sacred.
         As an institution, the amount of freedom combined with
        order exhibited in the Church became an object of admiration to the natives of
        countries which were either suffering from sheer anarchy, or else weighed down
        by despotism. Indeed, Gibbon names among the causes of the spread of
        Christianity the excellence of its organisation; and, though his ways of
        solving the problem of its growth are quite inadequate, and in many respects
        erroneous, yet he is not altogether wrong in his selection; and this is a point
        which, so far as it reaches, contains at least a measure of truth.
         An idea may possess great power. The idea of national
        independence has played a large part in history; witness the annals of ancient
        Greece, of Switzerland, of Scotland, or of modern Italy. Institutions may also
        mould the mind of nations; those Attributed to Lycurgus certainly molded the mind of Sparta. But no idea, nor cycle of
        ideas, no institution, however well organised, could have won the
        reverence, the obedience, the enthusiasm, which the Christian religion won by
        its exhibition of the Person of its Founder. "In addition to all the
        characters of Hebrew Monotheism, there exists, in the doctrine of the Cross, a
        peculiar and inexhaustible treasure for the affectionate feelings. The idea of
        the God-man, the God whose goings forth have been from everlasting, yet visible
        to men for their redemption as an earthly temporal creature, living, acting,
        and suffering among themselves; then—which is yet more important—transferring
        to the unseen place of His spiritual agency the same humanity He wore on earth,
        so that the lapse of generations can in no way affect the conception of His
        identity; this is the most powerful thought that ever addressed itself to a
        human imagination. It is the fulcrum which alone was wanting to move the world.
        Here was solved at once the great problem which so long had distressed the
        teachers of mankind, how to make virtue the object of passion, and to secure at
        once the warmest enthusiasm in the heart, with the clearest perception of right
        and wrong in the understanding. The character of the Blessed Founder of our
        faith became an abstract of morality to determine the judgment, while at the
        same time it remained personal and liable to love. The Written Word and
        Established Church prevented a degeneration into ungoverned mysticism, but the
        predominant principle of vital religion always remained that of self-sacrifice
        to the Saviour. Not only the higher divisions of moral duties, but the
        simple, primary impulse of benevolence, were subordinated to this new absorbing
        passion. The world was loved 'in Christ alone'. The brethren were members of
        His mystical body. All the other bonds that had fastened down the Spirit of the
        Universe to our narrow round of earth were as nothing in comparison to this
        golden chain of suffering and self-sacrifice, which at once riveted the heart
        of man to One who, like Himself, was acquainted with grief. Pain is the deepest
        thing we have in our nature, and union through pain has always seemed more holy
        and more real than any other.
         Now, as it pleased God, doubtless for wise ends, to
        allow that controversies should arise, it was natural that those which
        concerned the Person of the great Prophet who taught this creed should be among
        the first to occupy the attention of Christendom; for that question, it must be
        repeated, touches the very essentials of Christianity. Between those who
        worship Christ, as God of God, the second Person of the adorable Trinity, and
        those who make Him a creature, there must needs be a great gulf. True, that the
        latter class may say that He is no ordinary man; that He is the noblest, best,
        purest, and highest of all creatures. But, on this supposition, He is still a
        creature; and to give to a creature the honour due to God alone is
        the very essence of idolatry.
         Now this—when veils of subtlety are torn away— this
        question, and nothing less, had been the subject of discussion at the Council
        of Nice. The sceptical historian, to whom reference has just been
        made, exhibits in his narrative many strange anomalies. Carried away by the
        grandeur of Athanasius, Gibbon has drawn a picture of that great man, not,
        indeed, appreciative in the same sense as that given by Hooker, but yet so full
        of life and vigour, that good judges have pronounced it superior to that
        contained in the pages of any ecclesiastical historian. Nevertheless, his love
        of gibes has induced him to suggest, that because the respective watchwords of
        the orthodox, and of the Arians, or at least the Semi-Arians, differed but in a
        single letter, the difference between the two was vague, shadowy, and by no
        means vital.
         Whether Gibbon really believed this, whether he could
        have persuaded himself, that such a man, as he acknowledges Athanasius to be,
        would have written and argued, toiled and suffered, through his long career for
        the sake of a mere phantom, a splitting of words, seems very doubtful. But he
        has contrived to impress the motion, not only upon large masses of ordinary
        readers, but on the minds of many men of eminence, especially among such as,
        however great in the domain of scholarship, or physical science, have
        never bestowed much real thought upon questions of theology.
         It is true that the terms, "of one
        substance", and "of like substance", do, in the original
        language of the Nicene Creed, differ but by a single letter. It is equally
        true, that the word Creatour, as it used to be
        spelt, differs by one letter only from the word creature. Both Arius and
        Athanasius knew perfectly well that their respective watchwords did involve
        that vital difference. After-ages have clearly shown this. In our own day we
        might search the wide world over, and scarcely anywhere should we find a
        congregation of Arians, still less of Semi-Arians. Their position has been felt
        to be untenable. But the position to which the teaching of Arius was sure to
        lead, namely, that Christ is a mere man, is that of hundreds who acknowledge
        His historic existence. And still the truth for which the opponents of Arius
        contended, the divinity of our Lord and Saviour, is to the faithful the
        life's life of their spiritual being,—
         The holy Church throughout all the world doth
        acknowledge Thee, The Father of an infinite majesty; Thine honourable,
        true, and only Son; Also the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
         Whether, indeed, those who maintain that the Founder
        of Christianity, if a mere man, can be regarded as a good man, is one of the
        serious difficulties which must be faced by Socinians and their
        allies. This has been forcibly pointed out by writers of our own day, as by
        Canon Liddon in his "Bampton Lectures," and by the
        author of a short treatise especially dedicated to its consideration. We
        believe that it will become more and more evident, to those who really study
        the question, that to maintain that Jesus Christ was simply human, and was yet
        humble and devout, is to defend a position which is logically inconsistent and
        untenable.
         
         CHAPTER VII. HILARY AND THE ARIANS.
              
             Athanasius stands in the front rank of that great
        contest to which reference has just been made. It is some satisfaction to find
        in the present day writers who either look on the matter from outside as calm
        spectators, or else are actually hostile to Christianity, entirely abjuring the
        notion that the cause, of which the Bishop of Alexandria was the prime
        champion, could possibly be one of trivial importance.
             But, though Athanasius was the leader, he never found
        sufficient leisure for the production of any very long or elaborate treatise,
        and he only addressed those who could understand the Greek language. Here it
        was that Hilary came so powerfully to the aid of his fellow-laborer in
        the cause of truth. The act of Constantius, which for more than three years
        deprived the diocese of Poitiers of Hilary's superintendence, left the bishop
        at leisure, as has been remarked, for the composition of the twelve books
        "De Trinitate", of which so many are
        occupied with a refutation of Arianism. This work was widely read, and it must
        have proved a mine from which men of less leisure and ability might extract a
        large mass of valuable material. It supplied all—some would say
        even more than all—to the readers of Latin, which was given by Athanasius
        in his "Orations against the Arians" to the readers of Greek.
         It will be seen also, in our next chapter, that all
        the acts and writings of Hilary which tended to bring back Semi-Arians to the
        faith, must have, at least indirectly, had the effect of weakening the cause of
        Arianism. Among the writings having this object in view must be named Hilary's
        treatise, "De Synodis", and a history
        of the Councils of Seleucia and of Rimini, of which we have only fragments.
        Among his actions in the same direction, we must include his labors in France after his return from Phrygia; and
        also a visit to Italy.
         To Hilary, as to Athanasius, the contest against
        Arianism seems to have presented itself in that light in which we have already
        attempted to place it namely, as a practical answer to the questions whether
        Christianity was worth preserving, and whether the doctrine of the Redeemer's
        Godhead was an essential element of Christianity? If both these questions were
        to be answered in the affirmative, then exile, with loss of the charities and
        comforts of home life; then toil and thought and study; then conferences with
        supporters and with misguided opponents; then breaches of friendship with the
        authorities of the state; then even occasional misunderstandings with personal
        friends must all be worth enduring, in consideration of the example and
        commands of Christ, of the teaching of His Apostles, and of the greatness of
        the issue at stake, which embraces not only time, but eternity. "To this
        end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world that I should
        bear witness unto the Truth ... Though we, or an angel from heaven, preach
        any other gospel unto you than that which ;we have preached unto you, let him
        be accursed. Many deceivers are come into the world, who confess not that Jesus
        Christ is come in the flesh. This is a deceiver and an anti-Christ ... It was
        needful for me to write unto you, and exhort you that ye should earnestly
        contend for the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints".
         We inherit in peace the results of the toils and
        sufferings of these confessors of the fourth century. Is it well for us
        to criticize with severity any mistakes which they may have made? to
        censure lightly any rare and occasional asperities of language which they may
        have employed? or to be wholly careless and unthankful for the examples which
        they have set for their many wise and loving words for the victories won by
        them, of which we of later ages reap the benefits?
         
         CHAPTER VIII. HILARY AND THE SEMI-ARIANS.
              
             We are all aware that, in contests concerning
        literature, or art, or politics, it is not uncommon to find men who are
        instinctively drawn to take a middle course. Such men would not in the field of
        letters take part wholly with what are known respectively as the classic or the
        romantic schools. In art they would shrink alike from the ardent denunciation
        of the Renaissance spirit which the author of "Modern Painters" and
        "The Stones of Venice" employs, and from the vehement reaction which
        has now set in upon the other side. In politics, they would, perhaps, proclaim
        themselves what we now call Liberal-Conservatives. Few but extreme enthusiasts
        would deny the possible rightfulness of such a position. Indeed, to many minds
        it comes with a prestige in its favor, as the
        exhibition of a judicial temper.
         It must, however, be evident that such a principle
        carries with it dangers of its own. A famous Greek philosopher, from finding
        that, as a matter of fact, virtues generally lay between two extremes, one of
        excess and another of defect, actually taught that this was part of the essence
        of virtue, and introduced it into his definition. But the theory burdens
        his scheme of morals with difficulties, which he has not solved. Is it, for
        example, possible for a man to be really too just? Is it conceivable that a heart
        could be too pure? Surely more deep and true is the enunciation of our
        Christian philosopher, Bishop Butler, when he speaks of truth or right being
        "something real in itself, and so not to be judged of by its liableness to
        abuse, or by its supposed distance from, or nearness to, error". Most
        especially must Butler's remark be applicable to any truth which we believe
        that God Himself has revealed to us.
         Semi-Arianism looks like one of these attempts to take
        a middle course, where no middle course was in reality possible. Viewed as a
        system of theology, Semi-Arianism is as untenable as Arianism. It involved, as
        has truly been said, the following contradictions : "That the Son was born
        before all times, yet not eternal; not a creature, yet not God; of His
        substance, yet not the same in substance; and His perfect and exact resemblance
        in all things, yet not a second Deity". An English theologian of the last
        century, Dr. Clarke, who seems to have been almost a
        Semi-Arian, was asked whether upon his theory he supposed that God the Father
        could annihilate the Son and the Holy Ghost. After long consideration, he
        avowed himself unable to reply. Of course, he perceived that an
        answer either in the affirmative or in the negative would be equally fatal to
        his theory. If the Father could annihilate the Son and the Spirit, then they
        must be merely creatures. If he could not annihilate them, this could only be
        because they are one with Himself, of equal power, majesty, and glory.
         Now, it might naturally be supposed from these
        considerations that the champions of the Nicene Faith would practically regard
        Semi-Arians in the same light as that in which they regarded Arians; and,
        indeed, there was one school of orthodox thinkers who did so regard them; who
        considered the differences between the two sets of opponents too slight to
        deserve consideration, and who made an absolute admission of the Creed of Nicaea a
        primary condition of intercommunion and peace. The leader of this section of
        the orthodox was Lucifer, bishop of Cagliari, or, as he is sometimes
        called, bishop of Sardinia, the island of which Cagliari is the capital. He was
        a brave and earnest defender of the faith, but not always wise or considerate.
         But on this, as on almost every point of the controversy,
        Athanasius and Hilary, though separated and in different lands, thought and
        acted in almost perfect harmony and unison. They both perceived that, though as
        a theory Semi-Arianism had little if any claim to be thought superior to
        Arianism, yet that many of the Semi-Arians were in tone and temper of
        mind exceedingly different from the Arians. There was certainly a detachment of
        them who appear to have been reverent and unworldly, and who showed keenness in
        detecting and in repressing other errors of the day. Athanasius, in a
        well-known passage, declares that those who accepted all that was passed at
        Nice except the term of one substance were to be treated as brothers, whose
        difference was one of terms rather than of real meaning. He felt confidence
        that in time they would come to see its value and accept it.
         This feeling pervades the treatise on Synods
        ("De Synodis"), a letter which Hilary,
        while still in exile, addressed to his brother-bishops in Gaul. They were
        probably disappointed to find that many of those who had supported the cause of
        truth at Nice had not shown wisdom or firmness when they returned to their
        sees; and they desired some explanation of the numerous professions of faith
        which the Orientals seemed to be putting forth. Their questions had a practical
        bearing, for the Emperor Constantius had ordered that two fresh councils
        should be held—one for the East, and one for the West of Christendom. The
        Western one was to meet at Ariminum, on the
        eastern coast of Italy, the place since known as Rimini,—
          
             "Where Po descends,
         With all his followers, in search of peace.
              
             The place of the Eastern gathering was at first fixed
        at Nicomedia; but on August the 24th, in AD 358, a terrible
        earthquake all but overthrew the entire city. At the time
        when Hilary wrote, Ancyra had in consequence been fixed upon, but ultimately
        Seleucia was chosen.
         Now, Hilary was very anxious that his Gallic brethren,
        and also the British bishops, should come to Rimini in a charitable frame of
        mind towards the Semi-Arians. He praises his friends in Gaul in his De Synodis for their firmness in opposing the Arian bishop
        of Arles, Saturninus, and considers that they had done well in rejecting
        some unsatisfactory forms of expression put forth at a recent assembly held
        at Sirmium. But as regards the Semi-Arian watchword "of like
        substance" (homoiousion) he would not have them
        reject it too hastily without examination. There were those who, from malice or
        ignorance, had misunderstood the orthodox term "of one substance" in
        such wise as to make it identify the Personality of the Son with that of the
        Father, and become, in fact, a symbol of Sabellianism. Now, as on the
        "one hand the orthodox term might be perverted, so, on the other, was the
        unorthodox one capable of a good interpretation. Some of those who used it had
        been frightened from the use of the true word by the misinterpretation, and, when
        they said "of like substance", did in reality mean to imply an
        identity of substance, as well as of power, majesty, and glory between the
        Father and the Son. Asia Minor in general is, writes Hilary, in a sad
        condition. "I do not speak of things strange; I do not write without
        knowledge; I have heard and seen in my own person the faults, not of laymen
        merely, but of bishops; for excepting Eleusius, and a
        few with him, the ten provinces of Asia in which I am, are, for the most part,
        truly ignorant of God". Now this Eleusius,
        bishop of Cyzicus, was one of the Semi-Arians. With him Hilary also names,
        as distinguished for blamelessness of life, the bishops of Sebaste and of Ancyra, by name respectively Eustathius
        and Basil. The last-named was a man of high culture and learning.
         From the champions of the Catholic faith in Gaul,
        Hilary turns to his friends among the Semi-Arians. He seems willing to concede
        the possibility of a creed being accepted which should embrace both terms; or
        that the Son should be described as "being of one and of like substance
        with the Father". This would show that the orthodox did not mean to
        teach Sabellianism; it would also show that the difference between Arians
        and Semi-Arians was a vital one, while that between the Semi-Arians and
        Catholics was rather metaphysical and verbal, than in reality doctrinal.
        "Grant me", says Hilary to the Semi-Arians, "that indulgence
        which I have so often demanded at your hands. You are not Arians; why do you
        get the reputation of being Arians by your denial of the homoousion?"
        For his own part, Hilary lad learned his faith from the New Testament,
        especially the Gospels. "Although I was baptised"— such are his
        words—"many years ago, and have held for some time the office of a bishop,
        I never heard the Nicene Creed, until just before the date of my exile. But the
        Gospels and the Apostles made me understand the true sense of the homoousion and homoiousion. My desires are pious ones. Let us not
        condemn the Fathers, let us not stir up the heretics, lest, in our attempt to
        banish heresy, we in reality cherish it."
         Such was Hilary's endeavor to
        act as a peacemaker. It is frequently the fate of such to be suspected,
        sometimes upon one side, sometimes upon both sides. In the case before us,
        though the Semi-Arians were not prepared to act upon Hilary's suggestions, they
        did not, so far as we know, complain of any misrepresentation of their views,
        nor question the good faith of the writer. But Hilary was not so fortunate on
        the other side. He ought, one would think, to have been considered above
        suspicion. His communications with the Emperor Constantius, which we must
        consider in another chapter, the tone of his commentary on the Gospel of St.
        Matthew, the very fact that he was now suffering exile as a confessor on behalf
        of the faith, should have preserved him from assault on the side of the
        orthodox. But there was an extreme wing, more Athanasian than Athanasius himself—if
        the expression may be pardoned— who were for rejecting the very semblance of
        compromise, and thought that the proposals of Hilary had conceded too much to
        the Semi-Arians. The leader of this set was, as has been intimated, sincere and
        earnest, but somewhat harsh-minded, Lucifer of Cagliari. It must be owned that
        there were many Semi-Arians, who were unlike the three "very holy
        men" to whom Hilary refers; men to whose shiftings and whose want, either of clearness of understanding, or of straightforwardness
        of purpose, must have afforded some excuse to the Sardinian prelate. Of
        Hilary's personal behaviour towards him Lucifer could not, however,
        have found any reason to complain. For Hilary, as soon as he heard of Lucifer's
        objection to the "De Synodis", sent
        Lucifer a copy of the treatise, with an appendage of notes of an apologetic
        character, concluded in a tone of thorough courtesy and gentleness.
         One feature of Semi-Arian reasoning will fall
        naturally into our next chapter, because it was specially insisted on by the
        Emperor Constantius. But it will make our narrative clearer if we relate in
        this place the remainder of Hilary's dealings with the Semi-Arians, although it
        may carry us a little beyond that period of his exile with which these chapters
        are specially concerned.
             In the autumn of AD 359 the two
        councils summoned by Constantius actually met; the gathering of the Orientals
        being at Seleucia in Isauria, that of the
        Occidentals at Rimini. If the better-disposed among the Semi-Arians could have
        held their own at these two councils, it is probable that the recommendations
        of Hilary would have been virtually accepted, and comparative tranquillity have
        been restored. Possibly, however, after all it might have proved a hollow
        peace; and, if so, the disaster that ensued may have been overruled by God's
        providence to lasting good. That disaster was simply this, that both at
        Seleucia and at Rimini the Semi-Arians were quite outmanoeuvred, though not
        precisely in the same manner, by the bolder and less scrupulous Arians. As a
        dweller, though a constrained one, in the East, as the bishop of an important
        see in the West, Hilary found his career inseparably blended with the acts of
        both these councils.
         At that of Seleucia he was for a time personally
        present, having been, in fact, compelled to attend it by the secular
        authorities. There, amidst a gathering of about 150 bishops, Hilary found a
        comparatively small section of the supporters of orthodoxy, chiefly from Egypt;
        a considerable number of Semi-Arians, and a party of Ultra-Arians, who, from
        their watchword of actual unlikeness between the Father and the Son, are known
        in history as the Anomoeans. The language
        of this school so utterly shocked Hilary that he retired from the assembly. He
        had, indeed, effected some good by taking the opportunity of explaining the
        true position of his friends in Gaul. It may have also been partially owing to
        his influence that the leader of the Ultra-Arians, Acacius, found himself
        unable to carry out his own plans, though he contrived to win so much support
        from the Semi-Arians as to frustrate any decision in favour of the
        Creed of Nicaea.
         In the Latin council held at Rimini the orthodox
        bishops were proportionally far more numerous, being no less than 320 out of
        400. The imperial commissioners sent by Constantius found that their friends
        were so outnumbered, that the Nicene Creed would be almost certainly reaffirmed
        and Arianism again condemned. The council deposed these commissioners, and sent
        a deputation to Constantinople to inform the emperor of the sentiment pervading
        it. By delays, on the pretext that the barbarian war demanded his attention,
        and by threats, Constantius overawed this deputation. Valens, the Gallic bishop
        already mentioned in an earlier chapter, declared that he and his friends
        condemned Arius and Arianism, and all the well-known watchwords of the sect,
        such as the assertions that "there was a time when the Word was not";
        that "he was a creature as other creatures"; and the like. But they
        entreated the defenders of the Catholic faith that, for peace sake, they would
        give up the term "of one substance" (homoousioi),
        and adopt instead the assertion "that the Son was like the Father" (homoioii) The majority gave way, and Valens exulted in his
        triumph. The condemnation of the error "that the Son was not a creature as
        other creatures" necessarily left room for the inference that, after all,
        not merely as man, but even before His Incarnation, He was, in some sense, a
        creature. And the result of the Council of Rimini was made famous by the
        often-quoted words of St. Jerome, "that the world awoke one morning and
        groaned in its astonishment at finding itself Arian."
         It will, however, be seen that Hilary, after his
        return to Gaul, was not willing to refuse communion, as many of his allies
        desired, to all the bishops who had been led to sign the formula adopted at
        Rimini. In Italy, where he travelled for a time and spent more than two years
        of his later life (a.d. 362-364), this conciliatory
        course was attended with partial, but only partial, success. But in his native
        land, where he had pursued it before the journey to
        Italy, it proved thoroughly efficacious. It detached the Semi-Arians
        from the Arians, and won them back to the truth. It led to the condemnation
        of Saturninus of Arles, and to the triumph of the Catholic faith on
        the Holy Trinity and the Incarnation throughout all the Christian parts of
        Gaul. The friend and pupil of Hilary, Martin of Tours, found, indeed, plenty to
        do in the way of conversion of his countrymen from heathenism in portions of
        the land yet unconverted; and a later generation had its own difficulties in
        southern France, in connexion with the difficult problems respecting
        grace and free-will, Pelagianism and Semi-Pelagianism. But for the overthrow in
        Gaul, and beyond its limits, of the first grievous error concerning the
        adorable Person of the Redeemer of the world, our gratitude is chiefly due to
        the combination of firmness with charity which marked the life and labours of
        Hilary.
         If, then, we may venture briefly to sum up his
        sentiments towards the Semi-Arians, they would be found, if we mistake not, to
        run somewhat as follows :— "There is heresy, and there is heretical pravity.
        Heresy, or the denial of saving truth, may be uttered by many who are sound at
        heart, but who have been misled by want of intelligence and of perception of
        the points really at issue. But heretical pravity means something
        much worse than this; it is the enunciation of heresy in a really heretical
        temper of mind, and it can be detected by its tone of irreverence and
        its utter unscrupulousness with regard to means. Arius, with his appeals to the
        unworthy analogies of earthly generation, with the songs for drinking
        parties, which embodied his errors, with his supple courtliness and
        inveiglement of the civil power into his schemes, is the very type and
        embodiment of heretical pravity. But the Semi-Arians, though their creed
        may be hardly less erroneous, are in many cases far better than their creed.
        They have been often weak, often dull of perception, and unskilful in
        the use of terms, but I have found them often to be reverent towards Holy
        Scripture, learned, and blameless of life. Hence, what may seem at first an
        inconsistency, my uncompromising attitude towards the defenders of Arianism; my
        moderation towards the Semi-Arians. I have taken the men as I found them. For
        justification I may in this case, at least, appeal to the results. The judgment
        on my career I leave to the justice of posterity and the mercy of Him whom I
        have tried to serve."
          
             CHAPTER IX. HILARY AND THE EMPEROR.
              
             The title which is prefixed to this chapter is open to
        a technical objection. A critic might urge against it that Hilary came into
        contact with two actual emperors, and with another magnate who became an
        emperor during Hilary's lifetime, though at the epoch when they met he was
        only recognised as an heir to the throne; as a Caesar, not as an
        Augustus. The two actual emperors were Constantius II. and Valentinian;
        the Caesar was the youth who was afterwards to be known to all time by the
        title of Julian the Apostate.
         But the relations of the Bishop of Poitiers with
        Julian and with Valentinian, more especially with the former, were
        comparatively brief. Waiving once again, for the sake of convenience,
        chronological considerations, we may just state the nature of these relations,
        and then put them entirely on one side.
         It will be seen presently that Hilary was suspected by
        Constantius of some interference of a hostile character in matters political.
        It is rather startling to find in Hilary's second letter, addressed to that
        emperor (about AD 360, during his exile), the following
        language :—"I am an exile, not as the victim of crime, but as that of a
        faction. I have a weighty witness on behalf of the justice of my complaint, my
        lord, your religious Caesar, Julian."
         It is a singular circumstance, that although part of
        the episcopate of Hilary coincided with the short reign of Julian (AD 361-363),
        so that the open apostasy of the dissimulating prince must have become known
        even in Gaul, we do not hear of any collision between these old acquaintances.
        It is possible that the intolerant edicts of Julian, which prohibited the
        Christians from teaching the arts of grammar and of rhetoric, may have hardly
        had time to operate in Gaul before the death of their author made them null and
        void; or that Julian may have been too busy with Hilary's great fellow-labourer,
        Athanasius, to turn his theological attention from the East. "Julian, who
        despised the Christians, honoured Athanasius with his sincere and
        peculiar hatred''. From his own point of view Julian's sentiments were
        perfectly natural. He was thoroughly convinced that, if he could crush the
        primate of Egypt, he would have comparatively little difficulty in overthrowing
        other rulers of the Church. Athanasius has received many marks of homage, from
        the days of St. Gregory of Nyssa to those of Hooker; but none, perhaps, more
        emphatic and complete than the bitter hostility of Julian. The emperor's
        conduct in this respect was a real illustration of the well-known dictum of a
        writer of this century, that " nothing is more infallible than the
        instinct of impiety."
         But we must return to Hilary. Besides the brief and
        apparently favorable intercourse with
        Julian in Gaul, at the commencement of his episcopate, the Bishop of Poitiers
        was brought into contact on one occasion with the Emperor Valentinian.
        This emperor being at Milan in the year AD 364, the year of
        his accession, found Hilary at Milan engaged in a controversy with the bishop
        of that see, Auxentius.
         Hilary was convinced, and apparently with good reason,
        that Auxentius was in reality an Arian at heart. As, however, the
        Bishop of Milan made an open profession of the faith proclaimed in the Nicene Creed,
        we can hardly wonder that Valentinian, viewing the matter as a politician,
        declined to listen to the evidence that could be adduced against the sincerity
        of this avowal. The emperor commanded Hilary to return to Gaul. Hilary
        displayed prompt obedience, but he published in the following year, AD 365,
        an epistle, in which he warned the faithful against Auxentius, against
        whom he certainly made out a strong case. We do not, after this, hear of any
        more intercourse between Hilary and the authorities of the State.
         But, although the "Athanasius of Gaul" (as
        M. de Broglie justly calls Hilary) thus came momentarily across the path of a
        Julian at the commencement of his episcopate, and a Valentinian at
        its close, the real representative of the State with whom Hilary had dealings
        was Constantius the Second. The negotiations between the two lasted for five
        years (356-361), and were of a far more elaborately controversial character
        than Hilary's dealings with Julian or with Valentinian. Indeed, we have
        three long letters addressed by Hilary to this sovereign. This summary of the
        facts of the case will, it is hoped, be thought to justify the limitation
        employed in the heading of the present chapter.
         Constantius was a man who may fairly claim, perhaps,
        to be credited with good intentions, but it cannot be said that his ways of
        carrying them out were either wise or charitable. He seems to have cherished
        really strong convictions on behalf of the Christian religion as against
        heathenism. But he thought fit to turn against paganism the weapons of
        persecution which it had employed against the faith of the Cross. It is true
        that such force as he did employ was, for the most part, gentle, as compared
        with the savage deeds of a Nero, a Decius, or a Galerius; nor did the heathens
        of that age furnish any martyrs for their creed. Nevertheless, in thus changing
        the situation, Constantius was robbing the Church of Christ of one of her chief
        glories. She could no longer say that violence had again and again been
        employed against her, but never on her behalf. Her annalists are
        almost all agreed in condemning the sort of protection granted by Constantius
        as both wrong in principle and in every point of view a grave mistake.
         The emperor, however, not only believed that severe
        laws against pagan modes of divination, the overthrow of heathen temples, and
        excessive immunities granted to the clergy, formed a genuine service to the
        faith, but he claimed in return the right of meddling largely with doctrine and
        with the controversies then rife concerning it. For secular rule he had some
        real gifts. Like his father, Constantine, he was skilled in military exercises;
        like him he could endure fatigue, was temperate in his repasts, and of
        unblemished moral character. But he was fussy and self-important; apparently
        all the more so, because he was conscious of a want of dignity of presence,
        being small of stature and slightly deformed in his legs. It was observed, that
        in public he would refrain from any gesture that might seem to compromise the
        stateliness he tried to affect, and would not so much as cough. He liked to
        display his taste for literature and for theology, and would indulge his
        courtiers with long harangues.
             As Constantius was only one-and-twenty at the decease
        of his father in AD 337, some allowance might well be made for
        the vanity of one who found himself at so early an age in a position so
        exalted. But the increase of years and of experience did not in his case bring
        with it real growth of mind. No true largeness of ideas nor firmness of
        resolution marked the sway of Constantius. He did, indeed, pass by, without
        retaliation or notice, some very vehement and insulting addresses to him, more
        especially those from the pen of Lucifer of Cagliari. But he was fond of acting
        upon secret informations, which the accused
        person could not answer; he was too often the prey of the last courtiers who
        had access to his ear. Among Christians the Arians were eminently
        successful in obtaining his favour, and, though that favour might
        prove fitful and inconstant, he persecuted at the same time the heathen on one
        side, and the defenders of the Catholic faith upon the other.
         Consequently, it is not surprising that neither with
        historian, ancient or modern, believing or heathen, does the memory of
        Constantius the Second find grace. Ammianus and Gibbon are as severe
        as Socrates and Dollinger. Such was the imperial ruler with whom Hilary
        was specially confronted.
         The three letters to which reference has been made
        were respectively addressed by Hilary to Constantius in the years 355, 360,
        361.
             The first of the three is a plea for the toleration of
        the orthodox against the persecutions being inflicted upon them by the
        Arians—persecutions of a character both coarse and cruel. It appeared just
        after the bishops, led by Hilary, had taken the bold step of separating
        themselves from the communion of Valens, Ursacius,
        and Saturninus. A critic of our day, who is no mean judge of such a
        matter, calls attention to the skill, the tact and knowledge of the world
        displayed in the commencement of this epistle. Hilary begins by assuring the
        emperor of the thorough political submission of the Gauls to his sceptre.
         "All is calm", he writes, "amongst us;
        no perverse or factious proposals are heard; there is no suspicion of sedition;
        hardly a murmur is audible. We are living in peace and obedience. One thing
        only do we demand of your excellency—it is that those who have been sent
        into exile and into the depths of the deserts, those excellent priests, worthy
        of the name which they bear, may be permitted to return to their homes; and
        thus everywhere may reign liberty and joy."
         This language may remind us that Hilary had begun
        public life as a magistrate and a statesman. Even on political grounds, Hilary
        urges, the emperor is making a mistake. Among his Catholic subjects will be
        found the best defenders of the realm against internal sedition within, or
        barbarian invasion from without. He then proceeds to employ rather the tone of
        the philosopher :—
         "You toil, O emperor, you govern the
        state by wise laws; you watch day and night, in order that all under your rule
        shall enjoy the blessing of liberty .... God also has brought man to know Him
        by His teaching, but has not compelled him to do so by force. Inspiring respect
        for His commands through the admiration of His heavenly marvels, He disdains
        the homage of a will that was compelled to confess Him. If such constraint were
        employed, even in support of the true faith, the wisdom of the bishops would
        arrest it, and would say : 'God is Lord of all; He has no need of an
          unwilling allegiance; He will have no compulsory confession of faith; we are
          not to deceive, but to serve Him; it is for our own sakes, more than for His,
          that we are to worship Him'. I can only receive him who comes willingly; I
        can only listen to him who prays, and mark with the sign of the Cross him who
        believes in it. We must seek after God in simplicity of heart,
          reverence Him in fear, and worship Him in sincerity of will. Who has ever
        heard of priests compelled to serve God by chains and punishment?"
         Moderate as this language may seem, it was not such as
        Constantius was in the habit of hearing. Probably, if he had at the moment been
        governing Gaul in person, Hilary would at once have been made sensible of the
        emperor's annoyance; but Julian, to whose charge the province had been intrusted,
        was busy in a camp at Vienne on the Rhone. He expected an attack of barbarians,
        and was wholly engaged in making preparation for the first of those successful
        campaigns which he subsequently waged against the Alemanni and the
        Franks. Saturninus of Arles gathered together at Beziers (then known
        as Biterra) a small number of his partisans, and
        at last, through the intervention of Constantius, obtained from the hands of
        Julian the formal document which rendered Hilary an exile in Phrygia.
         This event, as we have observed, took place at the
        close of AD 356. The second letter of Hilary to Constantius
        was written fully four years later. It embodies a protest on Hilary's part of
        innocence of all the charges which, he hears, are brought against him. He is
        still, he tells Constantius, for all practical purposes a bishop in Gaul, for
        his clergy listen to his injunctions, and through these he still ministers to
        his flock. He would gladly meet, in presence of the emperor, the man whom he
        regards as the real author of his exile, Saturninus, the bishop of Arles,
        and would like to be allowed to plead for the faith at the council which is
        about to be summoned (this is the council which ultimately met at Seleucia
        in AD 359). Meanwhile he is deeply conscious of the injury
        wrought to Christianity by the clashing of rival councils and varying
        professions of faith.
         The emperor appears to have been anxious to see a
        creed drawn up which should not contain any phrase which was not to be found in
        Holy Scripture. This was a marked feature of the Semi-Arian case, and it must
        be owned that it is at first sight a highly plausible one; but it will not bear
        examination, for the very point at issue was what meaning was to be attached to
        this or that expression of Scripture. No commentator would be willing to be
        limited to the precise phraseology of the author whose writings he is trying to
        explain. As a plain matter of fact, at the present time it would be impossible
        to name any Christian community which has found itself able to act upon this
        theory. To carry it out in its integrity would almost require the employment of
        the original languages in which the Scriptures were written; for a translation,
        as even a beginner in scholarship must be aware, very often almost of necessity
        partakes of the nature of a commentary.
             The Arians themselves do not seem to have urged this
        plea. Indeed, on their part it would have been transparently absurd, for they
        had a whole class of watchwords, of which not one was to be found in
        Scripture—as, for instance, the phrases specially condemned in the earliest
        edition of the Nicene Creed. Even on the part of the Semi-Arians it was
        inconsistent, for they, too, clung to the non-Scriptural term, homoousion,
        quite as persistently as their opponents did to their watchword.
         Such is substantially the comment of Hilary upon the
        emperor's demand. He praises Constantius for his anxiety that his faith should
        be Scriptural, but he maintains that this is precisely what he and his friends
        are trying to teach. Only Constantius ought to remember, that all those whom
        even he would denounce as heretics make precisely the same claim. The emperor's
        allies had denounced, for example, Photinus and Sabellius;
        but Photinus and Sabellius both averred that their tenets
        were Scriptural. Montanus, who had employed the ministry of women who were
        apparently mad, had made the same claim. "They all talk Scripture without
        the sense of Scripture, and without true faith set forth a faith."
         Thus far the addresses of Hilary to Constantius had
        been, it is admitted on all sides, loyal, respectful, and thoroughly Christian
        in tone. "It would be unjust", says a writer, who is by no means
        unduly favourable to champions of orthodoxy, "not to acknowledge
        the beautiful and Christian sentiments scattered throughout his two former
        addresses to Constantius, which are firm but respectful and, if rigidly, yet
        sincerely dogmatic. His plea for toleration, if not consistently maintained, is
        expressed with great force and simplicity."
         The words just cited, of course, imply a reference to
        the third letter. It must have been written a year after the date (AD 360)
        in which the second was presented to the emperor.
         During this time Constantius appears to have changed
        his plans. Hitherto, though not inflicting death upon any of the orthodox, he
        had employed the punishment of exile with great recklessness. Bishops
        in all directions had been dismissed, as has been observed, from their sees—we
        have abundant evidence besides Hilary's on this point—without much care as to
        the district named. Thus Paulinus, bishop of Treves, a man of high and holy
        character, having been banished into an heretical district, had been driven to
        beg for bread. Moreover, some of their faithful presbyters had been compelled
        to work in the mines.
         Nevertheless, it seems probable that, if Constantius
        had continued to pursue this policy, Hilary, though he issued protests and
        petitions (far more for others than for himself), might have continued to
        address Constantius in comparatively moderate language. He had apparently a
        strong conviction that such punishments wrought their own cure, were often
        over-ruled to good, and ultimately did injury to the cause of those Arians
        who sympathised with the emperor in his action and had in some cases
        (as in Hilary's own) apparently suggested the victims.
         But the emperor in the last years of his life—he died
        in AD 361—adopted a much more conciliatory policy. It was an
        illustration, to some extent, of the fable about the wind and the sun
        contending for the traveller's cloak. Invitations to the palace,
        bribes, good dinners, imperial flatteries were freely lavished; and it seems to
        have been found that many who would have been proof against harsh measures were
        really influenced by these allurements.
         On almost the only occasion in his life of which we
        have any evidence, Hilary now thoroughly abandoned the tone of moderation which
        he generally employed. Constantius, by this change of policy, became in his
        eyes the worst of enemies to the truth; a very Antichrist, who would fain make
        the world a present to Satan. He appeals to the evidences of his own former
        moderation; but the time for gentleness has gone by. For his part he would
        thankfully see back again the time when the little-horse and the stocks, the
        fire and the axe, were plied against the faith of the Cross.
             "But now we are contending against a deceitful
        persecutor, against a flattering enemy, against an Antichrist Constantius, who
        does not scourge the back, but pampers the appetite; who does not issue
        proscriptions that lead us to immortal life, but rich gifts that betray to
        endless death; does not send us from prison to liberty, but loads us inside the
        palace with honors that bribe to slavery;
        does not torture the body, but makes himself master of the heart; does not
        strike off heads with the sword, but slays the soul with gold; does not in
        public threaten with fire, but in secret is kindling for us a hell; does not
        aim at true self-conquest, but flatters that he may lord it over us; confesses
        Christ for the purpose of denying Him; aims at unity for the destruction of
        true peace; represses heresies, but in such wise as would leave no
        Christians; honours priests, that he may do away with bishops; and
        builds the Church's walls, that he may destroy her faith."
         Then presently, with fresh vehemence, but with perhaps
        some measure of inconsistency, Hilary proceeds to accuse Constantius of, at
        least, some partial and local persecution of a more direct character:—
         "To thee, O Constantius, do I proclaim what I
        would have uttered before Nero, what Decius and Maximin would have heard from
        me. Thou art warring against God, raging against the Church, persecuting the
        Saints. Thou hatest those that preach
        Christ, thou art overthrowing religion, tyrant as thou art, no longer merely in
        things human, but in things divine ... A doctor art thou of lore profane, and,
        untaught in real piety, thou art giving bishoprics to thine allies,
        and changing good ones for bad; thou art committing priests to prison,
        thou arrayest thine armies to strike
        terror into the Church; thou closest synods and compellest the
        faith of the Orientals to become impiety. Those who are shut up in one city
        thou dost frighten with threats, weaken by famine, kill with cold, mislead by
        dissimulation. So, most wicked of mortal men, dost thou manipulate all the ills
        of persecution, as to shut out the chance of pardon in the event of sin, and of
        martyrdom where there is confessorship. This
        hath that father of thine, that murderer from the beginning, taught
        thee—how to prevail without insult, to stab without the sword, to persecute
        without infamy, to indulge hatred without being suspected, to lie without being
        discovered, to make professions of faith while in unbelief, to
        flatter without kindliness, to act, carry out your own will, while yet
        concealing that will."
         This letter has not unnaturally been the one especial
        object of attack with those who are inclined to lower Hilary. Men, who have no
        strong convictions of their own, imply that they would have always kept their
        temper under similar circumstances. But it is far less easy to judge such cases
        fairly than might at first sight be supposed. Sarcasm and invective almost
        always seem lawful weapons when employed on our own side; then they are just
        reproof and holy indignation. But turned against us they look like irreverence,
        and seem to carry with them their own condemnation. "If", as Mohler remarks,
        concerning the case before us,—"if we drive men to despair, we ought to be
        prepared to hear them speak the language of despair."
         Even those who, while sympathising in the
        main with Hilary, may think his language excessive, and that he would have been
        wiser to preserve his more usual tone, must allow that his excess was not on
        that side to which men are generally most tempted. From the pagan orators of
        the day Constantius heard nothing but the language of flattery—flattery which
        on their part could not possibly have been sincere. And when we remember to how
        many teachers of religion undue subservience to the great has at some time of their
        life proved a snare—a list including men so different as Martin Luther,
        Laud, Bourdaloue— when we think of the special
        temptations of our own Church and age, we ought to make some allowance even for
        the excesses of those who have, at least, been preserved from what Bishop Andrewes teaches
        us to pray, "from making gods of kings."
         We have given the very fiercest passages of this
        celebrated epistle, because neither on this nor on any other topic in Hilary's
        career do we wish to conceal anything. How far it is censurable in point of
        temper and of wisdom will always probably remain a point on which men must be
        content to differ. But two or three features of the case to which we have
        already made partial reference deserve some further consideration before we
        pass a judgment on it.
             In the first place, Hilary, as a student of classic
        literature, was probably (though Quintilian was his favourite author)
        more or less familiar with the speeches of the greatest of Roman orators. Now,
        the eloquence of Cicero is certainly not always free from gross personalities;
        he can be, says one of his latest editors—Mr. Long—"most
        foul-mouthed". There are passages in the oration which Juvenal selects as
        Cicero's grandest effort, the second Philippic against Mark Antony, which are
        far more insulting than any sentences of Hilary; and it would be easy to
        multiply examples of this fault. Many of the readers of the epistle to
        Constantius would, more or less consciously, judge the document as a piece of
        Roman literature, and from such a point of view it would not greatly startle or
        astonish them.
         But this, it will be said, is to put out of sight that
        Hilary was not a Roman consul, but a Christian bishop. The answer to such a
        charge shall be stated in the language of a living English judge : "It
        must also be borne in mind that, though Christianity expresses the tender and
        charitable sentiments with such passionate ardour, it has also a terrible
        side''. Gentleness is not its only characteristic. There are times when not
        only the seers of old, but the Prophet of prophets, found stern objurgation a
        necessity. Remove all such elements from the Gospel records, and they become at
        once a different book. If, then, the possibility of need for such reproof is
        proved by the highest and holiest of all examples, we may indeed question the
        manner or the degree in which it has been followed by Christ's servants, but we
        must not say that it is in itself necessarily wrong or unneeded. There is one
        more consideration which specially applies to English Churchmen. All systems
        and communions, even those of divine origin, being human in their working, must
        needs possess their weak sides. Now, it is to be feared that the accusation
        made against the Anglican communion of an undue leaning towards the side of
        temporal authority is not without some real foundation. The charge, though
        since reiterated by foes, has been made by more than one of her own sons.
        Careful study of our own faults, and earnest desire to amend them, are amongst
        the best pledges, under divine favour, for amendment alike in individuals
        and in societies. We may not have anything to show in this direction so
        deplorable as the flattery of Louis XIV by the great French preachers of his
        age; but in this matter Anglicanism is not blameless. Let us, then, bethink
        ourselves whether, since the present so deeply influences our judgments on the
        past, we may not unconsciously be inclined to judge with injustice those who
        have found themselves in a position of resistance to constituted authority in
        the State.
         What, in effect, would have been produced upon the
        mind of Constantius by the letter of Hilary, we cannot tell. Gibbon describes
        the character of the emperor as a compound "of pride and weakness, of
        superstition and cruelty". But Constantius had, nevertheless, shown
        considerable indifference to written attacks, and might possibly have judged
        silence to be in this case also the wisest course. At the moment, however, when
        the letter was published, Constantius was dying, perhaps actually dead. He
        expired, after a short illness, on the 3rd of November, AD 361,
        in Asia Minor, not many miles from Tarsus, and was succeeded by his nephew, the
        gifted and too celebrated Julian.
          
             CHAPTER X. MISTAKES OF HILARY.
              
             Those who are at all familiar, even as bystanders,
        with the practice of law-courts, may frequently have observed the presence of
        the following well-known element of discussion. Counsel on one side refer to
        some dictum of a distinguished judge, such as a Lord Hardwick or Lord Stowell,
        as involving a clear anticipation of the cause now being debated, and as
        virtually guiding the court in the direction of a particular decision. It is
        replied on the other side that no one questions the great weight which is given
        to the rulings of the high authority just cited, nor its application to the
        point which is now mooted. But, it is added, the sentence does not occur in the
        actual decision of a matter duly argued before the judge and pronounced upon
        accordingly. It only comes in incidentally, perhaps, by way of illustration;
        and it is obvious that the judge had never brought all the powers of his mind
        to bear upon the subject. It is merely a saying by the way, or, in the Latin
        phraseology which is commonly applied to it, an obiter dictum. Under
        such circumstances it is justly felt that the weight of the pronouncement is
        greatly lessened.
         Now this principle is one of wide extent. It is
        applicable to inquiries into the rulings of scientific authorities and to
        general literature. To few departments of study is it more applicable than to
        the field of patristic literature; and Hilary of Poitiers is certainly one of
        those thinkers whose writings call for an equitable and charitable
        consideration from this especial point of view.
             On four main themes Hilary must be pronounced to have
        been eminently successful. They are as follows :—First comes his natural and
        suggestive style of commentary on Holy Scripture, more particularly on the Book
        of Psalms and the Gospel according to St. Matthew. In the second place, he
        deserves a place among those who have given us highly interesting and valuable
        information concerning the mental process whereby they were led from the errors
        of paganism into the acceptance of the Christian faith,—a place less exalted
        perhaps than that of some other Fathers (as, for example, St. Justin Martyr and
        St. Augustine), but, nevertheless, a very high one. Thirdly, he is great in
        delineation of the spiritual nature of the Godhead as opposed to the dark and
        often degrading perversions into which the heathen nations had fallen. And,
        lastly, as has already been implied, he is a champion (we may say in the west,
        the champion) for the great dogmas of the full and perfect Divinity of our Lord
        and Saviour and the Holy Trinity in Unity. Some faint idea of his
        work in these four departments we trust to be able to give, through extracts,
        in a succeeding chapter.
         But there were some other very important questions
        concerning the union of two natures in the One Person of the adorable Lord, of
        the completeness of His manhood, and of the way in which He redeemed us, which
        had not, in the age of Hilary, received the amount of attention which their
        interest and importance would seem to invite. It is important to bear this in
        mind, if we would judge any of the early Fathers with fairness. Our own creed
        on these points is made up of a number of elements welded together. It is not
        easy to name anywhere a more masterly statement concerning the Incarnate Lord
        than the one given in the second of the Thirty-nine Articles. But those brief
        and balanced sentences are the outcome of many struggles. Not only Arius, but
        also Nestorius and Eutyches, have contributed towards them, in that by
        their respective heresies they necessitated this formulation of the true
        doctrine with the aid of Athanasius and Hilary, of Cyril and of Leo. Nor is
        this all. It is hardly too much to say that the view of the Atonement most
        ordinarily taught amongst us is, in its form, a mediaeval doctrine. It is, in
        the main, as Archbishop Thomson has pointed out, the theory of Anselm,
        elaborated and improved by Aquinas. Now, Anselm was archbishop of Canterbury in
        the reign of William Rufus, at the close of the eleventh century (AD 1097),
        and Aquinas wrote in the middle of the thirteenth century, at least 150 years
        later.
         Besides a few incidental mistakes (such as the
        supposition that Moses, like Elias, was still alive), Hilary seems at times to
        fail in grasping the doctrine that our Lord took His human nature from the
        Virgin Mother, of her substance, and to miss the distinction implied in the
        words, that, although He who is God the Son suffered, yet the Godhead did not
        suffer. In his anxiety to refute the Arians, he appears, at least in one
        passage of his treatise, "De Trinitate"
        (lib. x.), not merely to represent the Deity as impassible, but to deny the
        reality of our Lord's sufferings. It is possible that he did not really mean
        this, and certainly other parts of his writings look the other way.
        Nevertheless, the language of the "De Trinitate"
        must be regarded as incautious, and as demanding considerable charity of
        interpretation.
         Such mistakes must needs appear to us all the more
        strange, because the doctrines, to which reference has just been made, not only
        come before us as a part of the heritage of the Church universal, but also find
        expression of a clear and emphatic kind in Holy Scripture. Thus, to take but
        one passage out of many, the language of St. Paul, "God sent forth His
        Son, made of a woman," is decisive on one point; and the texts in the
        writings of the prophets, in the Gospels and in the Epistles, which dwell upon
        the importance of the sufferings of Christ as an essential part of His atoning
        work, are as abundant as they are pathetic and wonderful. But it must be borne
        in mind, that in the age of Hilary the canon of the New Testament was barely
        settled. Indeed, Hilary's great compeer and fellow-champion, Athanasius, was
        the first bishop who is known to have issued to his diocese a list of the books
        recognised and read in Church canonical scriptures. Hilary was living in a
        somewhat out-of-the-way part of Christendom. Up to the eve of his banishment he
        had never heard the Nicene Creed, though he had taught its doctrines, and it
        may well have happened that some portions of the New Testament were less well
        known to him than others. But, even if this were not the case, it must probably
        be admitted that sympathetic appreciation of our Lord's sufferings was brought
        out more strongly in the mediaeval than in the patristic ages. This would only
        be one illustration out of many of the correctness of the language of the
        historian, Evagrius, and of St. Augustine, as
        also of a well-known passage in Bishop Butler's "Analogy", to the
        effect that knowledge in things divine has been attained in the past, and will
        be attained in the future "in the same way as natural knowledge is come
        at, by the continuance and progress of learning and liberty, and by particular
        persons attending to, comparing, and pursuing intimations scattered up and down
        the Scripture, which are overlooked and disregarded by the generality of the
        world". For the same reason, namely, that it had not yet been debated, the
        language of Hilary concerning the Holy Spirit seems less clear and emphatic
        than is desirable.
         On the whole, it seems reasonable to consider that the
        two principal mistakes of Hilary were of such a nature that they would have
        become very grave and serious, and have imperilled the purity of the faith, if
        they had been clearly reasoned out and insisted upon by him. But this never
        came to pass : they were not, at the moment when he wrote, the questions at
        issue. Moreover, it is highly probable that in a later generation, when the
        errors of Nestorius became manifest, Hilary would have perceived his mistakes,
        and have proved willing to explain and to retract. As against the deadly
        heresies of his own day, he must ever be acknowledged as a confessor; as a
        great, and, under God's good providence, a highly successful champion.
             
         CHAPTER XI. THE CRITICS OF HILARY.
              
             If the career of a man, who has been eminent in the
        world of thought and of action, has confessedly been marked by some outbursts
        of vehemence and some errors of judgment, we must expect to find at least two
        lines of criticism adopted concerning him. There will be those who, having only
        a half liking, or possibly even an antipathy, to the cause represented by him,
        will dwell most upon the defects; there will be others who, without positively
        denying the failings or mistakes, will regard them as the proverbial spots upon
        the sun, the incidents of human frailty which may virtually be ignored, in
        consideration of the trials which he underwent and the noble service which he
        rendered.
             Hilary of Poitiers so lived and so wrote that we might
        expect beforehand to meet with such a variety of opinion as that above
        indicated. In his case, the decision depends more, perhaps, upon temperament
        than upon the ecclesiastical position of the critics. The Protestant Daille is among those who judge Hilary with severity;
        the Protestant Dorner is enthusiastic in his admiration. Erasmus,
        who, despite all that he effected on behalf of the Reformation, ultimately
        remained Roman Catholic, certainly gives full weight, to say the least, to what
        may be regarded as the blemishes of Hilary's writings; other Roman Catholics,
        as the Benedictine editor and the charitable Mohler, see the bright side
        only, and ignore or excuse whatever has been urged by the assailants.
         Gibbon declares, that "Erasmus, with admirable
        sense and freedom, has delineated the just character of Hilary". This is,
        in our estimation, a rather excessive eulogy. However, the opinions of such a
        man as Erasmus must always deserve consideration; and we propose, as fairly as
        we can, to give a brief account of his essay on Hilary, and to attempt to rate
        it at its true value. Possibly, even Erasmus himself, if he had known Gibbon,
        might have considered praise from such a quarter a slightly questionable gift.
         Erasmus declares that editors had in many places
        modified the language of Hilary in order to make it seem more orthodox. In some
        cases of this kind noted by Erasmus, the language of Hilary is quite
        defensible; and it does seem that Hilary himself would have been the last
        person to claim infallibility for his writings. "Such felicity",
        writes Erasmus, "God willed to be peculiar to the sacred Scriptures only.
        Outside these, no man, however learned and keen-sighted, is free from
        occasional lapses and blindness; to the end that all might remember that they
        are but men, and should be read by us as men with discrimination, with
        judgment, and, at the same time, with charity". Hilary, in the opinion of
        Erasmus, hesitated for some time before throwing in his lot with the cause of
        the Athanasian and the Nicene Creeds. Possibly, says the critic, he
        thought it a good cause, but hopeless; possibly he had not fully made up his
        own mind. To us the latter of these theories seems not only the more
        charitable, but infinitely the more probable of the two.
         The De Trinitate"
        is the book, says Erasmus, on which Hilary lavished all his strength. It stands
        to his mind in the same relation in which the Georgics do to that of Virgil,
        the story of Medea to that of Ovid, the "De Oratore" to that of Cicero, and the "De Civitate Dei" to that of St. Augustine. In the
        judgment of Erasmus, there are parts of this work which approach the borders of
        a dangerous curiosity. Now this must always be a profoundly difficult problem.
        Who is to draw the line between what is, and what is not, lawful speculation in
        things divine? The stricture of Erasmus is a far-reaching one, and it may be
        reasonably doubted whether he was quite the man to make it. How greatly the
        judgments of good and wise men may differ in such matters may be illustrated by
        a single instance. We are accustomed in England to hear a famous divine of the
        Elizabethan age spoken of as "the judicious Hooker". Yet, not only
        has the correctness of the title been questioned by Coleridge, but a more
        trustworthy critic, an eminent English bishop of our time, has expressed the
        opinion, that parts of Hooker's fifth book may possibly be thought to go beyond
        the bounds of safe speculation.
         Erasmus, while wishing that theological learning would
        restrain its definitions within the bounds of Scripture (a somewhat ambiguous
        expression), yet admits that even in apostolic times it was heresy that led to
        fresh expressions of truth (the Cerinthians and
        Ebionites having necessitated the composition of the Gospel of St. John), and,
        ultimately, to the formation of creeds. In the case of controversy, says
        Erasmus, we must make allowance for men being carried away. Thus Tertullian,
        waxing fierce against some divines of his day who were paying too much honour to
        matrimony, rushed into the opposite extreme. The language of St. Jerome on the
        same subject is indefensible, if it be judged with strictness. St. Augustine,
        warring with all his energies against Pelagius, assigned considerably less to
        our free will than do the reigning theologians of our day, that is to say, the
        fifteenth century.
         These remarks of Erasmus appear to be just and fair.
        In relation to Tertullian and Jerome, it may be alleged (as a gifted and
        eloquent lecturer of our time has said) that in certain ages there was a
        fanaticism of the ascetic principle, in another age a fanaticism of
        scholarship, while in our own day there appears to be in some quarters danger
        of a fanaticism of physical science. The remark of Erasmus in reference to St.
        Augustine would certainly meet with large acceptance, alike in the nineteenth
        as in the fifteenth century.
             But Erasmus passes on to the application of these
        remarks to Hilary. In the first place he censures the vehemence of his language
        against the Arians. We are not inclined to defend it; but it must be observed
        that Hilary had to deal with a peculiarly treacherous and aggravating specimen
        of Arians in the case of Auxentius of Milan, and still more so in
        that of Saturninus of Arles. If all wielders of such weapons—and,
        after all, they are but occasional with Hilary—are to be struck out of the list
        of those who have rendered signal benefit to the Church, that list must be
        considerably reduced. That it was the men themselves, and the whole tone and
        spirit of their warfare, that provoked Hilary is clear from the great
        difference of his attitude towards the Semi-Arians. If it be urged that such
        palliation is only a result of the theological hatred of all time, it must be
        replied that the Arians fare but little better in this respect in the pages of
        writers by no means conspicuous for love of orthodoxy. It is sufficient to
        refer the student who questions this assertion to the works of Dean Milman,
        and even of Gibbon.
         But a further objection on the part of Erasmus affects
        the fame, not of Hilary merely, but of the Church at large. The struggle, says
        Erasmus, concerned matters far removed from the grasp of human intellect. To
        this it must be replied that, as there may be a false charity, and a false
        justice, so, too, there may be such a thing as a false ignorance. Christians
        believe that God has given them a revelation, and that in essential points the
        meaning of that revelation can be proved. The great fact remains, that while
        the endlessly shifting creeds of the Arians and their allies have perished, the
        Nicene Creed, for which Athanasius and Hilary contended, is still an honoured and
        valued portion of the heritage of Christendom, still holds its place as a part
        of the highest act of Christian worship.
         If I, says Erasmus, had lived in the time of Hilary, I
        would have uttered warnings and teachings against the Arians, but I would not
        have called them Satans or Antichrists.
         We are all, more or less, creatures of our age. Most
        assuredly, in few instances, is this more manifest than in the life and
        character of Erasmus. He was a product of two great movements, the Renaissance
        and the Reformation. From the former he derived the keen and polished style of
        his admirable Latinity; from the latter his spirit of assault upon the
        corruptions of the Roman Catholic system. An Erasmus of the fourth century can
        hardly be imagined. Thus much, however, we may safely concede to him. If he could
        have been a contemporary of Hilary, Erasmus would not have written with
        vehemence against the Arians, it was not in his nature to do so; but we should
        have had from his pen keen, incisive satires on their writings, their
        proceedings, their relations with the Court, the fluctuations and
        inconsistencies of their multitudinous creeds. On some minds the weapons thus
        wielded would have produced more effect than any amount of hard names and
        vehement protestations. To others they would have seemed far more exasperating.
        But, just as Principal Robertson has remarked, that of the abuses thundered
        against by Luther, there was hardly one that had not been previously satirised by
        Erasmus, so, probably, it would have been in the fourth century. An Erasmus of
        that date, if such a personage could have existed, would have left denunciation
        to Hilary of Poitiers, to Lucifer of Cagliari, and a few more; but his own
        share in the contest, however prominent, would have taken another turn, and
        have been of a different kind.
         But, continues Erasmus, if, in the writings of Hilary
        himself, some want of grasp on the Person of the Holy Spirit, on the derivation
        of our Lord's human nature from the Virgin Mother, and on other points of
        importance seem to require a charitable interpreter, what right had such an
        author to speak so vehemently of the errors of others?
             There is certainly force in this consideration. More
        light, more knowledge of weak points in his own theology, might have induced
        Hilary, and many more before and since, to be more guarded in their language
        towards opponents. Still, it must be granted, that on few points are we all
        more likely to be prejudiced than in the matter of satire and of invective.
        When used upon our own side they seem most lawful weapons, justified by the
        attitude of an Elijah towards the priests of Baal, by St. Paul towards the Corinthians,
        by a higher and holier example in the censure of the Scribes and Pharisees. But
        when we find them turned against our friends, or against the supporters of a
        cause we cherish, they then become mere headlong temper or irreverence.
        Assuredly, to refer to a single illustration, the wit of the "Provincial
        Letters" of Blaise Pascal appeared to his Jansenist allies the
        most legitimate of instruments; but against his Jesuit opponents he had to
        defend the style which he adopted. In like manner the language on opposite
        sides of a Calvin and a Maldonatus, of a Wicliff and
        his adversaries, will be viewed differently by members of reformed and
        unreformed communions.
         Erasmus says that there may have been good and pious
        Arians, sincerely convinced that they were right. Hilary might at least reply,
        that he had met such men among the Semi-Arians, and had treated them with the
        respect and courtesy which they deserved, but that his personal experience of
        Arian opponents had been the very reserve of the imaginary portraiture made by
        his critic.
             Erasmus considers that, in his commentary upon St.
        Matthew, Hilary has too freely adopted the allegorical mode of interpretation
        pursued by that great genius Origen, from whom he borrowed largely. This is
        very possible; but to draw the exact line of demarcation between lawful and
        unlawful use of allegory is a task of much depth and difficulty, on which we
        cannot here pretend to enter further than protest against any such employment
        of it as would explain away the historic truth of the great events of our Lord's
        human career, His birth, His crucifixion, His resurrection, and His ascension.
             Of the judgment of Erasmus on another point of less
        importance, namely, the question of style, we have already spoken. The
        fastidious taste of Erasmus —unquestionably a master of elegant expression—is
        slightly dissatisfied with Hilary. He thinks that Hilary is wanting in severe
        simplicity; that in translating from Greek authors he infused a grandiloquence
        to which Gallic authors of that day were somewhat prone. However, Erasmus
        admits that Hilary's style has marked individuality. Moreover, as regards want
        of simplicity, he errs in good company, for his critic considers that scarcely
        any provincial writers of Latin, save a few who had lived at Rome from boyhood,
        can be acquitted of faultiness in this respect.
         Curiously enough, Erasmus does not find any fault with
        the vehement letter against Constantius, but is inclined to think the previous
        epistles to the emperor to be slightly reticent and over-courtly.
             He has pointed out the faults of Hilary, he declares,
        not in order to dim the glory and insult the reputation of a most holy and
        learned man, but for a warning to the bishops and theologians of his own day.
        Some defenders of the Papacy in his time are quite outrageous, and call a man a
        schismatic if he detract anything from the authority of the Bishop of Rome. We
        could ill spare the works of Origen and Tertullian, Chrysostom and Jerome,
        Augustine and Hilary, nor are even Aquinas and Scotus, says Erasmus, wholly
        out of date. The authority of Hilary is evidently ranked by Jerome even above
        that of Ambrose and Augustine. At any rate (says our censor in conclusion), he
        was a great man, and his chief work displays genius, eloquence, and great
        knowledge of Holy Scripture.
         It may seem, perhaps, as if this chapter ought to have
        been headed "A Critic of Hilary"; and it is true that it has been
        almost exclusively devoted to the opinions of Erasmus. No other writer, save
        the Benedictine editor, has gone so fully into detail. But we turn from the
        strictures of one who, with all his merits, is inclined to be rather carping
        and fastidious, and proceed to set down the more generous if less critical
        testimonies of some primitive and modern authorities.
         Here, for example, is the judgment of St. Augustine,
        written about AD 400, concerning Hilary :— "An
        illustrious doctor of the Churches. A man of no light authority in explanation
        of the Scriptures and assertion of the faith. A keen defender of the Catholic
        Church against heretics."
         St. Augustine's learned and gifted contemporary, St.
        Jerome, is even more emphatic in his eulogies. Alluding to the former eminence
        of some divines in secular station, Jerome asks : "Do not that holy and
        most eloquent man, the martyr Cyprian, and Hilary, a confessor of our own age,
        look like men who were once like lofty trees in this world's garden, but who
        afterwards built up the Church of God?" Elsewhere Jerome speaks of Hilary
        as "the Rhone of eloquence ... one in whose writings the piety of the
        faith never wavers ... A man whose writings I have traversed, and found no
        stumbling-blocks for my feet."
         If the consent of those who in many respects are at
        variance adds weight to testimony, the evidence of an antagonist of
        Jerome, Rufinus, becomes important. Now Rufinus calls Hilary
        "a confessor of the Catholic faith"; and adds, that "his book
        against Auxentius is one of most ample information."
         Some fifty years later (i.e. about AD 450)
        we find the ecclesiastical historian, Socrates, describing the efforts made by
        Eusebius, bishop of Vercelli, in company with Hilary, to oppose the progress of
        Arianism in North Italy. "These two", writes Socrates, strove nobly
        side by side for the faith. Moreover, Hilary, who was an eloquent man, set
        forth in his books in the Latin language, the dogmas of The One Substance, and
        powerfully confuted the Arian dogmas". The learned Benedictine, Dom Ceillier, is also entirely on the favourable side.
         In the Middle Ages the best construction was placed
        upon any doubtful expressions of Hilary by the first occupant of the see of
        Canterbury after the Norman Conquest, the illustrious Lanfranc; by the author
        of the famous "Four Books of Sentences", Peter Lombard, bishop of
        Paris; and by the greatest of the schoolmen, St. Thomas Aquinas. This statement
        implies, what is no doubt the case, that some critics had been less favourable.
        But with the exception of an early one, Claudianus Mamertus, they
        were not men of mark.
         Since the Reformation the Gallican historian, M. Noel
        Alexandre (better known by his Latinised appellation of Natalis Alexander) may
        be named among the apologists for Hilary; and a still more energetic defender,
        the Benedictine editor of his works, Dom Coutant. The Anglican, Cave, is also favourable.
             Coming down to our own century, we find among the
        severe critics of Hilary the rationalistic Baur of Tubingen. But in
        the opposite camp stand devout and careful thinkers, both among ourselves, as
        Canons Bright and Robertson, and also among Roman Catholics and Protestants on
        the Continent. The Duc de Broglie in his "Church and Empire in the Fourth
        Century", justly entitles Hilary "the Athanasius of Gaul", and,
        as we have seen, calls attention to his tact and knowledge of the world as well
        as to his loftier qualities. Another Roman Catholic, the learned and
        charitable Mohler, had previously, in his "Athanasius the
        Great", given a brief comment on the aid afforded to the famous Bishop of
        Alexandria by his brother-bishop of Poitiers. "Thus", writes Mohler,
        "did St. Hilary develop with ability and depth his ideas on
        the essence of the faith and its relations with science; on the Catholic Church
        and its relations with heretics in general, and his own age in
        particular."
         Pope Pius IX, towards the close of his long
        pontificate, declared Hilary to be a doctor of the universal Church. Our Roman
        Catholic fellow-Christians do not seem agreed among themselves how much is
        meant by this title; but it must of course be intended to imply a general
        recognition of orthodoxy. No one, however, among modern theologians seems to
        have devoted so much time and attention to the writings of Hilary as the
        Lutheran Dorner in his deep, original, and learned volumes on "The
        Doctrine of the Person of Christ". Dorner is enthusiastic in his
        admiration, possibly too determined to ignore even the slightest blemish in
        this Father of the fourth century. But his defence deserves deep consideration,
        because he has studied the writings of Hilary, and especially the
        "De Trinitate", with such zealous care
        and sympathy. Anticipating the judgment of Pius IX by a whole generation, Dorner sums
        up his analysis of him in the following words, with which we may well conclude
        the present chapter :—
         " Our attention is, above all, attracted to Hilarius of Pictavium. We feel the more drawn to him, because he does
        not appear hitherto to have met with the consideration he deserves. Hilarius is
        one of the most difficult Church teachers to understand, but also one of the
        most original and profound. His view of Christology is one of the most
        interesting in the whole of Christian antiquity... Hilarius evinced
        himself to be, in the true sense, a teacher of the Church."
          
             CHAPTER XII. HILARY AS TEACHER AND AS COMMENTATOR.
              
             It is high time to let Hilary speak for himself on
        some of the subjects which he treated.
             We commence with a few extracts from the first book of
        his treatise, "De Trinitate", relating
        to the grounds of his conversion to Christianity, of which we attempted to give
        a general idea in the first chapter of this volume.
         Hilary first lays down and comments on the proposition that
        the happiness which is based on mere ease and abundance cannot be reckoned as
        much superior to that enjoyed by a considerable portion of the brute creation.
        Most men of worth have, at any rate, got beyond this point, and have seen both
        the need of cultivating certain virtues, inasmuch as a good life evidently
        required good actions and sound understanding. They have also felt within
        themselves that it was improbable that a Being Who had bestowed upon us such
        gifts should have intended that our existence should be bounded by this earthly
        life. So far—and here Hilary has with him certain earlier converts, as, for
        instance, St. Justin Martyr—he went with the heathen philosophers. Hilary then
        proceeds as follows :—
         "Now, although I did not consider their
        sentiments on these points either foolish or useless, when they taught us to
        keep our consciences free from all fault, and in respect of the troubles of
        human life to meet them by foresight, avoid them by judgment, or bear them with
        patience, nevertheless, these men did not seem to me thoroughly competent
        guides towards the attainment of a good and happy life. The precepts they laid
        down were obvious ones, and in accordance with good sense. Not to admit them were
        but brutish, while to grant them and yet not to act upon them would seem like
        madness, surpassing the senselessness of brutes. But my soul felt a strong
        impulse not merely to do those things which to leave undone would be alike
        criminal and a source of woes, but to gain the knowledge of that God Who is the
        author of our gifts, to Whom our being owed itself, in the service of Whom it
        would feel itself ennobled, to Whom it must refer every conception of hope, in
        Whose goodness it could rest amidst the great troubles of our present condition
        as if in a safe and most friendly harbour. To understand or to grasp a
        knowledge of Him my soul was enkindled with a desire that burned within
        me."
         After speaking of the unworthy opinions of the
        ancients, whether atheistic (denying God), or polytheistic (as of gods many and
        lords many, degraded by human passions); or of a god—and this seemed the most
        general opinion—who existed, indeed, but was utterly indifferent about the
        affairs of earth; of gods in the likeness of cattle or confined within stocks
        and stones, Hilary proceeds as follows :—
         "But my soul, rendered anxious amid such
        thoughts, struggled to find a road useful and needful for the attainment of the
        knowledge of its Lord. It did not recognise as worthy of God a
        carelessness about things which He had Himself created; it perceived that sexes
        in the Godhead, and successions of parents and children, were incompatible with
        a powerful and imperishable nature; yea, further, it held for certain that what
        was Divine and Eternal must needs be One and indivisible. For, being the author
        of its own existence, it must of necessity leave nothing outside it more
        excellent than itself. Thus, then, almightiness and eternity could be
        properties of One alone. For in almightiness there could not properly be any
        'stronger' or 'weaker'; nor in eternity any 'latter' or 'former,' since in God
        was nothing to be adored save that which was power and eternity."
         In the next section he tells us what he learnt from
        the Scriptures :—
         "While thinking over these and many kindred
        subjects, I lighted on the books which the religion of the Hebrews has handed
        down to us as written by Moses and the prophets. In these were contained the
        following words, whereby the God the Creator testifies concerning Himself: 'I
        am that I am,' and again : 'Thus shalt Thou say unto the children of
        Israel, I am hath sent me unto you'. Much did I marvel at an utterance
        concerning God which was so complete, which described in language so suitable
        for the human understanding the incomprehensible knowledge of the divine
        nature. For of God we perceive that no property can be more especially His than
        to be; since the very fact of His existence is the mark of One Who is
        never-ending and had no beginning. That which is everlasting, with the power of
        blessedness unalloyed, never has been, or will be, able to be non-existent,
        since all that is divine is liable neither to destruction nor to commencement.
        And, since the eternity of God never lacketh anything
        that is needful, worthily doth He set forth the fact of His being as
        an evidence of His own imperishable eternity."
         Hilary proceeds to comment upon other passages of Holy
        Scripture connected with this theme which had especially arrested his
        attention, such as, for example, Isaiah LXVI. 1, 2; Psalm CXXXIX. To these
        he devotes some pages, and shows how, in combination with a passage from the
        Book of Wisdom, XIII. 5, they led him onward to further comprehension of the
        infinite and omnipresent nature of the Creator and of the beauty of the Divine
        Being, as evidenced in the order and beauty of creation. These thoughts confirmed
        in his mind that conviction of immortality which even natural reason had
        suggested. But the teachings of the Old Testament were wonderfully deepened and
        invigorated by one of the books of the New Dispensation—the Gospel of St. John.
        He cites the well-known verses from the first chapter (the precise passage
        selected for the Gospel on Christmas Day), and then makes the following remarks
        on the results of studying them :—
         " The mind has its intelligence carried
        beyond the powers of the natural senses, and learns more than it heretofore
        conceived concerning God. It learns that its Creator is God of God; it hears
        that the Word is God, and was with God in the beginning."
         After briefly paraphrasing the remainder of the
        passage, Hilary proceeds with a fresh section, of which the heading runs thus
        :—
         "The Son of God is God. To become sons of God is
        a power vouchsafed to us, but not a necessity. The Son of God was made man,
        that man might be made the son of God. Christ is very God, and very man."
         The section proceeds :—
             " Here the alarmed and anxious mind finds more
        hope than it looked for. In the first place, it is tinged with the knowledge of
        God as a Father; and the conception it formerly entertained through natural
        reason concerning the eternity, infinity, and beauty of its Maker, it now
        understands to be the property also of the only-begotten God. It does not relax
        its faith so as to believe in more gods than one, because it hears of 'God of
        God'. It does not have recourse to the notion of a diversity of nature between
        God and God, because it learns that 'God from God' is full of grace and truth;
        nor does it imagine any precedence, or the reverse, in point of time, because
        it finds that God was in the beginning with God."
         A little later on he adds :—
             "This doctrine of the divine mystery my mind
        embraced with joy, advancing towards God through the flesh, being called
        through faith to a new birth and endowed with a power for the attainment of a
        heavenly regeneration; recognizing the care of its Parent and Creator towards
        it, and convinced that it would not be reduced to nothingness by Him Who had
        called out of nothingness into its present state of existence."
         Hilary accepted the doctrine concerning the divine
        attributes and the Incarnation, not as discoverable by natural reason, but as
        attained by the boundlessness of faith. But he evidently thought them not to be
        opposed to reason, for his understanding could, in some measure, understand
        them if only it believed. He dwells much on this, quoting freely from the
        Epistle of St. Paul to the Colossians (II. 8-15), and then speaks of the
        probation for the world to come which is given in this life, in a brief
        section, headed with the words, "Faith in Christ removes both fear of
        death and weariness of life."
         "In this repose, then, conscious of its own
        security, ad my mind, rejoicing in its hopes, rested; and so far was it from
        fearing the interruption of death; as to regard it as the entrance into life
        eternal. But this life in the body it by no means regarded as miserable or
        painful to itself, but simply believed it to be what medicine is to the sick,
        swimming to the shipwrecked, learning to young men, military service to future
        commanders; that is to say, an endurance of the present state which should
        avail as preparation or the prize of a blessed immortality. Further, what it
        believed for itself, it also undertook to preach to others through the ministry
        of the priesthood laid upon it, extending the gift it had received into a work
        for the salvation of those around it."
         The "De Trinitate"
        consists of twelve books. This number might have arisen out of the natural
        growth and progress of the treatise without any especial design. But, if a
        reason for its choice were to be sought, we might imagine that it had been
        suggested by the number of the months of the year, or of the tribes of Israel,
        or of the Apostles. Jerome, however, informs us that the ground of Hilary's
        choice lay in the fact that a classical writer, whom he greatly admired, the
        critic Quintilian, had divided into twelve books his treatise upon Oratory.
         In the first book, as we have seen, Hilary maintains
        the reality of natural religion, and describes the manner in which its votaries
        are likely to be led onward to the acceptance of the revelation contained in
        the Holy Scriptures. The next four books discuss the baptismal formula recorded
        in the Gospel of St. Matthew (XXVIII. 19); the union of the two natures in the
        One Person of Christ; and the testimony in favour of the Catholic
        faith on these subjects, which may be adduced from the writings of the
        prophets. The two following books (that is to say, the sixth and seventh)
        contain arguments, not only against the error of Sabellianism, on which we
        have already touched, but also on that of Manichaeism.
         Manichaeism will come before us again in this little
        volume when we reach the case of Priscillian in connection with
        the life of St. Martin. Its assertion of two independent principles, a good and
        an evil one, mutually opposing and thwarting each other, is not destitute cf a certain plausibility from some facts of
        nature. In the generation succeeding that of Hilary, Manichaeism found
        some very able defenders and expositors. How great a fascination it possesses
        for some minds is shown by the fact that it enchained for eight years the
        mighty intellect of St. Augustine.
         The seventh book presents a feature not uncommon in
        ancient and in modern works of philosophy. Hilary maintains that the errors of
        the Ebionites (who taught that Christ was purely human), of the Arians (who
        made Him as nearly divine as a creature could possibly be), and of the Sabellians (who asserted a unity of personality as
        well as of substance in the Godhead), were mutually destructive of each other.
        Thus these errors, if rightly viewed, tended to confirm the convictions of true
        believers. "Their strife is our faith" says Hilary. The eighth book
        is a demonstration of the unity of God. It shows that the eternal Sonship of
        Christ in nowise destroys that unity. The faith "does not take from the
        Son of God the position of the Only-begotten, but neither does it through that
        introduce a divinity of two Gods."
         The remaining books of the "De Trinitate" are chiefly occupied with further
        refutations of Arianism, more especially in relation to single texts of the New
        Testament, which the Arians claimed as favourable to their doctrine.
        Throughout the treatise there are many admirable warnings, well worth the
        attention of readers in every generation, of the spirit in which Holy
        Scriptures should be studied. We subjoin two of these.
         Here is our author's description of those who, as it
        were, patronise the faith rather than cherish it.
           "There are many who, feigning faith,
        are not really subdued to the faith; men puffed up by the breath of human
        emptiness, who establish a faith for themselves instead of truly accepting
        it."
         Again : "He is the best reader who waits to gain
        from the words the sense of what is said instead ot imposing
        a meaning on them, and who carries away their teaching instead of reading a
        doctrine into them."
         A few more passages may serve to give a fuller notion
        of Hilary's general style. But at this point the reader may feel inclined to
        ask whether, beyond a generally able and devout treatment of his great theme,
        the author of the first extended treatise in the West has anything especial to
        tell us, anything which has a bearing on theological questions of our own time.
        For if he only discourses in a pious and lofty vein concerning knowledge, which
        we may find set forth with still greater precision by opening our Prayer-books
        and reading carefully the three Creeds and the first five of the
        Thirty-nine Articles, then an acquaintance with Hilary's chief work may be
        elevating and improving, but can hardly be called suggestive, or, in the
        fullest sense, one that now tends to edification.
         It must be answered, that on at least one point which
        has not yet been thought out, nor received all the attention which it deserves,
        Hilary's view is not only interesting and original, but has also a direct
        bearing upon the questions of our day.
             That question is the following :—When we read in
        certain passages of Holy Scripture (as, for example, especially in St. Paul's
        Epistle to the Philippians, II. 7), that the Son of God "emptied
        Himself", how much does this imply in the way of acceptance on the part of
        our Lord of the limitations of our human ignorance? That he condescended to
        learn, in a new way, through the medium of those human powers which for our
        sake He had adopted, truths which He had known as God from all eternity, is a statement
        generally accepted by theologians. But did He, whose personality resides in His
        divinity, place, as it were, in abeyance during his sojourn on earth any
        portion of that power and knowledge which He had ever enjoyed in Heaven? It is
        perhaps hardly too much to say that orthodox writers, who claim our respect
        from learning and character, give somewhat different answers to this question.
         Now, Hilary certainly suggests an answer. He considers
        that "the taking the form of a servant" involved the consequence that
        the Incarnation was not from the beginning complete—that is to say, that as the
        form of the Godhead belongs to Christ's divinity, and He divested Himself of
        this form during His earthly life, He did not, until His exaltation, join to
        our human nature the complete essence of the Godhead. Not that there was in
        Christ at any moment any cessation of His divine existence. That could not be.
        He remained always God, and capable at any moment of resuming His true form.
        But of His own free will, according to Hilary, He from time to time
        subjected Himself from the day of His Incarnation to that of His resurrection
        to those weaknesses of suffering and of ignorance to which humanity is liable.
        When, however, He displayed acts of power, and when He uttered words of divine
        wisdom,. He was resuming and reasserting the action proper to His full and
        perfect Godhead.
         As, however, we are able to refer our readers
        elsewhere for further illustrations of what is most peculiar to Hilary, but at
        the same time most difficult, we prefer to set forth a few practical passages
        which have not hitherto been rendered into English, nor, we believe, into any
        modern language.
             Some extracts from the second book of the
        "De Trinitate" will serve to show how
        keenly Hilary felt that these discussions were undesirable in themselves, but
        rendered necessary by the restlessness of heresy.
         "It used to be enough for believers to receive
        that word of God which by the testimony of the Evangelist was poured into our
        ears with the actual power of its own truth, how the Lord says, 'Go ye into all
        nations, baptising them in the name of the Father, the Son, and the
        Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I command you; and
        lo, I am with you always even unto the end of the world'. For what is there
        that is not therein contained concerning the mystery of the salvation of
        mankind? Or what is there that is defective or obscure? For all the words are
        full, as coming from Him who is full; and perfect, as coming from Him who is
        perfect ...  But we are compelled by   the faults
        of heretics and blasphemers to do what would otherwise be unlawful, to climb up
        lofty heights, to speak on matters beyond the powers of human expression, to
        presume, where full knowledge has not been vouchsafed to us. And whereas the
        divine precepts ought to be fulfilled by faith alone—namely, the adoration of
        the Father, the veneration of the Son, the abounding in the gifts of the Holy
        Ghost, we find ourselves compelled to extend our humble powers of discourse
        into regions where language fails, and we are forcibly driven into a faulty
        province of thought by reason of the faults of others. Themes, which should
        have remained free from discussion because of our reverent scruples, are thus
        forced forward into the perilous sphere of human speech. For many have arisen
        who interpret the simplicity of heavenly words in accordance with a sense
        imposed on them by their own will, not that which the actual force of what is
        said demands".
         Hilary mentions by name, though only in a passing way,
        some Gnostic sectarians, and (a little more in detail) the error of Sabellius,
        already noticed by us, and of the Ebionites, who represented the Redeemer as a
        mere man, though miraculously born of the Virgin Mary. He then declares his own
        anxiety, and the reluctance with which he undertakes the task of attempting to
        explain things truly :—
         "Assuredly, to me, when I attempt to reply to
        these men, there arises, as it were, a seething tide of cares. There is the
        risk of slipping as regards the sense, there is the feeling of stupefaction in
        the province of the intellect; and one must confess, not merely that language
        is infirm, but that one's very speech is silence. In truth, the actual will to
        make the attempt is extorted from me, with the design of resisting the rashness
        of others, of meeting and confuting error, of providing instruction for the
        ignorant .... The very nature of the subject devours the significance of words,
        the light that cannot be penetrated blinds the contemplation of sense, and that
        which passes all bounds exceeds the capacity of the understanding. But we,
        imploring the pardon of Him who is all these things, are about to dare to seek,
        to speak; and—which is the only fitting pledge in so deep an investigation—we
        shall avow our belief in what has been revealed."
         After speaking of the provision for the coming of
        Christ, Hilary expresses himself as follows on the Incarnation, surely not
        without much power and freshness:—
         "Now in what follows we see the dispensation of
        the Father's will. The Virgin, the birth, the body; and subsequently the cross,
        death, Hades, are our salvation. For the sake of the human race was the Son of
        God born of a Virgin, through the Holy Spirit, Himself ministering to Himself
        in this operation; and by His own, that is, God's, overshadowing might
        implanting the germs of a body for Himself and the beginnings of mortal flesh :
        so that being made man he might receive into Himself from the Virgin the nature
        of flesh, and that through the alliance of this conjunction there might stand
        forth in Him a sanctified body of the entire race; that as all may be built up
        in Him by the fact of His willing to take bodily substance, so again He might
        be shed back upon all through that in Him which is invisible.
             "Therefore did the invisible image of God shrink
        not from the shame of a human beginning, and through conception, birth, the
        cradle, and infant cries traverse the entire course of the reproach and
        humiliations of our nature. What worthy return can be made by us for the
        affection of so vast a condescension?"
         Then, after a few eloquent lines on those seeming
        contradictions between the infinite and finite natures thus meeting in Christ,
        on which pious contemplation has ever loved to dwell, Hilary adds :—
         "If any one shall cherish the idea that such
        things are unworthy of God, let him be led to confess that he himself is so
        much the more beholden to Him for the benefit received, in proportion as all
        this seems unbefitting to the divine Majesty. He, through whom man was created,
        needed not to become man; but we needed that God should become flesh and dwell
        among us, that by the taking to Himself the one flesh He might dwell in the
        innermost recesses of the flesh of the human race at large. His humiliation is the
        ennobling of us, His reproach becomes our honour; that He as God should
        abide in our flesh is in turn a renewal of us from fleshly nature into
        God."
         We turn to our author's commentaries on Holy
        Scripture. It seems desirable, in a sketch of this kind, to confine our
        attention to such books of Hilary as are unquestioned. For this reason we shall
        pass by certain commentaries on the Pauline Epistles, and the fragments of a
        colloquy upon the book of Genesis, which has been lately put forth as the work
        of Hilary by the learned Benedictine, Dom Pitra.
             Hilary probably intended to have composed a commentary
        upon the Book of Psalms. But he either did not carry out this design, or else a
        large portion of the book has been lost. There are only extant his remarks on
        Psalms I, II, IX .... Hilary was not a proficient in Hebrew learning. Such
        knowledge was rare among the Fathers of the first five centuries, Origen and
        St. Jerome being the only conspicuous exceptions. Hilary, like most of his
        contemporaries, was compelled to trust mainly to the famous Greek translation
        known as the Septuagint. He enjoyed, however, the advantage of the commentaries
        of the famous Alexandrian divine, Origen. His general line lies midway between
        that of critics who are solely engaged in urging the literal sense, and those
        who are exclusively intent upon the Christian application of the words to the
        Church and to its divine Head. It is right to notice that Hilary prayed God to
        give him a true understanding of His Holy Word, and that he returned thanks in
        a modest spirit for such light as had been vouchsafed to him. We give a few
        specimens of his treatment.
             He explains to us how we are to understand Jerusalem
        in the Psalms.
             "The Jerusalem which is in heaven, which is our
        mother, which is the city of the great King, of which I think those are now
        inhabitants who rose again at the time of our Lord's passion."
         On Psalm CXIX, part 16, "Mine eyes fail for
        Thy salvation, and for the words of Thy righteousness," Hilary writes :—
         "The eyes fail when the sight, looking out
        eagerly for the fulfilment of some expectation, grows wearied. Now
        the Psalmist fixed the eyes of his soul on the salvation of God. What must be
        understood by the salvation we have frequently explained; namely, that it is
        Jesus, who shall save His people from their sins. While others then filled
        their eyes with the desires of the world, and directed them towards the
        pleasures of the present life, the Psalmist fixed his on the salvation of God.
        Nor let us suppose that his eyes failed merely with the effort of
        contemplation. They do not rest only on the salvation of God, but
        also on the proclamation of His righteousness. He confesses, then, the just
        proclamations of God. He knows that there are some, which, by the thoughtless
        and impious, are reckoned as unjust utterances : when the heart of Pharaoh is
        hardened to contumacy, and the obstinacy of an irreligious will is imputed to
        him; when, of two nations yet unborn, it is told that the elder shall serve the
        younger; and when, though neither has wrought any good, subservience is imposed
        on one, domination given to another; when Adam is expelled from Paradise, that
        he may not eat of the Tree of Life. These things men, unable to enter into the
        idea of divine excellence, goodness, and justice, determine to be unjust,
        simply because they cannot understand them. But the eyes of the Psalmist fail
        in looking on the just utterances of this sort. For he knows that there is no
        injustice in these words of God, but that, at the advent of God our Saviour,
        these decisions are to be consummated, and will be perceived by us to have been
        works of justice."
         Presently, on the words, "Deal with Thy servant
        according to Thy mercy" (CXIX. 124): —
         "For there is need of His mercy that we may abide
        in the profession of our service. Weak is human infirmity in the way of gaining
        anything; this is alone its natural duty to will, and to begin, to enrol itself
        into the family of God. It is the work of the divine mercy to help the willing,
        to strengthen the beginners, to welcome those who have come to Him. But we must
        do what we can in the way of beginning, that He may make perfect."
         Hilary is certainly emphatic upon the side of our
        position as free agents; more so, perhaps, than Augustine would have altogether
        approved of. Prayer, study of God's Word, fasting, preservation of purity, are
        all to be employed, and through them we are to place our hope on the mercy of
        God, which is, after all, the one great resource. But our fasts and alms must
        be undertaken in a right spirit, and not casually.
             "We, if we fast once, think that we have done
        enough; if we give anything to a poor man out of the abundance of our private
        property, we believe that we have fulfilled all righteousness; when,
        perhaps, our fasting has been done to please men, or to relieve a frame wearied
        with feasting; and even during our fasts we meditate on lawless passion, on
        wrongs to be done to others, on hatreds; and our giving has arisen from our
        being tired at the poor man's knock at the door, or from our craving for a
        reputation for goodness in the vain and idle judgment of men. And then we think
        it due to us that our petitions should be heard by God; but the Psalmist hopes
        for all from God, looks for everything from His mercy. He fulfils, indeed, all
        the works of goodness, but he does not think this enough for salvation, unless
        he obtains mercy according to the compassions of God and His judgments."
         We give one more specimen from a comment on "I
        said unto the Lord, Thou art my God"
         " It is the mark of no light and scanty confidence
        to have said unto the Lord, Thou art my God. A mind given up to lust, to
        avarice, to self-pleasing, to drunkenness, cannot utter those words. All these
        things must we renounce, and put an end to our subservience to them and
        acquaintance with them, that by such renunciation we may dare to say, I have
        said unto the Lord, Thou art my God.''
         Hilary proceeds to show that all true Christians are
        warranted in making these words their own, but that Christ could use them in a
        manner special and peculiar to Himself; and that He did virtually so employ
        them on many occasions, such as the multiplication of the loaves and fishes, at
        the raising of Lazarus, and at the acceptance of His cup of woe in the garden
        of Gethsemane.
             It is curious to find the Saracens mentioned by a
        bishop of Gaul at so early a date. In the comment on Psalm CXX. 5 (on the
        words, "that I dwell in the tents of Kedar"), Hilary writes,
        "These are the men now called Saracens". The name became only too
        familiar to his countrymen between AD 1100-1270. It is also a
        curious coincidence that the famous victory of Charles Martel in AD 732
        over the Saracens, which saved France and Europe from their domination, was won
        in the district between Poitiers and Tours, the episcopal seats of the two
        bishops whose careers we have attempted to elucidate in the limits of this
        humble volume.
         The commentary on St. Matthew is the earliest in the
        Latin tongue on any one Gospel, just as the treatise on the Holy Trinity is
        also the first that was published in the Western Church. We find it more
        difficult to give specimens of this commentary than of the reflections on the
        Psalms. Possibly, as a rule, it seems less striking, or, perhaps, we look for
        more on such a theme; especially if we are at all acquainted with the richness
        of an Augustine or a Chrysostom, or of treatises formed out of a number of authors,
        or with modern writings based upon such.
             Here is a passage on the Transfiguration :— "But
        while He was yet speaking a bright cloud overshadowed them, and they are
        encompassed with the spirit of divine power. A voice from the cloud proclaims
        that this is the Son, this the Beloved, this He in Whom the Father is well
        pleased, this He Who is to be listened to; so that, after the condemnation
        passed on Him by the world, the voluntary submission to the cross, He might
        be recognised as the fitting author of true teaching, as having
        confirmed by His own example the glory of the heavenly kingdom to be given to
        bodies after decease by the resurrection from the dead. He roused His disciples
        from their state of dread and alarm. Him they see alone Whom they had witnessed
        standing between Moses and Elias ... He bids them preserve silence respecting
        the events they had witnessed until He should rise from the dead. For this was
        reserved as a reward for their faith, that honour might be given to
        disciples who had accepted, as in no wise light, the authority of his precepts
        in themselves. Still He had perceived that they were weak as yet for the
        hearing of the voice. When they were filled with the Holy Spirit, then should
        they be witnesses of spiritual events."
         The following is his comment on the feeding of the
        Four Thousand (Matt. XV. 36, 37):—
         "The material supplied is thereupon increased,
        whether on the spots marked out as tables, or in the hands of the dispensers,
        or in the mouths of the eaters, I know not. By this deed the framer of the
        universe is made manifest."
         In an earlier passage (XIV. 19) he refers to the holy
        Eucharist as "the heavenly food of eternal life."
         The other works of Hilary will, in part at least, come
        under our notice in subsequent chapters. One of the most important, in his own
        day, was the one entitled "On Synods" ("De Synodis"). It was a letter written by the Bishop of
        Poitiers during his exile in Phrygia to his brother bishops in Gaul. It was
        what we should now call an Irenicon, beseeching all possible
        gentleness of consideration for the Semi-Arians, and putting the best
        construction that could be allowed upon their phraseology while appealing to
        them; at any rate, not to deny the lawfulness of the term "of one
        substance" even if they were not yet prepared to accept it. In adopting
        this course Hilary was (though it would seem independently) taking the same
        line as his great compeer, Athanasius. But there were not wanting those who
        thought that Hilary had conceded too much. Their opinions found a spokesman in
        a brave, outspoken, but somewhat harsh-minded, defender of the faith, Lucifer,
        bishop of Cagliari. A rejoinder to Lucifer by Hilary was printed for
        the first time by the Benedictines in their edition of Hilary's work in 1693.
        It is couched in terms of great courtesy. But this treatise demands a chapter
        to itself.
         Very different in tone is Hilary's book against Auxentius,
        bishop of Milan. But, then, Auxentius really seems to have been a
        double-minded man, who pretended to be orthodox, but was really an Arian at
        heart. It was written in a.d. 365, and will be
        brought before the reader as we proceed.
         Some further notice must be taken of a lost historical
        work which Hilary composed between the years 360 and 366. Written against two
        Arian bishops, Valens and Ursacius, it contained
        a history of the Councils of Rimini and Seleucia. The fragments, first
        published in 1598, are of considerable value, and have been only employed by
        modern historians of the Church, as, for example, Canons Robertson and Bright.
        But the suspicion, to say the least, of early interpolations necessarily
        lessens the authority of the collection. The contest concerning the documents
        contained in it is rendered all the more keen, inasmuch as, if the whole were
        accepted as genuine, the case against Liberius, bishop of Rome, would be
        much strengthened. That some of the fragments do not deserve our confidence
        must. we think, be conceded by unbiassed disputants.
         During his exile in Phrygia, Hilary learnt, either
        directly or indirectly, that there was some prospect of his daughter, Abra,
        being sought in marriage, though she was only in her thirteenth year. Hilary
        wrote a letter, drawing a picture, in somewhat mystic language, of the heavenly
        bridegroom, and with it he sent a morning and an evening hymn. The letter
        evidently hints that the bishop would prefer hearing that his daughter had
        resolved to embrace a life of celibacy. But he desires her to use her own judgment,
        and on any difficulty in the letter or in the hymns Abra is to
        consult her mother.
         Some readers may possibly look for the expression of
        opinion on the question whether the life and writings of St. Hilary have any
        very direct and important bearing upon the points at issue between ourselves
        and our Roman Catholic fellow-Christians. The answer must probably be in the
        negative, if direct evidence be sought for. So far as indirect evidence is
        concerned, it seems to the present writer (though this will be put down perhaps
        to Anglican prejudice) that what is to be found is, in almost every case,
        hostile to the claims of Rome. Let us glance at four points: development;
        the honor to be accorded to the Virgin
        Mother of the Lord; the position of the Bishop of Rome; and the general
        question of authority.
         1. Undoubtedly the works of Hilary do suggest the
        existence of a doctrine of development. Such a doctrine is implied also in the
        writings of the historian Evagrius in the
        fifth century, and, again, very frequently in the writings of St.
        Augustine. But it need not involve more than this—that, to use the words
        of Augustine, "many things pertaining to the Catholic faith, while in
        course of agitation by the hot restlessness of heretics, are, with a view to
        defence against them, weighed more carefully, understood more clearly, and
        preached more earnestly; and the question mooted by the adversary hath become
        an occasion of our learning." Thus much was always granted by the late
        Professor Hussey, of Oxford, in criticising the theory of Cardinal
        Newman and his allies. But it had been preached before the same university by
        Dean Hook many years earlier—before the rise of controversy upon the subject.
         2. As regards the honour to be given to
        her whom all generations shall call blessed, the language of our author seems
        at times to fall short of that employed by great Anglican divines such as
        Bishop Pearson, Bishop Bull, and many more. Even in the strongest passage which
        virtually concedes the title of Theotokos, or
        God-bearer, which is so thoroughly recognised by the Anglican
        doctors, Hilary speaks of the Virgin as having to endure the severity
        of God's judgment at the Last Day.
         3. Hilary had certainly an exalted opinion of the
        position of St. Peter as spokesman and leader of the Apostolic College. But
        this of itself proves nothing. In the works of St. Cyprian, of Bishop
        Pearson, we find a similar recognition, but unless it is further conceded that
        the Bishop of Rome is successor to the powers of St. Peter, in a sense which is
        untrue of other bishops, nothing is proved.
         4. The truth seems to be that Hilary conceded
        authority to conscience, to Holy Scripture, to Church councils, without ever
        putting forth any theory of the precise weight to be accorded to each element.
        How he was himself led on by conscience and right reason is clear from the
        first extract given in this chapter. As regards Holy Scripture, it must suffice
        in this place to point to the same passage, and to Hilary's assertion that he
        had learnt the doctrine contained in the Nicene Creed from the New Testament,
        though he had never heard the creed itself until he was on the point of exile.
        At a later date he seems to countenance the statement in Newman's
        "Arians" that too many of the bishops who had been present at Nicaea
        did not stand up boldly for the faith on their return to their dioceses; and
        that its preservation was, in many cases, mainly due to the courage and
        fidelity of the Christian laity.
         In his journey into North Italy, and his travels in
        those parts with Eusebius of Vercelli, there is not a word of any permission
        being asked of the Bishop of Rome. Indeed, some of the strongest evidence
        respecting the fall of the Roman Pontiff, Liberius (who, for a time,
        gave some degree of countenance to Arianism), is derived from a collection of
        letters originally made by Hilary, though subsequently it would seem
        interpolated. In the words of a living Roman Catholic historian, the Duc de
        Broglie, "it seems impossible to destroy the concurrence of testimonies
        which attest the fall of Liberius; but we admit that it is very difficult
        to determine the extent and the character of his false step". But a more
        detailed examination of this subject must be reserved for a later chapter.
         On the whole, Hilary seems to write and to act in the
        spirit of the often-quoted saying of St. Cyprian, to the effect that "the
        episcopate is one of which each bishop possesses an unlimited
        liability". A bishop evidently supporting heresy, in Hilary's judgment,
        lost his rights, and the Bishop of Poitiers was prepared to wield the influence
        conferred on him not only by his ecclesiastical rank, but his character for courage
        and ability in defence of the Catholic faith, wherever it might be assailed.
        This view of Hilary's position and career is, at any rate, not inspired by any
        of those insular prepossessions of which British writers are often accused. It
        struck the eminent Roman Catholic divine, Mohler, who, as we have already
        remarked, has justly applied to Hilary the words used by Gibbon concerning the
        contemporary work of Athanasius that, "in a time of public danger, the
        dull claims of age and rank are sometimes superseded."
         That we may not, however, close this chapter with
        merely controversial thoughts, we subjoin a few more extracts from Hilary's
        greatest work, the "De Trinitate",
        which must commend themselves, we would fain hope, to every Christian
        mind.
         "It is perfect knowledge so to know God, that
        thou shouldst know Him to be not indeed one who is shrouded from our
        knowledge, but one whose nature we cannot worthily express. We must believe in
        Him, recognise Him, adore Him, and by such duties ought we to
        express what He is".
         Again : —
             "God, in His love for the world, exhibited this
        proof of His love, the giving of His only-begotten Son. If the proof of His
        love had consisted only in setting forth a creature for creatures; giving for
        the world that which was of the world; and redeeming beings sprung from nothing
        by a being sprung from nothing like themselves; a sacrifice thus weak and
        unimportant would not call forth a faith of great worth. But precious is that
        which evidences love; and greatness is measured by what is great. God, in His love
        for the world, gave not an adopted Son, but His own, the only-begotten. In Him
        is the real property of the Father, nativity and truth, no mere creation, nor
        adoption, nor semblance. The pledge of God's love and charity is to have given
        for the salvation of the world His own and only-begotten Son."
          
             CHAPTER XIII. HILARY'S "IRENICON"
              
             Although in a previous chapter we have given a slight
        general idea of the circumstances which induced Hilary to compose his treatise
        on the Synods, yet the importance of the book demands, even at the risk of a
        slight repetition, some further notice, and that more lively idea of its
        character and tone which will, we trust, be supplied by the translation of some
        portion of its contents. The full title of this letter runs as follows
        :—"On the Synods of the Catholic Faith against the Arians, and against Perverters of
        the Faith who take the side of the Arians."
         The address of this treatise presents a rather
        difficult study in what may be termed the ecclesiastical geography of the time,
        that is to say, at the close of AD 358, or the commencement of
        the year following. Literally translated, it runs thus :—
         "To my most beloved and blessed brethren and
        fellow-bishops of the provinces of the first and second Germany, the first and
        second Belgica, the first and second Lyonesse, of the province of
        Aquitania, and the province of the Nine-Nations, of the Narbonian province, especially the people and clergy
        of Toulouse, and to the bishops of the British provinces, Hilary, the
        servant of Christ, wishes eternal salvation in God and our Lord."
         It would probably be impossible, and hardly worth
        while even if possible, to trace the precise bounds of the various provinces
        here named. But commentators have succeeded in discovering, in most instances,
        the name of the ecclesiastical metropolis of each; and this knowledge gives a
        very fair general notion of the people whom the Bishop of Poitiers was
        addressing. These head-quarters of Church authority stood as follows (for
        convenience sake we give the modern names):—For the first Germany, Mainz (or Mayence); for the second Germany, Koln (Cologne); for the
        first Belgica, Trier (Treves); for the second Belgica, Rheims; for
        the first Lyonesse, Lyons; for the second Lyonesse, Rouen; for the
        province of the Nine-Nations (roughly corresponding with Gascony) a town near
        the present site of Agen. The special mention of Toulouse probably arises
        from the circumstance that its bishop, by name Rhodanius,
        had been kept firm in the faith, though of a yielding nature, by the influence
        of Hilary, and was at this time involved in the same sentence of exile. As
        regards the last in this list, the provinciarum Britannicarum episcopi,
        it must be observed that they are bishops long antecedent to the mission of St.
        Augustine and the establishment of Dorobernium or
        Kent-town (for such is the meaning of Cantuaria),
        now known to us as Canterbury, as the seat of the primacy. For Hilary is
        writing, at the latest, in AD 359, whereas the date of St.
        Augustine's mission is AD 597.
         Hilary begins by explaining that he had for some time
        thought silence best. But he understands that the rarity of communication on
        the part of his brethren in Gaul has arisen from the distance caused by his
        exile, and the actual ignorance on the part of many of the country to which he
        was banished. But he now hears, to his delight, that for three years his
        brother-bishops have refused communion to Saturninus; are thoroughly at
        heart with him who now addresses them; and have not only declined to accept,
        but have condemned, the formula drawn up by an assembly held at Sirmium.
        Hilary proceeds thus :—
         "I have now felt it to be a duty and an act of
        piety to transmit, as a bishop to bishops who hold communion with me in Christ,
        the conversation of salutary and faithful discourse; so that I, who in my fear
        of uncertain issues was congratulating myself on my personal freedom from all
        these difficulties, might now rejoice in the integrity of our common faith. O
        unshaken firmness of your noble conscientiousness! O strong house built on the
        foundation of the faithful rock. O uninjured and undisturbed constancy of an
        inviolate will!"
         Hilary assures his friends that the news of the
        firmness and decision of their faith has, even at this late hour, produced
        considerable effect jupon the temper and conduct of some Oriental
        prelates, who had given way to the decrees promulgated at Sirmium. He now
        writes, however, not merely to congratulate them on their behaviour and
        its good results, but also to answer the inquiries addressed to him by some
        among them as to the positions taken up by the Orientals. The task thus imposed
        upon him is a difficult one; for, if it is hard to put into words one's own
        belief, it is still harder to set forth the belief entertained by others. He
        will try his best. Only let them be sure to read his epistle to the end, and
        not to judge him until that is done. In that case he is not without hope that
        crafty heretics may fail in their attempts to deceive, and that the sincere
        upholders of the Catholic faith may attain what they so much desire. Hilary
        then describes those mutual suspicions of the Oriental and Gallican episcopate,
        to which reference has been made in a former chapter; how the language of the
        Westerns seemed to their brethren in the East to be tinged with Sabellianism,
        while in turn the bishops in Gaul supposed their fellow-prelates in Asia to be
        in danger of lapsing into thorough Arianism.
         It is necessary, in the first place, then, for Hilary
        to show forth with all possible definiteness the precise tenour of the protests made by the Orientals against
        the decrees of the Council of Sirmium (the one known as the
        Second Sirmian, held in AD 357);
        "not", he says, "that all this was not most clearly published by others,
        but because an exact verbal translation from Greek into Latin generally causes
        obscurity. Since the care taken to preserve a parallelism between the actual
        words employed cannot succeed in creating the same definite impression upon
        ordinary understandings."
         Let it be permitted to us to remark, in passing, that
        this is a problem of all time, and not confined to translations from Greek into
        Latin. The Venerable Bede refers to the same difficulty when he attempts to
        give a Latin version of a hymn of the earliest Anglo-Saxon poet, Caedmon;
        and a great master of language in our own day, John Henry Newman, has also
        dwelt upon it in two of his Anglican works. To find it, however, acknowledged
        by Hilary is peculiarly gratifying to one who, like the present writer, is among
        the first, he believes, who have attempted to present certain portions of
        Hilary's own writings in an English dress. Hilary could not complain if he
        found that an English version of his own writings occasionally became a
        paraphrase.
         It is curious to find Hilary in some degree
        anticipating the criticism of Erasmus upon the question of ignorance, and
        evidently intimating that to pretend ignorance concerning that which has been
        clearly revealed amounts to an abnegation of duty. Among the sadder elements of
        the story told in the "De Synodis", is that
        of the ambiguous Creed of Sirmium being signed by Hosius of
        Cordova, who had been one of the leading bishops on the orthodox side at Nice,
        possibly the actual president of that famous council. Hilary, however, does not
        appear to have been aware of some mitigating circumstances. The creed, assigned
        in the "De Synodis" to the actual
        penmanship of Hosius and another, was in all probability not actually
        composed by that prelate. It may be said that this is a fact of minor
        importance, if, after all, Hosius set his signature to this
        fallacious document. But we learn from other sources that he was more than a
        hundred years old when he thus acted, and, further, that it was under the
        pressure of torture.
         Hilary criticises this document (known as
        the Creed of Sirmium) with great ability, showing on the one hand where it
        falls short of the full truth, and on the other what large admissions heretics
        were now willing to make, as feeling the pressure of Scriptural authority.
        Having already pointed out the weakness and inconsistency of the Semi-Arian
        creed, we need not here dwell upon our author's analysis of it. Hilary passes
        on to an account of a synod held at Antioch. This was a synod of high repute
        held in AD 341, on the occasion of the dedication of a church of which
        Constantine himself had laid the foundations. The main object before the ninety
        bishops who composed it was to condemn, not Arianism, but the Sabellianism which
        had sprung up since the date of the great gathering at Nicaea. It was at this
        point that there came in some of the difficulties of translation to which
        reference has been made. The Greek-speaking Fathers spoke of "three
        hypostases in one ousia" which
        Hilary translates "three substances in one essence"; though he
        evidently meant what was afterwards better expressed as "three persons in
        one essence". Even here, however, we must carefully bear in mind that the
        term person is not to be understood as meaning all that it implies in human
        agents—namely, an independent unity.
         Accounts of other synods and documents follow. Then
        comes a summary of the difficulties which have arisen, partly from the profound
        nature of the questions at issue, and partly from the lamentable ignorance even
        of those who ought to have been guides and teachers of the flock.
             "So great is the peril of the Eastern Churches,
        that it is rare to find either priests or people sound in the faith. Sadly
        through the fault of some has authority been granted to impiety; and in
        consequence of the banishment of bishops, whose case is not unknown to you, the
        strength of the profane ones has been increased". And here comes in that
        sad account of the spiritual condition of Asia Minor which has been already
        quoted in our eighth chapter—that on "Hilary and the Semi-Arians."
         Hilary then proceeds to admit that the objection to
        the term "of one substance" (homoousion), on the ground that
        it may, under certain circumstances, be supposed to suggest Sabellianism,
        has not been wholly unreasonable. It needs to be set forth in such a context
        and such a manner as may render its orthodoxy clear and unmistakable.
         "Let us urge no solitary phrase from among the
        divine mysteries in such wise as to cause suspicion on the part of hearers and
        give occasion to the blasphemer. The one substance may be uttered with piety,
        may be kept in silence with piety."
         Hilary then proceeds, while criticising the
        danger of the worst sense being attached to it, to admit that the Semi-Arian
        watchword "of like substance" may be patient of a good
        interpretation.
         "I entreat you, brethren, remove suspicion, shut
        out occasions of offence, In order that the homoiousion may
        be approved, let us not find fault with the homoonsion.
        Let us think of so many bishops, holy men and now at rest; what judgment will
        the Lord pass upon us if they are now anathematised by us? ... For we
        were ordained by them, and we are their successors. Let us renounce the
        episcopate, because we shall have commenced its duties with an anathema. Make
        allowance, brethren, for my grief; the task on which you are venturing is an
        impious one. I cannot endure the suggestion, that any man avowing the homoiousion in a religious sense should lie
        under an anathema. There is nothing criminal in a term which in nowise shocks
        the religious sense. I neither know nor understand the homoiousion,
        except as a confession of a like essence. I call to witness the God of heaven
        and earth, that I, when I had not yet heard either term, yet had always felt
        the lawfulness of each in such wise that by "of one substance" ought
        to be understood of like substance—that is, that nothing like to itself in
        nature could possibly exist, unless it were of the same nature. Baptized a
        considerable time since, and abiding for a short time in the episcopate, I
        never heard the Nicene Creed, except when on the point of exile; but the
        Gospels and the Epistles made clear to me the sense of the homoousion and homoiousion. Pious is the wish we cherish. Let us
        not condemn the Fathers, let us not give courage to the heretics, lest, while
        we drive heresy away, we nourish heresy. Our Fathers, after the Council
        of Nicaea, interpreted the fitness of the one substance in a religious
        spirit; their treatises are extant, full perception of what they meant abides
        with us; if anything in the way of addition is needed, let us consult about it
        in common. A most excellent condition of the faith may yet be built up amongst
        us, on the basis that nothing that has been well arranged may be disturbed, and
        all that is wrongly understood may be cut away.
         "I have, O brethren beloved, gone beyond the
        modesty of human intelligence, and, forgetful of my humility, have written on
        matters so vast and recondite, themes before this age of ours unattempted and kept in silence, under the compulsion
        of my love for you; and I have told you my own belief, under the conviction
        that I owe to the Church the service of this my campaign, that by means of this
        letter I should mark out distinctly the voice of my episcopate in Christ in
        according with evangelic doctrine. It is your duty so to treat in common, to
        provide, and so to act, that what you abide in with faith inviolate up to the
        present day you may preserve with religious conscientiousness, and what you
        hold now you may hold still. Be mindful in your holy prayers of my exile.
        Pleasant as would be a return from that exile to you in the Lord Jesus Christ,
        it is, I feel well-nigh sure, after this my exposition of the faith, a safer
        issue that I should die. That God and our Lord may preserve you undefiled and
        uninjured to the day of revelation is, brethren beloved, my desire."
         That this letter, conjoined as it was with consistent
        treatment of Semi-Arians throughout Hilary's subsequent career, produced a
        great effect upon the mind of Christian Gaul, can hardly be doubted. So far as
        any hesitation arose concerning it, it was from the orthodox, not from the
        Semi-Arian camp, that it proceeded. There have been critics who have regarded
        its concessions as somewhat exceeding those which Hilary's great compeer,
        Athanasius, would have been inclined to make. But Dom Coutant, the
        Benedictine editor of the works of Hilary, appears successfully to have
        disposed of this theory, alleging, fairly enough, we think, that any slight
        seeming discrepancy of tone may be accounted for by observation of
        the difference of dates and circumstances. A conference between the defenders
        of the Nicene Creed in the West and its still more remarkable
        champion in the East would, in all human probability, have proved that their
        line of action was virtually as identical as the faith for which they were
        contending. But, even if both were present, which is doubtful, for a brief time
        at the Council of Seleucia in AD 359, the visit of Athanasius
        to that city was a secret unknown, not merely to all his enemies but even to
        most of his friends, so that the two allies never met for conference. The
        period embraced in Hilary's exile (which lasted, as we have said, for at least
        the three years commencing with AD 356) is contemporary with
        the third expulsion of Athanasius from Alexandria; the expulsion achieved in
        that same year (356), by the secret orders of the dissembling Constantius,
        when, at the hour of midnight, Syrianus, duke of
        Egypt, with five thousand soldiers, attacked, with tumult and bloodshed, the
        congregation of faithful worshippers gathered together in the church of
        St. Theonas. That attack was the prelude to
        similar outrages in the other churches of Alexandria, which, for four months,
        remained, in the words of Gibbon, "exposed to the insults of a licentious
        army, stimulated by the ecclesiastics of a hostile faction."
         The insults and cruelties inflicted upon holy maidens,
        as well as upon bishops and presbyters, at the instigation of the Arians, need
        not here be told in detail. The point with which we are here concerned is, that
        the main object of the assault, Athanasius himself, escaped into the desert,
        though not until he had seen the last of the congregation depart. For six years
        (356-362) the Archbishop of Alexandria, in the inaccessible retreats of the
        deserts, lived as a monk among monks. But, though constantly changing his place
        so as to elude pursuit, he continued to send forth his vigorous writings in
        defence of the faith and against Constantius.
             In the romantic series of repeated exiles, in the
        concentration of all hostility against his individual self—insomuch that
        "Athanasius against the world" has passed into a proverb—in the
        imperial, though still humble and self-forgetting, care of all the churches,
        the place of the Bishop of Poitiers is undoubtedly below that of the great
        Archbishop of Alexandria. But the work of Athanasius would have remained far
        less thorough and complete, if, for the many thousands unacquainted with the
        Greek language, there had been no doctor in the West to teach, in ways of his
        own and in the Latin, the great lessons which his generation needed to learn.
        Perhaps the fact that they were never able to meet face to face must be
        considered to enhance the substantial unity of their creed and work.
         Both found it necessary in some degree to break with
        Lucifer of Cagliari. Athanasius, in a well-known passage of his "De Synodis" (41), expressed his willingness to regard as
        brethren those who accepted all that was decreed at Nice, except the term
        "of one substance". His most recent English biographer is, no doubt,
        right in insisting that Athanasius did not consider that such a position on the
        part of the Semi-Arians ought to be, or would be, a permanent one. He was
        convinced that in time they would perceive the value and importance of the
        term, and that it would come to be accepted by them, as, in truth, it has come
        to be accepted by Christendom at large; being, in the words of Gibbon,
        "unanimously received as a fundamental article of the Christian faith, by
        the consent of the Greek, the Latin, the Oriental, and the Protestant
        Churches."
         Hilary, in the work before us, evidently meant to
        express similar sentiments. But Lucifer of Cagliari thought that he had
        conceded too much, and had recognised the Semi-Arians as being now in
        full possession of the truth. In a kindly and courteous explanation sent to
        Lucifer, the Bishop of Poitiers denied that he had meant or had
        said so much.
         " I said not they had proffered the true faith,
        but a hope of recalling the true faith."
         A few years later, the submission of opponents of the
        Creed of Nicaea was made upon so large a scale that the question of the terms
        on which they were to be received was anxiously debated. Reconciliations of
        this nature are proverbially matters of much delicacy. The discussion on the
        terms to be granted to those who had lapsed had, in a previous generation,
        caused long and bitter controversy, and had largely contributed to the
        schismatic movement known as Novatianism.
        Happily no such serious rent arose out of the negotiations between the orthodox
        and the returning Arians or Semi-Arians. Nevertheless, the Bishop of Cagliari,
        unable to accept the gentle terms offered by the majority, refused to
        communicate not only with those who had been misled at Rimini, but also with
        all who had received such even when they had manifested their repentance. A
        few, hence called Luciferians, sided with him. The general feeling branded
        them as schismatics; and Jerome, though partially excusing the leader, wrote a
        treatise against his followers. Some who did not agree with Lucifer yet shrunk
        from positive condemnation. The Church historian, Sulpicius Severus, who will
        subsequently come before us as the biographer of St. Martin, declines to
        pronounce a judgment on the case. But if he hesitates here (on the whole, we
        venture to think, mistakenly), on one point he feels no doubt whatever.
        "This", writes Sulpicius, "is admitted on all hands, that our
        Gaul was freed from the guilt of heresy by the good work of Hilary alone."
          
             CHAPTER XIV. HILARY AS HISTORIAN.
              
             The activity of our prelate's mind was not
        sufficiently occupied by the production of Commentaries on Holy Scripture and
        dogmatic theology, by letters to Constantius, or to his friends in Gaul. In
        addition to these labours, Hilary, as we have already observed, composed
        between AD 360-366 an historic work, in which he intended to
        give some account of the Councils of Seleucia and Rimini, and to
        explain how it came to pass that the Council of Rimini, summoned by
        Constantius, was led to oppose the orthodox Creed of Nicaea.
         Of this history we only possess fragments, and, most
        unfortunately, these fragments are not in a sound condition. At an early
        period, seemingly while Hilary was yet alive, some interpolations crept into
        the work; and this circumstance throws a shadow of doubtfulness over the value
        of the fragments, considered as a whole. Many statements, however, contained in
        them receive abundant corroboration from independent sources, and, in turn,
        throw light upon incidents narrated by other authors. Such are, for example,
        the calumnious charge against the great Athanasius, that he had slain a man
        named Arsenius, who was subsequently produced alive; the
        equally calumnious, though less grave, accusation against one of the
        deacons of Athanasius,—Macharius,—that he had broken
        a chalice; the mention of a letter from the Egyptian bishops to their brother
        prelate, Julius, bishop of Rome, and the like. These, with many more details of
        a like kind, are testified to by Theodoret and also by St. Athanasius
        himself.
         The same must be said concerning a summary of the many
        brutalities enacted against orthodox prelates, and even holy maidens, by
        Arians, which forms part of a narrative of the Council of Sardica. That
        council, summoned by Constantius and Constans, met at some period not earlier
        than AD 343, nor later than 347,—the precise date is much
        disputed,—at this town in Illyricum. Its site coincides, or nearly coincides,
        with that of the modern town of Sophia. There were present about seventy-six
        Eastern and a hundred Western bishops; and Hosius, of Cordova, who had
        probably been president at Nice, again occupied the same honourable position.
        Whether from the stress of business, from its being imprudent to quit Rome, or
        (as Dean Milman suggests) a dislike to risk the growing dignity of
        his see by provoking comparison with the Bishop of Cordova, Julius, the bishop
        of Rome, did not attend. He sent, however, two, or possibly even three,
        episcopal legates to represent him.
         How far Hilary would have shone as an
        historian, in what degree his narrative would have strengthened his case
        against the two Arian bishops of Gaul—Valens and Ursacius—for
        whose confutation he composed it, we have no sufficient means of
        judging.
         In the shape in which it has come down to us, it
        rather resembles a collection of materials for history than a history properly
        so called. Nevertheless, these fragments are far from valueless, and events of
        the last twenty years have somewhat enhanced the interest felt concerning them.
             It is not immediately obvious why our author interwove
        into his history an event so far back as the Council of Sardica. The
        mention of a local council, summoned at Arles in AD 353, is
        intelligible enough. For not only was this council held in Gaul, but it brought
        to the front the man who was to prove Hilary's chief opponent, Saturninus.
        This prelate, with his Arian allies, succeeded in obtaining from this council a
        decree of banishment against the devout and orthodox Paulinus, bishop of
        Treves. Hilary shows that the point then at issue was a question of faith, and
        no mere opinion concerning the conduct of an individual prelate; in other
        words, that it turned upon the Creed of Nicaea, not upon the question
        whether the conduct of Athanasius should be condemned. This is the subject of
        the first of these historic fragments.
         To go back after this commencement upon the Council
        of Sardica looks like a faulty arrangement, which may, perhaps, have
        arisen from the disorganized state in which the book has come down to
        us. However, it gives Hilary an opportunity of not only defending the course
        pursued by Athanasius, but of confirming his defence by the evidence of the two
        prelates against whom, as we have said, the book is written—Valens and Ursacius. The career of these two bishops, though far
        less violent than that of Saturninus, had been extremely wavering and
        inconsistent.
         In two letters (one addressed to Julius, bishop of
        Rome, the other to Athanasius himself) they had recognized the
        innocence of that great champion of truth, and pronounced the various charges
        against him to be false. But at a council held at Sirmium in 349, and
        subsequently at Milan, these acquittals were reversed; and the
        above-named Gallican prelates appear to have been among those who
        changed sides.
         The same difficulty had nearly broken up the Council
        of Sardica. Athanasius, with his two companions, Marcellus of Ancyra,
        and Asclepas, claimed the right to sit and vote,
        but Eusebius of Nicomedia and his partisans would not allow this without a
        fresh trial. When the Eusebians could not carry their point, they
        fled, and organised a rival council at the neighbouring city
        of Philippopolis.
         The Council of Sardica has not been deemed
        of a sufficiently important and representative character to rank among those
        which are commonly called ecumenical. It is true that one or two great names
        among Roman Catholic writers may be cited on behalf of its ecumenicity, and
        that here and there we may find it so called in controversial works written
        by Ultramontanes. But few, if any, Roman
        Catholic writers of repute would now venture to claim such a position for it.
        M. de Broglie disclaims it, and so does even Hefele.
         The last-named author not only shows that the weight
        of authority during the last 300 years is against its ecumenicity, but that
        conclusive arguments from patristic testimony can be adduced. St. Gregory the
        Great and St. Isidore of Seville only knew of four general
        councils—the famous ones of Nice and Constantinople, of Ephesus and Chalcedon.
        St. Augustine, though he had heard of the Eusebian gathering (which
        called itself a Council of Sardica, even after its removal to Philippopolis),
        was entirely ignorant of the fact that an orthodox synod had been held at Sardica.
        Now, this is inconceivable, if it had been acknowledged as an ecumenical
        council.
         Once again we may seem to be wandering far away from
        the words and deeds of Hilary of Poitiers. The link of connection will,
        however, soon become discernible. The Council of Sardica is one of
        those assemblages which, though not in the first rank, yet did aid in producing
        results of importance. It certainly gave an impulse to the growing power of
        the see of Rome. For its third and fourth canons allow a bishop
        deposed by his comprovincial bishops, or non-suited in a case of
        importance, to appeal to the Bishop of Rome, so that he might obtain a
        re-hearing of his case; not, indeed, directly by the Bishop of Rome, but by
        judges of neighbouring provinces appointed by that bishop.
         Moreover, in the third canon we find the following
        words introduced :—"If it seem good to you, let us honour the
        memory of the blessed Apostle Peter, and let letters be addressed to [Julius]
        the bishop of Rome by those who have been the judges; and let him, if it seem
        fitting, reopen the case". The seventh canon runs somewhat similarly. Now,
        although these canons do not appear in the "Fragmenta"
        of Hilary, we do find therein a letter from the Sardican bishops to Julius allowing that he had good
        reason for not being present in person at the synod, and "that it was best
        and fittest that the bishops from all the provinces should make their reports
        to the head—that is, the chair of St. Peter."
         Over the canons of Sardica a fierce contest
        has been waged between the great and learned school of Gallican divines,
        such as De Marca, Dupin, with several others, and the Roman Ultramontanes, or (as Hefele calls them), Curialists. The Gallicans, while pointing out the
        limitations of the cases, yet maintain that these canons involved a novelty;
        and they seem to imply that, as coming from a council not recognised as
        ecumenical, they sanction something like an usurpation. The Curialists not only strain them beyond their natural
        meaning, but declare that, far from being a novelty, these canons only state
        formally what was already recognized informally, and (as English
        jurisprudents would phrase it), at the most, convert common law into statute
        law. Yet even such a change may prove very potent, for it forms a secure basis
        for further aggression.
         Distinguished modern divines, who are far removed from
        any sympathy with distinctively Roman Catholic doctrine, admit that the
        providence of God, in this instance, as in so many more, overruled to good much
        that was abstractedly indefensible. They also grant that natural causes, such
        as the imperial character of the capital of Italy, combined with some of the
        merits of the early occupants of the see, produced that excessive
        domination which by the fourteenth century had become too great for any mere
        mortal, even with the best intentions, to be able to wield it aright. Thus, to
        take one example out of many, the late Professor Hussey of Oxford, in a
        succinct and able essay against the Roman Supremacy, when treating of the age
        of Hilary and Athanasius, writes as follows:—"Rome at that time, and for
        some time afterwards, had earned the precedence in honour always
        allowed to the imperial see, not only by her martyred bishops and her
        munificence to poorer Churches, but also by her orthodoxy, and by the courage
        and ability with which she undertook the championship of the truth against
        various shapes of error."
         In attempting to form an opinion respecting the
        attitude of Hilary's mind towards the Roman claim, it must be owned that the
        evidence we have to proceed upon is somewhat scanty and imperfect. It is not
        even clear that he was acquainted with the actual canons passed at Sardica.
        The supposition that he was ignorant of their precise contents is certainly not
        more startling than is the fact that Augustine did not even know of the
        existence of an orthodox Council of Sardica. But, even if, which is more
        probable, Hilary was acquainted with them, it must be remembered that the
        majority of copies contain the word which we have placed in brackets; that is
        to say, the name of Julius. The Sardican canons
        were published both in Latin and Greek; and in the great work of Labbe on
        the Concilia, the name of the then Bishop of
        Rome appears both in the Greek copy and in one of the two Latin ones therein
        given.
         It is no doubt possible—and a learned German
        Protestant, Spittler, strongly takes this view—that those
        who inserted the name of Julius may have done so
        without necessarily meaning to limit the powers therein assigned, so
        far as a non-ecumenical council could assign them, to the person thus named.
        Nevertheless, those who have seen even a little of the behind-scenes working of
        public bodies, alike in causes civil and ecclesiastical, must be aware how
        frequently the personal element affects the resolutions that nominally spring
        out of abstract considerations. Stated openly, they would constantly run
        somewhat as follows:—"Let such and such additional powers be conferred
        upon the prefect of such a city, for it is an ancient and central one; and
        then, you know, the present prefect is such an excellent, genial, hospitable
        man". "Let such an extension of authority be refused to the
        bishop of such and such a diocese, because there would be found
        difficulties in the working out of the scheme; and besides the present holder,
        A. B., with many good gifts, has incurred, whether justly or not, a prejudice
        in connection with this or that event". True that in each case the first
        part is usually said aloud and the latter in a whisper; but, for all that, it
        is often the whispered word that proves the more influential and the one which
        actually prevails.
         Now Julius, who occupied the Roman see for fifteen
        years (AD 337-352), had proved himself through all these troublous times to be a model prelate. He had maintained
        the truth of that great central article of the Christian faith, the
        Incarnation, which forms the chief glory of the human race; and he had loyally
        supported the action of its foremost champion, Athanasius. Indeed, Rome, which
        until the time of Leo I made scarcely any direct contribution to theology, had,
        under the sway of Julius, not only welcomed the Bishop of Alexandria on the
        occasion of his second exile from Egypt, but had become (in Dean Milman's phrase)
        "the scholar as well as the loyal partisan of Athanasius". Athanasius
        impressed upon Latin Christianity the spirit of orthodoxy, and "introduced
        into Rome the knowledge and practice of the monastic life."
         Consequently, a claim for an accession of authority to
        "the bishop of the royal city", as Socrates calls the Roman prelate,
        came before the Council of Sardica with a great prestige in its favor. The retirement of the Eusebians to Philippopolis left
        the orthodox bishops in possession of the field. The Council, sitting within
        the realms of the orthodox Constans, reaffirmed the decisions of Nice, and
        compelled even Constantius to consent to a restoration of Athanasius.
         It would be interesting, if we possessed the entire
        work of Hilary, to know how he understood the only sentence contained in his
        extensive writings—and that sentence not his own—which even hints at a primacy
        residing in the Roman see. Did he regard what had been done as a power
        conferred simply on his friend Julius? Did he look at the Council of Sardica as
        in these matters a purely local one, and as solely conferring (whether on
        Julius or on his successors) a right of appeal from Illyricum and Macedonia? These
        provinces, though mainly Greek in race and language, formed part of
        the empire. That they should seek association with Rome in matters
        ecclesiastical as well as civil was only natural, more especially as the
        temporal authority in the East was at this time both heterodox and tyrannical;
        while at Rome both Church and State were on the side of orthodoxy.
         To these questions we have no sufficient means of
        returning a satisfactory reply. Yet it does seem as if a certain course of
        action on the part of Hilary and certain portions of these
        "Fragments" may aid us in arriving at a conclusion which attains, to
        say the very least, to a high degree of probability.
         The course of action has already been referred to, and
        must come under our notice once again. In his latest years, Hilary resolved to
        leave the home to which he had returned, and to confront, in his own quarters,
        the Arianising bishop of Milan, Auxentius.
        In this tour Hilary enjoyed the company and aid of Eusebius, bishop of
        Vercelli. It seems to have been injured by the opposition of Lucifer of
        Cagliari. It was brought to a termination by the stern mandates of the emperor,
        Constantius. But, as we have already observed, not one single hint can be
        discovered of the slightest appeal to the authority of the Bishop of Rome.
         That bishop was the successor of Julius in the Roman
        see, Liberius. That the conduct of Liberius may have greatly
        influenced the feeling of Hilary towards the Roman see, is very possible. But,
        concerning that conduct, these "Fragments" are one of the sources of
        evidence. Our general verdict, identical with that of M. de Broglie, has already
        been given. But at this point we must re-state the case a little more in
        detail.
         The question is whether Liberius, who became
        bishop of Rome in AD 352. did or did not, during any part of
        his career, lend countenance to the Arian heresy.
         There are large portions of Christendom, there are
        large tracts of time in its history, when such a question could only have been
        regarded as one of very subordinate importance. It is impossible to describe
        such a condition of feeling more clearly, or to state it more emphatically,
        than has been done by the greatest doctor of the Western Church, St. Augustine.
        Writing against Donatist adversaries, he exclaims, "It is a
        consolation by no means slight, nay, of no mean glory, to be criminally
        accused, in company with the Church itself, by the enemies of the Church; yet
        her defence does not depend on the defence of those men whom they [the
        Donatists] attack with their false charges. Assuredly, whatever may have
        been Marcellinus, Marcellus, Silvester, Melchiades [bishops
        of Rome], Mensurius, Coecilianus [bishops of Carthage], no damage accrues to the Catholic Church diffused
        throughout the universe, in no wise are we crowned by their innocence, in no
        wise are we condemned by their iniquity."
         Christendom at large would still be prepared to
        re-echo these trenchant and decided accents, so long as the terms innocence or
        iniquity referred to moral conduct only. But the work of Augustine in which
        they occur touches upon questions concerning doctrine even more than on those
        connected with morality. In the matter now to be discussed—the case of Liberius—the
        case is essentially doctrinal.
         To begin with what is admitted on all sides. The
        commencement of the episcopate of Liberius was marked by conduct most
        loyal to the truth and to its defender, Athanasius. Called upon, by a message
        from Constantius in AD 356, to condemn Athanasius, Liberius insisted
        on demanding a fair trial for the Bishop of Alexandria. He further demanded
        that the accusers should disavow Arianism as a condition of their being allowed
        to bring charges of misconduct against the accused. Hereupon the emperor caused Liberius to
        be forcibly brought from Milan, where he was then staying, and undertook the
        task of converting him by personal intercourse. A report of the conversation
        between the emperor and the bishop has come down to us. Those are
        probably right who hesitate to receive this document as thoroughly trustworthy.
        But there is no dispute about the main result of the conference. Liberius rose
        in his demands. He called for a general subscription to the Nicene Creed, for
        the restoration of all banished bishops, for a fair trial of Athanasius at
        Alexandria. if trial there must needs be. Three days were then allowed him,
        during which he was to decide whether he would sign a document condemnatory
        of Athanasius, or depart into exile to such place as the emperor should
        name. Liberius did not hesitate, and was accordingly sent to Beroea in
        Thrace. His spirited conduct had, however, made an impression upon the mind,
        not only of Constantius, but also upon that of his Arian consort, the beautiful
        and accomplished Aurelia Eusebia. They conjointly sent after Liberius a
        present of a thousand pieces of gold. But he felt that the acceptance of this
        gift would lay him under some measure of obligation to the court. Consequently
        he refused it, and in a still more peremptory manner declined aid from an
        imperial chamberlain, the eunuch Eusebius.
         It may also be considered as unquestioned, that Liberius,
        at the time of his decease in AD 366, was recognised as
        one who died in full communion with the Church and among the defenders of the
        Catholic faith.
         But what is to be said as regards the
        intervening-time? We have already implied, and it must now again be repeated,
        that at the close of two years of exile Liberius did in some degree,
        if the expression may be allowed, lower his flag in token of surrender. Not for
        one moment do we desire on such a theme to employ a word that can seem to savour of uncharitableness. Those alone who have felt the
        dreariness of exile, or who have known what it is to suffer imprisonment for
        conscience sake, have any right to speak upon the subject. That, among the
        hundred-and-forty-seven bishops banished by Constantius, only two of mark gave
        way, is a wonderful tribute to the general spirit of noble constancy and
        endurance. Liberius was sorely tried. He saw one of his own deacons,
        Felix by name, appointed bishop of Rome. Other bishops who had taken the side
        of the court, as Demophilus of Beroea,
        where Liberius was compelled to reside, and a man once thought brave
        and constant, Fortunatian, the bishop of Aquileia, urged him with subtle
        arguments. On one of the two points required of the exile, namely the
        condemnation of Athanasius, they plausibly represented that it did net involve
        any sacrifice of principle; that, even if innocent of much that was laid to his
        charge, Athanasius was at best a wrong-headed man, who must be sacrificed, like
        another Jonah, for the sake of appeasing the storm which he had raised.
         Let it be observed in passing, that the possibility of
        separating between a man and a cause must often be a reality, and that the case
        of Lucifer of Cagliari is an instance in point in connection with the
        times of which we are writing. But, although we have not seen it thus stated,
        it appears to us that the career of the famous Bishop of Alexandria may, in
        this respect, be divided into two parts. During the first half of his
        episcopate, charges of misconduct were alleged against Athanasius with so much
        profusion and subtlety, that persons living at a distance might well suppose
        that he was really a turbulent and ill-judging man, nay, perhaps actually a
        criminal. But, as accusation after accusation proved groundless,
        the nobler spirits rapidly perceived wherein the real gravamen of the charges
        against Athanasius consisted. It lay in this, that misbelief and
        unbelief consisted in believing that the overthrow of the primate of Egypt was
        an absolute necessity. There were many elements of the struggle, which were greatly
        modified by the decease of the Arian Constantius and the accession of the
        Apostate Julian. But this was not one of them. We have already quoted the
        emphatic words of Gibbon1 respecting that sincere and peculiar hatred with
        which Julian honoured Athanasius. That this prince did not display
        equal enmity against Hilary lends countenance to the belief which the bishop of
        Poitiers entertained; namely, that Saturninus, his chief opponent, had
        arraigned him, not on the ground of doctrine, but on that of political
        disloyalty, which Julian would probably know to be false, and would willingly
        disregard. But, among the foremost testimonies to the intimate connexion between
        the cause of Athanasius and the cause of truth, must ever be ranked the
        sentiments and conduct of the gifted Apostate.
         It is hardly possible to believe that Liberius was
        not perfectly cognizant of what would be understood by acquiescence
        in the condemnation of Athanasius. But this was not the only condition exacted
        as the price of his return from captivity. As if to show that it was not a
        merely personal question that was at stake, he was called upon to subscribe a
        creed other than the Nicene Creed. The air was at that moment rife with creeds.
        Their degrees of divergence from truth varied, but they were all non-Nicene;
        they were all trying, if we may so speak, to dethrone that wonderful symbol of
        belief, and to occupy the vacant place. To sign this or that one might mean
        more or less; might involve a profession of utter Arianism, or a subtle shade
        of difference which was capable of a good interpretation. But to sign any of
        these documents would be understood alike by friends and foes as in some degree
        an act of tergiversation.
         What did Liberius do? We answer in the words
        of St. Jerome's "Chronicle" : "Liberius, overcome by weariness
        of his banishment, subscribed to heretical pravity, and entered Rome as a
        conqueror". The same great doctor, in another work, his "Catalogue of
        Illustrious Men", expresses a natural feeling of indignation against the
        bishop of Aquileia—Fortunatian—who was a leading agent in the perversion of the
        Bishop of Rome. Jerome's account of this prelate, literally translated, runs as
        follows :—"Fortunatian, an African by birth, bishop of Aquileia in the
        reign of Constantine, wrote commentaries on the Gospels under duly arranged
        headings in a brief and homely style. On this ground he is regarded as an
        object of detestation, that he was the first to solicit, and warp, and
          force into an heretical subscription Liberius, who had gone into exile
        for the sake of the faith."
         We will give one more testimony. It is that of a
        virtual contemporary, the historian Sozomen. Sozomen declares that Constantius compelled Liberius to
        confess in public before a gathering of deputies from Eastern bishops and other
        presbyters that the Son is not of one substance with the Father.
         Is there on this matter any counter-evidence? Not one
        syllable. It is possible, indeed, to allege the silence of two
        historians—Socrates and Theodoret. But this would prove too much. For Theodoret
        also omits the fall of Hosius of Cordova, about which, unhappily,
        there is neither doubt nor question. This puts Theodoret out of court, so to
        speak; and against the silence of Socrates we have not only the testimonies of
        St. Jerome, which have just been cited, but also that of an orthodox
        contemporary; Faustinus, and an Arian one, the historian Philostorgius.
         The greatest remains. The writer of our own day who
        has more than any one else thoroughly sifted the evidence in this
        matter—Mr. P. le Page Renouf—most justly declares that "Athanasius speaks
        with the most noble tenderness of the fall both of Liberius and Hosius".
        And, indeed, Athanasius asserts a degree of peril as imminent over Liberius,
        which we do not find in any other history of the period. His words are :—"Liberius,
        after he had been in banishment two years, gave way, and from fear of
        threatened death was induced to subscribe". Elsewhere this great confessor
        for the faith is found thoroughly to endorse the opinion which we had formed
        from other testimonies on the meaning at this juncture of a condemnation of
        Athanasius. For he quotes Constantius as having made the following avowal
        :—"Be persuaded, and subscribe against Athanasius; for whoever subscribes
        against him thereby embraces with us the Arian cause."
         Now it is certainly right for all of us who are not
        Roman Catholics to bear in mind that there is a possible danger of our
        consciously or unconsciously exaggerating the case against a pope; especially
        since the Vatican Council has assigned to the Bishop of Rome the extraordinary
        powers now claimed for him. We have tried in this small volume to bear in mind
        this danger, and to remind our readers that the fall of Liberius was
        produced by threats, certainly of lifelong exile, possibly of death, and that
        there seems no reasonable doubt that he subsequently recovered himself.
         But, if there be a danger on the one side, that danger
        is greatly intensified on the other. Up to AD 1500 the fall
        of Liberius had been unquestioned. But after the Reformation a great
        difference of tone may be observed in certain quarters. One of the authors
        known as the Bollandists (the compilers of the still incomplete
        "Acta Sanctorum"), Stilting, attempted to disprove the charges
        made against Liberius; and since the date of the Vatican Council the
        attempt has been renewed by several anonymous writers, and by one man of
        mark—Bishop Hefele.
         This was, at any rate, a novelty. The whole of the
        great Gallican school,—let it suffice to name Tillemont, Fleury, Montfaucon, Ceillier,—with one voice proclaim the truth of the fall of
        Pope Liberius. Mohler and Dollinger, the two greatest names
        among German Roman Catholics, are on the same side. M. Renouf (who
        was a Roman Catholic before the question of papal infallibility was brought up
        in connection with the Vatican Council) not only cites the famous
        Italian controversialist, Cardinal Bellarmine, as equally explicit with
        the French and German inquirers, but declares that the various mediaeval martyrologies contained
        distinct reference to the fall of Liberius; nay, more, that it was not
        until the sixteenth century that they were struck out of the Roman Breviary.
        Its words are, indeed; most emphatic on the assent rendered by the Bishop of
        Rome to Arian heresy.
         And now to come back to the question of the evidence
        rendered by the historic fragments of Hilary. Even if, with Dom Ceillier and with the Benedictine editor of Hilary,
        Dom Coutant, we forbear to press some of the documents as being
        questionable, there remains enough to show how strongly Hilary felt upon the
        subject. Yet more; the interjections from his pen tend to prove either that he
        must have regarded the concessions to the bishop of Rome made by the Council
        of Sardica as peculiar to Julius, or else that he recorded them as an
        historic judgment to which larger experience of life forbade his practical
        assent.
         If any assert that Liberius did not fall,
        they may as well give up all belief in history. To say that his utterances
        during the period of his lapse, having been brought about by threats, cannot be
        regarded as the deliberate verdicts of a bishop of Rome, is intelligible. But it
        seems impossible to regard them as the mere private enunciations. It was in
        order to free himself from exile, possibly to save his life, certainly to
        regain his see, that Liberius yielded. The defence that he was only
        writing as a private doctor was unheard of before the present century, and a
        Roman Catholic dignitary, Cardinal de la Luzerne, has distinctly asserted the
        contrary. His words seem important, and will make a fitting termination to the
        present chapter :—"He gave what was demanded of him on the conditions on
        which it was demanded. When they demanded his signature at the hand of a pope,
        as pope, it is the pope, as pope, who gave it." Of the subscription given by Liberius to
        another creed than the Nicene, the Cardinal says, "this was only the
        beginning of his fall; it is not by a single act, but by a succession, that he
        manifestly declared himself heretical." We take no pleasure in the fall of
        any one, least of all of a chief shepherd of Christ's flock.
         But facts are facts, and history is history. We see no
        escape from the conclusions herein laid down; although, as we have already
        remarked, it is satisfactory to reflect that Liberius returned to his
        old allegiance, again contended for the Catholic faith, and died in full
        communion with its children and champions.
          
             CHAPTER XV. MINOR ELUCIDATIONS.
              
             It is proposed in this chapter to touch briefly upon
        two or three incidental topics on which it is impossible, within the limits of
        this work, to dwell with fulness. We refer more especially (1) to the
        ideas of Hilary as a commentator deducible from the compilation made by the
        famous schoolman, Aquinas; (2) to some features in one of his latest struggles,
        that against the Arian bishop of Milan, Auxentius; and (3) to his position
        in the field of hymnology.
         1. St. Thomas Aquinas, amongst his many remarkable
        contributions to theology, gave us a commentary upon the four Gospels woven
        with extraordinary skill out of the works of the ancient Fathers. It possesses
        some of the defects natural to the period of its production. Quotations
        are occasionally given which later editors, particularly the Benedictines, have
        since discovered to be spurious. It is also possible that to some modern
        readers the allegorical interpretations may seem to occupy a disproportionate
        place among the links of this "Golden Chain". In the case of the
        extracts made from Hilary this element is, we incline to think, unduly
        prominent. Nevertheless, as opinions on such a point may fairly differ, it
        seems right to make a slight addition to the cursory notice given in a former
        chapter, and to cite a few specimens of Hilary as an allegorist, if such a term
        may be permitted. It must be premised that in this department of interpretation
        Hilary is certainly, on the whole, inferior to some other Fathers in felicity,
        more especially to Origen. We, of course, select one or two of our author's
        most successful efforts.
         The following is Hilary's comment on our Lord's
        discourse concerning the work and office of the holy Baptist, recorded in the
        eleventh chapter of St. Matthew :—
         "In these things which were done concerning John
        there is a deep store of mystic meaning. The very condition and circumstances
        of a prophet are themselves a prophecy. John signifies the Law : for the Law
        proclaimed Christ, preaching remission of sins, and giving promise of the
        kingdom of heaven. Also when the Law was on the point of expiring (having been
        through the sins of the people, which hindered them from understanding what
        it spoke of Christ, as it were, shut up in bonds and in prison), it
        sends men to the contemplation of the Gospel that unbelief might see the truth
        of its words established by deeds."
         Here is a similar application of the parable
        concerning the grain of mustard-seed :—
         "This grain, then, when sown in the field,—that
        is, when seized by the people and delivered to death, and, as it were, buried
        in the ground by a sowing of the body,—grew up beyond the size of all herbs,
        and exceeded all the glory of the Prophets. For the preaching of the Prophets
        was allowed, as if it were herbs, to a sick man; but now the birds of the air
        lodge in the branches of the tree; by which we understand the Apostles, who put
        forth of Christ's might, and overshadowing the world with their boughs, are a
        tree to which the Gentiles flee in hope of life, and having been long tossed by
        the winds the spirits of the devil, may have rest in its branches."
         Hilary occasionally dwells, in common with many of the
        Fathers, upon the supposed suggestiveness of the numbers mentioned in connection with
        some incident. Thus, for example, as regards the miraculous feeding first of
        the five thousand and then of the four thousand, he observes :—
         "As that first multitude which He fed answers to
        the people among the Jews that believed, so this is compared to the people of
        the Gentiles, the number of four quarternions denoting
        an innumerable number of people out of the four quarters of the earth."
         It cannot, we think, be affirmed that any marked
        success has attended investigations of this sort respecting the mystic meaning
        of numbers. The subject possesses a great charm, however, for certain minds.
        Such a belief formed a leading element in one of the most high-toned systems of
        ancient philosophy,—that of the Pythagoreans. Plato has also shown a disposition
        to encourage it, though his references to the subject are far from being clear
        and intelligible. In modern physical science the discoveries of Dalton in
        chemistry are connected with numbers to a degree that is almost
        marvellous. If there be mysteries entwined with numbers in nature, it is
        also possible that the same law may hold good with reference to revelation. But
        when it has been remarked that certain numbers,—as, for example, seven and
        forty, recur very frequently in the pages of Holy Writ; that some mystery may
        underlie such a fact; and that such belief is commonly manifested in patriotic
        theology, and has had a certain measure of influence upon Christian art, we
        have probably said all that can be safely advanced at present. No consistent
        theory upon this matter has yet been proved.
         And here we leave this part of Hilary's exposition,
        merely adding that though Aquinas may have given it undue prominence, he
        has not wholly excluded specimens of our author's more usual comments. We give
        one merely by way of example. Hilary is expounding the confession of St. Peter
        (St. Matt. XVI. 16):—
         "This is the true and unalterable faith, that
        from God came forth God the Son, who has eternity out of the eternity of the
        Father. That this God took unto Him a body, and was made man, is a perfect
        confession. Thus he embraced all, in that He here expresses both His nature and
        His name, in which is the sum of virtues. This confession of Peter met a
        worthy reward, for that he had seen the Son of God in the man."
          
             2. There is an obvious reason for not dwelling much on
        the details of Hilary's contest with Auxentius. We fear that our readers
        may be rather wearied with continuous accounts of the struggles against
        Arianism; although it is well that they should bear in mind on this theme the
        admonition of a writer not generally disposed to overvalue the work of the champions
        of orthodoxy. "That wonderful metaphysic subtlety," wrote Charles
        Kingsley, "which, in phrases and definitions too often unmeaning to our
        grosser intellect, saw the symbols of the most important spiritual realities,
        and felt that on the distinction between homoousios and homoiousios might hang the solution of the
        whole problem of humanity, was set to battle in Alexandria, the ancient
        stronghold of Greek philosophy, with the effete remains of the very scientific
        thought to which it owed its extraordinary culture, Monastic isolation from
        family and national duties especially fitted the fathers of that period for the
        task, by giving them leisure, if nothing else, to face questions with a
        life-long earnestness impossible to the mere social and practical northern
        mind. Our duty is, instead of sneering at them as pedantic dreamers, to
          thank Heaven that men were found, just at the time when they were waited, to do
          for us what we could never have done for ourselves; to leave us as a precious
          heirloom, bought most truly with the life-blood of their race, a metaphysic at
          once Christian and scientific, every attempt to improve on which has hitherto
          been found a failure; and to battle victoriously with that strange brood of
          theoretic monsters begotten by effete Greek philosophy upon Egyptian symbolism,
          Chaldee astrology, Parsee dualism, Brahminic spiritualism". It is true
        that Kingsley is chiefly thinking of the East; but Hilary was, as we have seen,
        the representative champion of the same contest in the West.
         It is right to observe, before we proceed, that Auxentius is
        one of the few persons against whom the bishop of Milan employs
        severity of language. Now, to record all Hilary's expressions would almost
        inevitably convey a very false impression to the mind of any ordinary reader.
        For the amount of objurgation contained in Hilary's writings, taken
        as a whole, is not very large, and to set down everything of the kind in this
        small work would give a most unjust impression of the proportionate space which
        it occupies in his writings. Three persons only seem to be special objects of
        his indignation, Saturninus, Constantius and Auxentius. But, in all these
        cases, it was not heresy or the patronage of heresy which alone moved the wrath
        of Hilary; it was the combination, in his judgment, of utter dishonesty
        with misbelief.
         Towards the close of AD 364, the
        altercation between the two prelates attracted the observation of Valentinian,
        who had become emperor soon after the commencement of that year. Both from such
        evidence as remains to us, and from the generally charitable estimate of
        opponents formed by Hilary, there seems good ground for believing that his
        judgment of Auxentius was just. But, inasmuch as, though seeming
        Arian in his heart, Auxentius made a profession of orthodoxy, we can
        hardly wonder that Valentinian acted as most rulers and statesmen
        would have been inclined to act under similar circumstances, and declined to
        examine the accusations made by Hilary. Indeed, the emperor openly entered into
        communion with Auxentius, and ordered Hilary to leave Milan. Hilary obeyed
        the imperial mandate without delay, but once more betook himself to his pen.
        Into the arguments whereby he seeks to prove the covert Arianism of his fellow
        bishop, we do not propose to enter; but two points outside the personal
        controversy deserve attention.
         One of these points has already come before us in the
        discussion contained in an earlier chapter, namely, chapter IX, concerning
        Hilary and the emperor. Of the two courses which had been alternately followed
        by Constantius, persecution and the allurement of flattery, Valentinian,
        in Hilary's judgment, seemed inclined to adopt the gentle one. But this was a
        special object of dread to Hilary; indeed, so much so as to render him perhaps
        rather one-sided in his sentiments and language concerning it. Like many other
        excellent men, he had a keen sense of the actual danger then impending, and was
        consequently rather inclined to underrate the terrible trials which had existed
        for ordinary Christians during the previous ages of persecution.
         The second point is one of those which lend some
        countenance to the much-mooted proposition, "History repeats itself".
        Hilary saw reason to fear that the defenders of the Catholic faith in Milan
        might be tempted to enter into some compromise with its opponents, for the sake
        of keeping possession of some cherished and valued places of worship. On this
        topic Hilary is most emphatic. "Specious indeed is the name of peace and
        fair the very thought of unity; but who can doubt that that unity of the church
        and of the gospels alone is peace which preserves the unity of Christ,—that
        peace of which He spoke to the Apostles after His glorious Passion, which on
        the eve of departure He commended to us for a pledge of His eternal
        mandate,—that peace, brethren most beloved, which we have endeavoured to
        seek when it has been lost, to smooth when it has been disturbed, to hold fast
        when it has been found? But to become partakers or creators of this kind of
        peace has been denied to us by the sins of our age, has been disallowed by the
        forerunners and ministers of an impending antichrist, men who exult in a peace of
        their own, that is to say in a unity of impiety, who conduct themselves
        not as bishops of Christ, but as priests of antichrist."
         Hilary gives a short explanation of the way in which
        there may be many antichrists, as St. John has taught us in his first Epistle
        (II. 18). He proceeds to lament the tendency to court the patronage of emperors
        and officers of state, which is in fashion.
             "And first allow me to pity the toil of our age,
        and to bewail the foolish opinions of the present day, in which men believe
        that human powers can patronize God, and endeavour to
        defend the church of Christ by a worldly ambition. Fain would I ask you, O ye
        bishops, who believe that such a course is possible, what sort of aids did the
        Apostles employ in furtherance of their preaching of the gospel? by what powers
        were they helped when they preached Christ, and turned well-nigh all nations
        from idols to God? Did they seek to win any honour from the palace
        when they were singing a hymn in prison in chains after their scourging? Was it
        by the edict of a king that Paul laboured to gather together a church
        for Christ, at the time when he was a spectacle in the theatre for men to gaze
        upon? Was he, do you suppose, defended by the patronage of a Nero, a Vespasian,
        or a Decius, men who by their hatred against us made the confession of the
        divine messages to bud forth? The apostles, who supported themselves by
        the labours of their own hands, who met together in upper chambers
        and in secret places, who traversed towns and fortresses and well-nigh all
        nations by land and sea in the teeth of decrees of the senate and mandates of
        kings—did they, forsooth, not hold the keys of the kingdom of heaven?
        Rather, did not the power of God then manifestly exhibit itself against human
        hatred, when Christ was all the more preached in proportion as that preaching
        was forbidden?"
         Hilary proceeds to analyze the
        many evasions, of which Auxentius was guilty both as regards doctrine
        and fact; as, for example, his denial that he knew Arius, when in truth he had
        commenced his career as a presbyter in Alexandria at an Arian Church presided
        over by one Gregory. The desire of the Emperor Valentinian not to
        stir up awkward inquiries, and to assume the sincerity of all who professed to
        be orthodox, seemed but too likely in time to infect the flocks. It might
        happen that if they opposed the Emperor's views (not, as we have remarked,
        unnatural views for a statesman to adopt) they might incur the danger to which
        we have referred, and lose possession of the churches. Hilary, as we have
        remarked, is most anxious to forewarn them on the peril of such an anxiety. He
        shrinks from committing to paper all the disgraceful blasphemies of the Arians.
         "But one warning I give you : be on your guard
        against antichrist. A dangerous affection for walls has seized upon you; in a
        mistaken way you venerate the Church of God as if it must be seated under roofs
        and in buildings, and you connect with such things the idea of peace. But is
        there a doubt but that antichrist will take his seat in these? To my thinking,
        the mountains and the woods and lakes, the very prisons and chasms, are safer;
        for in such places men of old, either abiding by choice or detained by force,
        used to prophecy by the Spirit of God. Keep away then from Auxentius, the
        Angel of Satan, the enemy of Christ, the abandoned devastator, the denier of
        the faith; who has made to the Emperor a profession framed in order to mislead;
        who has deceived in such wise as to blaspheme. Let him now collect against me
        what synods he chooses; and publicly proscribe me as a heretic, as he has often
        done; let him stir up against me at his liking the wrath of the powerful. To me
        assuredly he will always be a Satan, because he is an Arian. Nor shall peace
        ever be desired save the peace of those who, according to the creed of our
        fathers at Nicaea, anathematize Arians and preach Christ as true God."
          
             3. For convenience sake and from a desire that this
        chapter may not close with accents of fiery controversy, we have disregarded
        chronological exactness. For the struggle with Auxentius took place
        after Hilary's return from banishment, whereas the hymn to which we now invite
        attention was composed during its author's exile, and was enclosed in a letter
        to his daughter Abra. It cannot indeed be pretended that the one specimen
        of this kind of composition, of' which the genuineness seems the best
        established, is such as to place the Bishop of Poitiers on a level with St.
        Ambrose, far less with some of the mediaeval writers of hymns. Still it is
        singular that the earliest Latin hymn, to which we are able to assign a name as
        that of its. author, should be the work of that Father of the Church who gave
        us the earliest treatise upon the doctrine of the Holy Trinity and the first
        commentary upon a Gospel. As will be seen from the following attempt to render
        it, it is addressed to the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, and is rightly
        called a Morning Hymn:—
          
             Radiant Giver of the light,
             By whose calm and piercing ray,
             When have flown the hours of night,
             Comes the re-awakening day;
             True enlightener of the earth,
             Not like feeble morning-star,
             Herald of the sun-light's birth,
             Dimly brooding from afar,
             But brighter than the noon-tide blaze,
             Fount and source of all our day.
             Potent in men's heart to raise
             Sparks that ne'er shall fade away.
             Framer of the realms of space,
             Glory of Thy Father's light,
             Teach, by treasures of Thy grace,
             Hearts to scan themselves aright.
             Still the Spirit's aid impart,
             Make us shrines of the Most High,
             Lest the arch-rebel traitor's art
             Lure us by its witchery.
             Earthly needs of life entail
             Daily cares without, within;
             Make Thy precepts still prevail,
             Guide us through them free from sin.
             Lawless passion's force repress,
             Purity of heart bestow ;
             E'en our mortal bodies bless
             Th' Holy Spirit's shrines to grow.
             Thus the prayerful soul aspires,
             Such its votive-gifts to Thee,
             Trusting that thy morn-lit fires
             Serve for nightly custody.
             
         CHAPTER XVI. LAST YEARS OF HILARY—CONCLUSION.
              
             The decision of Constantius, which had sent Hilary
        back to Gaul, though still keeping the sentence of banishment hanging over him,
        allowed him some freedom in his mode of return. It was dilatory, for he stayed
        at various places on the road, and his happiness at the prospect of regaining
        home was much alloyed by the scenes which he witnessed. The emperor had
        banished from their sees all the bishops who refused to accept the ambiguous
        form of words set forth by the Council of Rimini, and many flocks were mourning
        the absence of their chief pastors. The year 361 was spent in this way; but in
        the following year Hilary regained his home, and rejoined his wife and
        daughter. He was warmly welcomed by the inhabitants of his native town and by
        the diocese at large, and his friend and disciple, Martin of Tours, was among
        those who hastened to visit him.
             Abra had received addresses during his absence;
        and he, on hearing it, had sent her a letter of a rather mystic though
        exceedingly affectionate character. Its tendency was to set forth the
        superiority of celibacy. But he wished the decision to be really her own,
        though if she found any difficulty in understanding his letter, or two hymns
        which he enclosed, she was to consult her mother. He found her unwedded on his
        return, and she may probably have remained so.
             The more ardent among Hilary's friends and supporters
        desired, as has been observed already, to refuse communion to all who had been
        betrayed into the acceptance of the decrees of Rimini. But such a course did
        not commend itself to their leader. Hilary preferred the plan of gathering
        together, in different parts of Gaul, assemblies of bishops, and entering into
        mutual explanations. The line proposed by him proved most successful, and the
        counter-efforts of his old opponent, Saturninus, were utterly fruitless.
        The Bishop of Aries found himself thoroughly deserted, and was in a short time
        practically excluded from communion with the Gallican episcopate.
         The attempt to carry out still further this line of
        conduct by a journey into Northern Italy and Illyria was not, as we have
        implied, equally successful. Though Eusebius of Vercelli lent Hilary powerful
        aid, the efforts of these two friends seem to have been threatened by the
        conduct of the well-intentioned, but uncompromising, Lucifer of Cagliari,
        Nevertheless, Hilary remained in Italy from the latter part of AD 362
        until the late autumn of 364, when, as has already been mentioned, he was
        ordered home by the Emperor Valentinian. Ten years later, had he lived so
        long, Hilary would have had the satisfaction of seeing Ambrose become bishop of
        Milan.
         The last three or four years of his life were spent at
        Poitiers, and seemed to have been comparatively quiet and untroubled. He died
        in peace on January 13th, AD 368.
         There was so much of paganism remaining in Gaul at the
        date of Hilary's conversion, that he might have, humanly speaking, enjoyed a
        brilliant career as a member of the gifted, and, for those times, polished
        society of the aristocracy of his native land. In that case, he would not have
        known exile; and, though he might have disliked many of the anti-pagan measures
        of Constantius, he probably would not have protested against them any more than
        did the heathen orators of the day, such as Themistius or Libanius, who continued to lavish flatteries upon the
        emperor, though in their hearts believing him to be an enemy of the gods. But
        there was that in Hilary which, by the grace of God, rendered such a career
        impossible; and his country, and Christendom at large, more especially in the
        West, were to be the gainers. Even in Britain a few churches have been
        dedicated to his memory. The great popularity of the name Hilaire in
        France is a tribute to the impression which he made upon the public mind. This
        impression may have been deepened by the good gifts of his namesake, St.
        Hilary of Aries, in the succeeding century.
         But we can hardly look back upon Hilary's troubled
        and chequered career, noble as it was, without feeling that it offers
        one of the numerous illustrations of the fact, that in whatever age of the
        Church our lot might have been cast we should have found difficulties at least
        as great as those of our own time. In the eighteenth century its spiritual
        deadness might have paralysed us. In the sixteenth we should have had
        to undergo the fierce trial of deciding, not merely between Mediaevalism and the Reformation, but between, it may
        be, the different schools and theories of reform. In the fifteenth, we might
        have shared its torpor, or have become intoxicated with the pagan spirit of the
        movement known as the Renaissance. In the early part of the thirteenth century,
        a wave of unbelief, exceedingly mysterious in its origin, and as subtle as
        anything to which we are now exposed, might have swept us away in its vortex.
        And, during the first three centuries, there might have been presented to us
        the choice between apostasy and a death of torture, demanding heroic virtue to
        support it.
         And how, as regards that age, the middle of the fourth
        century, in which was placed, by God's providence, the life of Hilary of
        Poitiers? He has himself described it.
             "It is a thing equally deplorable and dangerous
        that there are as many creeds as opinions among men, as many doctrines as
        inclinations, and as many sources of blasphemy as there are faults among us,
        because we make creeds arbitrarily and explain them arbitrarily. The Homousion is rejected, and received, and explained
        away by successive synods. The partial or total resemblance of the Father and
        of the Son is a subject of dispute for these unhappy times. Every year, nay,
        every moon, we make new creeds to describe invisible mysteries. We repent of
        what we have done, we defend those who repent, we anathematize those whom we
        defended. We condemn either the doctrine of others in ourselves, or our own in
        that of others; and, reciprocally tearing one another to pieces, we have been
        the cause of each other's ruin."
         That, unlike these varying creeds, the Nicene Creed
        has endured; is, as we have already remarked, a wonderful tribute to the divine
        blessing on the work of the famous council which drew it up.
             That Hilary was permitted to take an honourable,
        and, on the whole, a wonderfully successful part in bringing Christendom out of
        this state of chaos, and that his character and conduct were not unworthy of
        his lofty aims and devout writings, form his title to our reverence and
        regard,—
         
         We live by admiration, hope, and love,
             And even as these are well and wisely fix'd
             In dignity of being we ascend.
              
             One alone, indeed, of our race can satisfy all the
        demands of the human heart, and intellect, and conscience. But His servants
        stand around Him, and lead onward to Him. To throw our lot with them is to hope
        for acceptance at His hands :—
          
             Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ,
             Thou art the everlasting Son of the Father.
             We therefore pray Thee help Thy servants, whom Thou
             hast redeemed with Thy precious blood.
             Make them to be numbered with Thy saints in
        glory everlasting.
          
             
         
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