READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE CHRISTIAN ROMAN EMPIRE AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TEUTONIC KINGDOMS 300-500
THE
ORGANISATION OF THE CHURCH
CHRISTIAN
organization was the means of expressing that which is behind and beneath all
its details, namely the underlying and penetrating consciousness of the oneness
of the Christian body and the Christian life. It was the process by which the
separate charismata could be developed and differentiated, while at the same
time the unity of the whole was safeguarded. Looked at in this light, the
history of organization in the Christian Church is, in its main stream, the history
of two processes, partly successive, partly simultaneous, but always closely
related: the process by which the individual communities became complete in
themselves, sufficient for their own needs, microcosms of the Church at large;
and the process by which the communities thus organized as units proceeded to
combine in an always more formal and more extensive federation.
But these two
processes were not merely successive. Just as there never had been a time when
the separate communities, before they became fully organized, were devoid of
outside ministration or supervision, so there never came a period when the
fully organized communities lived only to themselves: unity was preserved by
informal means, till the growing size and number of the communities, and the
increasing complexity of circumstances, made informal means inadequate and
further formal organization imperative. And again, though the formal
self-expression of the individual community necessarily preceded the formal
self-expression of the federation of communities, yet the history of
organization within the single community does not come to an abrupt end as soon
as the community becomes complete in itself: all functions essential for the
Christian life are henceforth there, but as numbers increase and needs and duties
multiply, the superabundant vitality of the organism shows itself in the
differentiation of new, though always subordinate, functions. And therefore,
side by side with the well-known history of the federation of the Christian churches,
it will be our business to trace also the obscurer and less recognized, but
perhaps not less important, processes which were going on, simultaneously with
the larger processes of federation, in the individual churches and especially
in those of them which were most influential as models to the rest.
(A) In the
early days of Christianity the first beginnings of a new community were of a
very simple kind: indeed the local organization had at first no need to be
anything but rudimentary, just because the community was never thought of as
complete in itself apart from its apostolic founder or other representatives of
the missionary ministry. ‘Presbyters’ and ‘deacons’ no doubt existed in these
communities from the first: ‘presbyters’ were ordained for each church as it
was founded on St Paul's first missionary journey; ‘bishops and deacons’
constitute, together with the ‘holy people’, the church of Philippi. These
purely local officials were naturally chosen from among the first converts in
each district, and to them were naturally assigned the duties of providing for
the permanently recurring needs of Christian life, especially the sacraments of
Baptism—St Paul indicates that baptism was not normally the work of an
apostle—and the Eucharist. But the evidence of the earlier epistles of St Paul
is decisive as to the small relative importance which this local ministry
enjoyed: the true ministry of the first generation was the ordered hierarchy,
“first apostles, secondly prophets, thirdly teachers”, of which the apostle
speaks with such emphasis in his first epistle to the Corinthians. Next in due
order after the ranks of the primary ministry came the gifts of miracles—“then
powers, then gifts of healing”— and only after these, wrapped up in the obscure
designation of “helps and governments”, can we find room for the local service
of presbyters and deacons.
Even without
the definite evidence of the Acts and the Pastoral Epistles and St. Clement of
Rome it would be already clear enough that the powers of the local ministry
were narrowly limited, and that to the higher ministry, the exercise of whose
gifts was not confined to any one community but was independent of place
altogether, belonged not only the general right of supervision and ultimate
authority over local churches, but also in particular the imparting of the gift
of the Spirit, whether in what we call Confirmation or in what we call
Ordination. In effect the Church of the first age may almost be said to have
consisted of a laity grouped in local communities, and a ministry that moved
about from place to place to do the work of missionaries to the heathen and of
preachers and teachers to the converts. Most of St Paul's epistles to churches
are addressed to the community, the holy people, the brethren, without any hint
in the title of the existence of a local clergy: the apostle and the Christian
congregation are the two factors of primary account. The Didache shows
us how right down to the end of the first century, in remoter districts, the
communities depended on the services of wandering apostles, or of prophets and
teachers, sometimes wandering sometimes settled, and how they held by
comparison in very light esteem their presbyters and deacons. Even a
well-established church, like that of Corinth, with half a century of history
behind it, was able, however unreasonably, to refuse to recognize in its local
ministry any right of tenure other than the will of the community: and when the
Roman church intervened to point out the gravity of the blow thus struck at the
principle of Christian order, it was still the community of Rome which
addressed the community of Corinth. And this custom of writing in the name, or
to the address, of the community continued, a relic of an earlier age, well
into the days of the strictest monarchical episcopacy: it was not so much the
bishop's headship of the community as the multiplication of the clergy which
(as we shall see) made the real gap between the bishop and his people.
Most of our
documents then of the first century show us the local churches neither
self-sufficient nor self-contained, but dependent for all special ministries
upon the visits of the superior officers of the Church. On the other hand most
of our documents of the second century—in its earlier years the Ignatian
letters, and an ever-increasing bulk of evidence as the century goes on—show us
the local churches complete in themselves, with an officer at the head of each
who concentrates in his hands both the powers of the local ministers and those
also which had at first been reserved exclusively for the "general"
ministry, but who is himself as strictly limited in the extent of his
jurisdiction to a single church as were the humbler presbyter-bishops from whom
he derived his name. When we have explained how the supreme powers of the general
ministry were made to devolve on an individual who belonged to the local
ministry, we have explained the origin of episcopacy. With that problem of
explanation we have not here to deal in detail: we have only to recognize the
result and its importance, when in and with the bishop the local church
sufficed in itself for the extraordinary as well as for the ordinary functions
of church government and Christian life.
In those early
days of episcopacy, among the diminutive groups of Christian “strangers and
sojourners” which were dotted over the pagan world of the second century, we
must conceive of a quite special closeness of relation between a bishop and his
people. Regularly in all cities—and it was in the provinces where city life was
most developed that the Church made quickest progress—a bishop is found at the
head of the community of Christians: and his intimacy with his people was in
those primitive days unhindered by the interposition of any hierarchy of
functionaries or attendants his flock was small enough for him to carry out to
the letter the pastoral metaphor, and to “call his sheep by name”. If the
consent of the Christian people had always been, as Clement of Rome tells us, a
necessary preliminary to the ordination of Christian ministers, in the case of
the appointment of their bishop the people did not consent merely, they
elected: not till the fourth century did the clergy begin to acquire first a
separate and ultimately a predominant share in the process of choice. Even
though the “angel of the church” in the Apocalypse may not have been, in
the mind of the seer, at all intended to refer to the bishop, yet this
quasi-identification of the community with its representative exactly expresses
the ideal of second century writers. “The whole number of you I welcome in
God's Name in the person of Onesimus”, “in Polybius I beheld the whole
multitude of you”, writes Ignatius to the Christians of Ephesus and Tralles: “be subject to the bishop and to one another” is
his injunction to the Magnesians: the power of Christian worship is in “the
prayer of the bishop and the whole church”. So too to Justin Martyr, “the
brethren as we are called” and “the president” are the essential figures in the
portraiture of the Christian society.
If it is true
that in the first century the apostle-founder and the community as founded by
him are the two outstanding elements of Christian organization, it is no less
true that in the second century the twin ideas of bishop and people attain a
prominence which throws all subordinate distinctions into the background. Even
as late as the middle of the third century we see Cyprian—who is quite
misunderstood if he is looked on only as an innovator in the sphere of
organization—maintaining and emphasizing at every turn the intimate union, in
normal church life, of bishop and laity, while he also recognizes the duty of
the laity, in abnormal circumstances, to separate from the communion of the
bishop who had proved himself unworthy of their choice: “it is the people in
the first place which has the power both of electing worthy bishops and of
spurning the unworthy”. Similar witness for the East is borne in the same
century by the Didascalia Apostolorum, where bishop and laity are addressed in
turn, and their mutual relations are almost the main theme of the writer.
But this
personal relation of the bishop to his flock, which was the ideal of church
administrators and thinkers from Ignatius to Cyprian, could only find effective
realization in a relatively small community: the very success of the Christian
propaganda, and the consequent increase everywhere of the numbers of the
Christian people, made some further development of organization imperative.
Especially during the long peace between Severus and Decius (211-249) did
recruits pour in. In the larger towns at least there could be now no question
of personal acquaintance between the president of the community and all its
members. No doubt it might have been possible to preserve the old intimacy at
the cost of unity, and to create a bishop for each congregation. But the sense
of civic unity was an asset of which Christians instinctively availed
themselves in the service of religion. If practical convenience sometimes
dictated the appointment of bishops in villages, these were only common in
districts where, as in Cappadocia, cities were few, and where consequently the
extent of the territory of each city was unduly large for supervision by the
single bishop of the city. Normally, even in days before there was any idea of
the formal demarcation of territorial jurisdiction, the city or civitas with
all its dependent lands was the natural sphere of the individual bishop's
authority. And within the walls of the city it was never so much as conceivable
that the ecclesia should be divided. When the Council of Nicaea was making
provision for the reinstatement in clerical rank of Novatianist clergy willing to be reconciled with the Church, the arrangement was subject
always to the maintenance of the principle that there should not be “two bishops
in the city”. The very rivalries between different claimants of one episcopal
throne serve to bring out the same result—witness the earliest instances of
pope and anti-pope of which we have documentary knowledge, those of Cornelius
and Novatian in 251, and of Liberius and Felix about
357. In the latter case Constantius, with a politician's eye to compromise,
recommended the joint recognition of both claimants: but the Roman people—Theodoret, to whose History we owe the details, is careful
to note that he has recorded the very language used—saluted the reading of the
rescript in the circus with the mocking cry that two leaders would do very well
for the factions at the games, but that there could be only "one God, one
Christ, one bishop." Exactly the same reason had been given a century
earlier in almost the same words, by the Roman confessors when writing to
Cyprian, for their abandonment of Novatian and adhesion to Cornelius: “we are
not unaware that there is one God, and one Christ the Lord whom we have
confessed, one Holy Spirit, and therefore only one true bishop in the communion
of the Catholic Church”. Both in East and West, in the largest cities as well
as in the smallest, the society of the faithful was conceived of as an indivisible
unit; and its oneness was expressed in the person of its one bishop. The parish
of Christians in any locality was not like a hive of bees, which, when numbers
multiplied inconveniently, could throw off a part of the whole, to be
henceforward a complete and independent organism under separate control. The
necessity for new organization had to be met in some way which would preserve
at all costs the oneness of the body and its head.
It followed
that the work and duties which the individual bishop could no longer perform in
person must be shared with, or deputed to, subordinate officials. New offices
came into being in the course especially of the third century, and the growth
of this clerus or clergy, and its gradual acquisition
during the fourth and fifth centuries of the character of a hierarchy nicely
ordered in steps and degrees, is a feature of ecclesiastical history of which
the importance has not always been adequately realized.
Of such a
hierarchy the germs had no doubt existed from the beginning; and indeed presbyters
and deacons were, as we have seen, older component parts of the local
communities than were the bishops themselves. In the Ignatian theory bishop,
presbyters, and deacons are the three universal elements of organization, “without
which nothing can be called a church”. And the distinction between the two
subordinate orders, in their original scope and intention, was just the
distinction between the two sides of clerical office which in the bishop were
in some sort combined, the spiritual and the administrative: presbyters were
the associates of the bishop in his spiritual character, deacons in his
administrative functions.
Our earliest
documents define the work of presbyters by no language more commonly than by
that which expresses the "pastoral" relation of a shepherd to his
flock: “the flock in which the Holy Ghost hath set you as overseers to shepherd
the Church of God”, “the presbyters I exhort .. . shepherd the flock of God
among you ... not as lords of the ground but as examples of the flock, until
the Great Shepherd shall appear”. But in proportion as the local organization
became episcopal, the pastoral idea concentrated itself upon the bishop. To
Ignatius the distinctive function of the presbyters is rather that of a council,
gathered round the bishop as the apostles were gathered round Christ—an idea
not unconnected perhaps with the position of the presbyters in the Christian
assembly; for there is no reason to doubt that primitive tradition underlies
the arrangement of the early Christian basilicas, where the bishop’s chair
stood in the centre of the apse behind the altar, and the consessus presbyterorum extended right and left in a
semicircle, as represented in the Apocalypse. So too in the Didascalia Apostolorum (Syriac and Latin) the one definite
function allotted to presbyters is that of “consilium et curia ecclesiae”. Besides pastoral duties, however, the Pauline epistles
bring presbyters into definite relation also with the work of teaching. If
‘teachers’ were originally one grade of the general ministry, they would
naturally have settled down in the communities earlier than the itinerant
apostles or prophets: ‘pastors and teachers’ are already closely connected in
the epistle to the Ephesians: and the first epistle to Timothy shows us that ‘speaking
and teaching’ was a function to which some at least of the presbyters might
aspire. It is probable enough that the second-century bishop shared this, as
all other functions of the presbyterate: St Polycarp is described by his flock
as an ‘apostolic and prophetic teacher’: but, as differentiation progressed,
teaching was one of the duties less easily retained in the bishop's hands, and
our third-century authorities are full of references to the class known as presbyteri doctores.
If presbyters
were thus the bishop’s counsellors and advisers where counsel was needed, his
colleagues in the rites of Christian worship, his assistants and
representatives in pastoral and teaching duties, the prototypes of the
diaconate are to be found in the Seven of the Acts, who were appointed to
disburden the apostles of the work of poor relief and charity and to set them
free for their more spiritual duties of ‘prayer and ministering of the Word’.
Quite similarly in the ‘servants’ of the local church, the bishop found ready
to hand a personal staff of clerks and secretaries. The Christian Church in one
not unimportant aspect was a gigantic friendly society: and the deacons were
the relieving officers who, under the direction of the ‘overseer’, sought out
the local members of the society in their homes, and dispensed to those who
were in permanent or temporary need the contributions of their more fortunate
brethren. From their district-visiting the deacons would derive an intimate
knowledge of the circumstances and characters of individual Christians, and of
the way in which each was living up to his professio:
by a very natural development it became part of their recognized duties, as we
learn from the Didascalia, to report to the
bishop cases calling for the exercise of the penitential discipline of the
Church. Throughout all the early centuries the closeness of their personal
relation with the bishop remains: but what had been spread over the whole
diaconate tends to be concentrated on an individual, when the office of archdeacon—oculus episcopi, according to a favorite metaphor—begins to emerge: the earliest instances of the actual title are c.
370-380, in Optatus (of Caecilian of Carthage) and in
the Gesta inter Liberium et Felicem, (of Felix of Rome).
Originally, as
it would seem, deacons were not ministers of worship at all: the earliest
subordinate office in the liturgy was that of reader. We need not suppose that
deacon in the New Testament means a distinct official in the Church any more than
in the Synagogue: but the same phrase in Justin's Apology has more of a formal
sound, and by the end of the second century the first of the minor orders had
obviously an established place in church usage. While Ignatius names only
bishop, presbyters, and deacons, Tertullian, contrasting the stable orders of
Catholics with the unsettled arrangements of heretics, speaks of bishop,
presbyter, deacon, and reader. And in remote churches or backwardly organized
provinces the same four orders were the minimum recognized long after Tertullian,
as in the so-called Apostolic Church Order (third century, perhaps for Egypt)
and in the canons of the Council of Sardica (343, for
the Balkan peninsula: the canon is proposed by the Spaniard Hosius of Cordova).
But the process
of transformation by which the diaconate became more and more a spiritual
office began early, and one of its results was to degrade the readership by
ousting it from its proper functions. It was as attendants on the bishop that
the deacons, we may well suppose, were deputed from the first to take the
Eucharist, over which the bishop had offered the prayers and thanksgivings of
the Church, to the absent sick. In Rome, when Justin wrote, soon after 150,
they were already distributing the consecrated "bread and wine and
water" in the Christian assembly. Not very much later the reading of the
Gospel began to be assigned to them: Cyprian is the last writer to connect the
Gospel still with the reader; by the end of the third century it was a constant
function of the deacon, and the reader had sunk proportionately in rank and
dignity.
But this
development of the diaconate is only part of a much larger movement. In the
greater churches at least an elaborate differentiation of functions and
functionaries was in course of process during the third century. Under the
pressure of circumstances, and the accumulation of new duties which the
increasing size and importance of the Christian communities thrust upon the
bishop, much which he had hitherto done for himself, and which long remained his
in theory, came in practice to be done for him by the higher clergy. As they
moved up to take his place, they in turn left duties to be provided for: as
they drew more and more to the spiritual side of their work, they left the more
secular duties to new officials in their place. Evidence for Carthage and Rome
in the middle of the third century shows us that, besides the principal orders
of bishop, presbyters, and deacons, a large community would now complete its clerus by two additional pairs of officers,
subdeacon and acolyte, exorcist and reader, making seven altogether. The church
of Carthage, we learn from the Cyprianic correspondence, had exorcists and readers, apparently at the bottom of the
clergy; and it had also hypodiaconi and acoliti, who served as the bearers of letters or
gifts from the bishop to his correspondents. Subdeacons and acolytes were now
in fact what deacons had earlier been, the personal and secretarial staff of
the bishop, while exorcists and readers were the subordinate members of the
liturgical ranks. The combination of all these various officers into a single
definitely graduated hierarchy was the work of the fourth century: but it is at
least adumbrated in the enumeration of the Roman clerus addressed by Pope Cornelius, Cyprian's contemporary, to Fabius of Antioch in
251. Besides the bishop, there were at Rome forty-six presbyters, seven
deacons, seven subdeacons, forty-two acolytes; of exorcists and readers,
together with doorkeepers, there were fifty-two; of widows and afflicted over
fifteen hundred: and all this “great multitude” was “necessary in the church”.
Promotion from
one rank of the ministry to another was of course no new thing. In particular
the rise from the diaconate to the presbyterate, from the more secular to the
more spiritual office, was always recognized as a legitimate reward for good
service. “They that have served well as deacons”, wrote St Paul, “purchase for
themselves an honorable step”; though when the
Apostolic Church Order interprets place of a presbyter or that of a bishop is
meant. But it was a serious and far-reaching development when, in the fourth
century, the idea grew up that the Christian clergy consisted of a hierarchy of
grades, through each of which it was necessary to pass in order to reach the
higher offices. The Council of Nicaea had contented itself with the reasonable
prohibition (canon 2) of the ordination of neophytes as bishops or presbyters.
The Council of Sardica in 343 prescribes for the
episcopate a “prolixum tempus” of promotions through
the “munus” of reader, the officium of deacon,
and the ministerium of presbyter. But it was in the church of Rome that
the conception of the cursus honorum—borrowed,
we may suppose, consciously or unconsciously from the civil magistracies of the
Roman State—took deepest root. Probably the oldest known case of particular
clerical offices held in succession by the same individual is the record, in an
inscription of Pope Damasus, of either his own or his
father's career—there are variant readings "pater" and "puer", but even the son's career must have begun early
in the fourth century—"exceptor, lector, levita, sacerdos". Ambrosiaster, a Roman and younger contemporary of Damasus, expresses clearly the conception of grades of order
in which the greater includes the less, so that not only are presbyters
ordained out of deacons and not vice versa, but a presbyter has in himself all
the powers of the inferior ranks of the hierarchy. The earliest of the dated
disciplinary decretals that has come down to us, the letter of Pope Siricius to Himerius of Tarragona
in 385 (its prescriptions are repeated with less precision in that of Zosimus
to Hesychius of Salona in 418), emphasizes the stages and intervals of a normal
ecclesiastical career. A child devoted early to the clerical life is made a
reader at once, then acolyte and subdeacon up to thirty, deacon for five years,
and presbyter for ten, so that forty-five is the minimum age for a bishop: even
those who take orders in later life must spend two years among the readers or
exorcists, and five as acolyte and subdeacon. But the requirements of Siricius and Zosimus are moderate when brought into
comparison with the pseudo-papal documents which came crowding into being at
the beginning of the sixth century: of the apocryphal councils fathered on Pope
Sylvester the one gives a cursus of 52 years, the other of 55, before the
episcopate.
Two
considerations indeed must be borne in mind which qualify the apparent rigor of
the fourth and fifth century cursus. In the first place we have already traced
the beginning of the depreciation of the readership. In days when liturgical
formulae were still unwritten, the reader's office was the only one that was
mechanical: what it had necessarily implied was a modicum of education, and all
who had passed through the office had at least learned to read. Thus it came
about, from the fourth century onwards, that the readers were the boys who were
receiving training and education in the schools of the Church: according to the
canons, for instance, of the Council of Hippo in 393 readers on attaining the
age of puberty made choice between marriage and permanent readership on the one
hand, celibacy and rise through the various grades of clerical office on the
other. And the second thing to be remembered is that all these prescriptions of
canons or decretals represented a theoretical standard rather than a practice
regularly carried out. Canon Law in the fourth century could still be put
aside, by bishop or people, when need arose, without scruple. Minor orders
might be omitted. St Hilary of Poitiers wanted to ordain Martin a deacon
straight off, and only made him an exorcist instead because he reckoned that
Martin's humility would not allow him to refuse so low an office. Augustine and
Jerome were ordained presbyters direct. Even the salutary Nicene rules about
neophytes were on emergency violated: Ambrose of Milan and Nectarius of Constantinople were both elected as laymen (the former indeed as a
catechumen), and were rushed through the preliminary grades without appreciable
delay; St Ambrose passed from baptism to the episcopate in the course of a
week.
But in spite of
any occasional reassertions of the older freedom, it did nevertheless remain
true that the curses and all it stood for was gradually establishing itself as
a real influence: and it stood for a body continually growing in size, in
articulation, in strength, in dead weight, which drove in like a wedge between
bishop and people, and fortified itself by encroachments on both sides.
Doubtless it would have been natural in any case that bishop and people, no
longer enjoying the old affectionateness of personal intercourse, should lose
the sense of community and imperceptibly drift apart: but the process was at
least hastened and the gap widened by the interposition of the clerus. It was no longer the laity, but the clergy alone,
who were in direct touch with the bishop. Even the fundamental right of the
people to elect their bishop slipped gradually from their hands into the hands
of the clergy. Within the clerical class a continual and steady upward pressure
was at work. The minor orders take over the business of the diaconate: deacons
assert themselves against presbyters: presbyters in turn are no longer a body
of counselors to the bishop acting in common, but,
having of necessity begun to take over all pastoral relations with the laity,
tend as parish priests to a centrifugal independence. The process of
entrenchment within the parochial freehold was still only in its first
beginnings: but already in the fourth century—when theologians and exegetes
were feeling after a formal and scientific basis for what had been natural,
instinctive, traditional—we find presbyters asserting the claim of an ultimate
identity of order with the episcopate.
Such are the
summary outlines of the picture, which must now be filled in, here and there,
with more detail. And the details will serve to reinforce the conclusion that
the principal features of the history of church organization in the fourth and
fifth centuries are not unconnected accidents, but are to a large extent just
different aspects of a single process, the multiplication and development of
the Christian clergy.
1. The people
had originally chosen their bishop without serious possibility of interference
from the clergy. Voting by orders in the modern sense was hardly known: in so
far as any check existed on the unfettered choice of the laity, it lay in the
hands of the neighboring bishops from whom the
bishop-elect would naturally receive consecration. Cyprian, it is clear from
his whole correspondence, was made bishop of Carthage by the laity against the
decided wishes of his colleagues in the presbyterate. After the death of
Anteros of Rome in 236, we learn from the story in Eusebius that “all the
brethren were gathered together for the appointment of a successor to the
bishopric”. And this was still the practice after the middle of the fourth
century: the description of the election of St Ambrose in 374 by his biographer
mentions the people only. Another biography, that of St Martin of Tours by Sulpicius Severus, depicts a similar scene about the same
date: Martin was elected, in the face of opposition from some of the assembled
bishops, by the persistent vote of the people. The laity too, at least in some
churches, still selected even the candidates for the priesthood. Possidius, the biographer of St Augustine, relates how Valerius of Hippo put before the "plebs dei" the need for an additional presbyter, and how the
Catholic people, "knowing Saint Augustine's faith and life," seized
hold of him, and presented him to the bishop for ordination. In Rome however
the influence of the clergy was already predominant. The episcopal elections,
during the troubled decade that followed the exile of Liberius in 355, are described in the Gesta inter Liberium et Felicem: the clergy
first pledge their loyalty to Liberius and then
accept Felix in his place: the opposition, who clung all through to Liberius and after his death elected Ursinus as his
successor, are represented as mainly a lay party—multitudo fidelium, sancta plebs, fidelis populus, dei populus—yet
even in their electoral assembly the clergy receive principal mention, “presbyteri et diacones ... cum
plebe sancta”. And though there are some indications that the party of Ursinus
had strong support in the local episcopate, it was Damasus,
the candidate of the majority of the clergy, who secured recognition by the
civil power. At the end of the fourth century a definite place is accorded to
the clergy in the theory of episcopal appointments. The eighth book of the
Apostolic Constitutions distinguishes the three steps of election by the
people, approval by the clergy, consecration by the bishops. Siricius of Rome, in his decretal letter to Himerius, puts the clergy before the people, “si eum deri ac plebis edecumarit election”:
the phrase “cleri plebisque”
became normal in this connection, and ultimately meant that it was for the
clergy to elect and for the people to approve.
Fundamental as
these changes were, no doubt each stage of them seemed natural enough at its
time. Indirect election was an expedient unknown as yet: real election by the
laity, in view of the dimensions of the Christian population, became more and
more difficult, and the pretence of it tumultuous and unsatisfactory. The
members of the clergy on the other hand were now considerable enough for a
genuine electing body, yet not too unwieldy for control: and the people were
gradually ousted from any effective participation. So far as the influence of
the laity still continued to make itself felt, it was through the interference
of the State. Under either alternative Christian feeling had to content itself
with a grave deflection from primitive ideals.
2. The earlier
paragraphs of this chapter have already given us reason to anticipate the
developments of the diaconate in the fourth century. We have seen how the
intimate relations of the deacons with the bishop as his personal staff caused
the business of the churches to pass more and more, as numbers multiplied,
through their hand; we have seen also how from their attendance on the bishop,
in church as well as outside of it, they gradually acquired what they did not
originally possess, a status in Christian worship. It is just on these two
lines that their aggrandizement still proceeded. In Rome and in some of the
Eastern churches (witness the last canon of the Council of Neocaesarea in Pontus, c. 315), the deacons were limited, on the supposed model of the
Acts, to seven, while the presbyterate admitted of indefinite increase,
"and the mere disproportion in numbers exalted the individual deacon"
says Jerome bitterly. But if complaint and criticism focused itself on the
affairs of the church of Rome, where everything was on a larger scale and on a
more prominent stage than elsewhere, the indications all suggest that the same
thing was in lesser measure happening in other churches.
The legislation
of the earliest councils of the fourth century supplies eloquent testimony to
the ambition of deacons in general and Roman deacons in particular. The Spanish
canons of Elvira, c. 305, show that a deacon might be in the position of
"regens plebem", in charge, no doubt, of a
village congregation: he might (exceptionally) baptize, but he might not do what
in many places the bishops of the Council of Arles, in 314, learnt that he did,
namely "offer" the Eucharist. By a special canon of the same Council
of Arles, the deacons of the (Roman) City are directed not to take so much upon
themselves, but to defer to the presbyters and to act only with their sanction.
Both these canons of Arles are combined and repeated in the 18th canon of
Nicaea: but the reference to Rome is omitted, and the presumptions of the
diaconate—we must suppose that existing conditions in the Eastern churches are
now in view—take the form of administering the Eucharist to presbyters,
receiving the Eucharist before bishops, and sitting down among the presbyters
in church. Later on in the century we find the Roman deacons wearing the vestment
called “dalmatic”, which elsewhere was reserved to the bishop: and one of
them—probably the Mercury who is mentioned in one of Pope Damasus’
epigrams—had asserted the absolute equality of deacons and priests. Ambrosiaster, who may be confidently identified with the
Roman ex-Jew Isaac, the supporter of the Anti-pope Ursinus, treats in the
hundred and first of his Quaestiones de iactantia Romanorum levitarum:
Jerome, in his epistle ad Evangelum presbyterum, appropriates the arguments of Ambrosiaster and clothes them with his own incomparable
style. The Roman deacons, they tell us, arrogate to themselves the functions of
priests in saying grace when asked out to dinner, and in getting responses made
to themselves in church instead of to the priests: and this arrogance is made
possible because of their influence with the laity and in the administration of
ecclesiastical affairs. But the mind of the Church is clear: even at Rome
presbyters sit, while deacons stand, and if at Rome deacons do not carry the
altar and its furniture or pour water over the hands of the priest — as they do
in every other church—that is only because at Rome there is a "multitude
of clerks" to undertake these offices in their place. We do not know that
these indignant remonstrances of Ambrosiaster and
Jerome had any practical results: we do know that in the second half of the
fourth and the beginning of the fifth century three deacons, Felix, Ursinus,
and Eulalius, made vain attempts upon the papal
throne—the successful rivals of the two latter were priests, Damasus and Boniface—while by the middle of the fifth
century, as illustrated in the persons of St Leo and his successor Hilarius, the archdeacon almost naturally became pope.
3. As the
deacon thus pressed hard on the heels of the presbyter, so the presbyter in
turn put himself into competition with the bishop. Ambrosiaster and Jerome not only deny any parity of deacon and presbyter, but assert in
opposition a fundamental parity of order between presbyter and bishop. Both
were commentators on St Paul. Exegesis was one of the most fertile forms of
that astonishing intellectual efflorescence, which, bursting out at the
beginning of the fourth century in the schools of Origen and of Lucian, and in
the West fifty years later, produced during several generations a literary
harvest unequalled throughout the Christian centuries. And the two Latin
presbyters found in the Pastoral Epistles just the historical and scriptural
basis for the establishment of the claims of the presbyterate, that the instinct
of the times called for. The apostle had distinguished clearly enough between
deacons and presbyters or bishops: but he had used—so they rightly saw—the
terms presbyter and bishop for the same order of the ministry, and it was an
easy deduction that presbyter and bishop must be still essentially one. So Ambrosiaster (on 1 Timothy) and so Jerome (on Titus)
explains that in the apostolic age presbyters and bishops were the same, until
as a safeguard against dissensions one was chosen out of the presbyters to be
set over the reste. The exegesis of Ambrosiaster and Jerome was undeniably sound: their
historical conclusions were, if the picture given in the earlier pages of this
chapter is correct, not so just to the facts as those of another commentator of
the time, perhaps the greatest of them all, Theodore of Mopsuestia.
No doubt the New Testament bishop was a presbyter: but “those who had authority
to ordain, the officers we now call bishops, were not limited to a single
church but presided over a whole province and were known by the title of
apostles. In this way blessed Paul set Timothy over all Asia, and Titus over
Crete, and doubtless others separately over other provinces ... so that those
who are now called bishops but were then called apostles bore then the same
relation to the province that they do now to the city and villages for which
they are appointed”: Timothy and Titus “visited cities, just as bishops today
visit country parishes”.
“Uterque enim sacerdos est”. In these words lies perhaps the real inwardness
of the movement for equating presbyters with bishops and of its partial
success: “Priesthood” was taking the place of “Order”. In the first centuries,
to St Ignatius for instance and to St Cyprian, the essential principle was that
all things must be done within the Unity of the Church, and of that unity the
bishop was the local centre and the guardian. That alone is a true Eucharist,
in the language of Ignatius, which is under the authority of the bishop or his
representative. No rite or sacrament administered outside this ordered unity
had any reality. Baptism or Laying on of hands schismatically conferred,
whether without the Church among the sects or without the bishop's sanction by
any intruder in his sphere, were simply as though they had not been. Under the
dominance of this conception the position of the bishop was unique and
unassailable. But, as time went on, the single conception of Order, intense and
overmastering as to those early Christians it had been, was found insufficient:
other considerations must be taken into account, “lest one good custom should
corrupt the world”. Breaches were made in the theory first at one point, then
at another. Christian charity rebelled against the thought of wholly rejecting
what was intended, however imperfectly, to be Christian Baptism: iteration of
such Baptism was felt, and nowhere more clearly than at Rome, to be
intolerable. As with Baptism, so, though much more gradually and uncertainly,
with Holy Orders. The distinction between validity and regularity was hammered
out: quod fieri non debuit, factum valet was the expression of
the newer point of view. Augustine, in his writings against the Donatists, laid
down the principles of the revised theology, and later ages have done little
more than develop and systematize his work.
It is obvious
that in this conception less stress will be set on the circumstances of the
sacrament, more on the sacrament itself: less on the jurisdiction of the
minister to perform it, more on his inherent capacity: less, in other words, on
Order, more on Priesthood. We are not to suppose that earlier thought
necessarily differed from later on the question, for instance, to what orders
of the ministry was committed the conduct of the characteristic action of
Christian worship, or as to its sacrificial nature, or as to the priestly
function of the ministrants. But earlier language did certainly differ from
later as to the direction in which sacerdotal terminology was most freely
employed. In the general idea of primitive times the whole congregation took
part in the priestly office: when a particular usage of "sacerdos" first came in, and for several generations
afterwards, it meant the bishop and the bishop only. The phraseology in this
respect of St Cyprian is repeated by a whole chain of writers down to St
Ambrose. No doubt the hierarchical language of the Old Testament was applied to
the ministry of the Church long before the fourth century: but it was either
transferred in quite general terms from the one hierarchy to the other as a
whole, or it was concentrated upon the bishop.
Thus in the Didascalia Apostolorum it is the bishops who inherit the Levites' right to material support, the
bishops who are addressed as “priests to your people and levites who serve in the house of God, the holy catholic Church”, the bishop again who
is “the levite and the high priest” (contrast the
language of the Didache). But the detailed comparison of the three orders of
the Jewish ministry and the Christian was so obvious that it can only have been
the traditional use of sacerdos for the bishop
that retarded the parallelism. We find levita for deacon in the egiprams of Damasus and in the de Officiis of St Ambrose: but the complete triad of levita, sacerdos, summus sacerdos for deacon, presbyter, and bishop meets
us first in the pages of the ex-Jew Ambrosiaster. And
while Ambrose employs the Old Testament associations of the levite to exalt the dignity and calling of the Christian deacon, Ambrosiaster contrasts the “hewers of wood and drawers of water”
with the priests, and paraphrases the titles sacerdos and summus sacerdos as presbyter and primus presbyter. Summus sacerdos is freely used of bishops by Jerome, though
the title was forbidden even to metropolitans by an African canon. But in any
case the new extension of sacerdos to the
Christian presbyter was too closely in harmony with existing and not to
take root at once. It is common in both St Jerome and St Augustine: Pope
Innocent speaks of presbyters as secundi sacerdotes: and from this time onward bishop and priest
tend more and more to be ranked together as joint possessors of a common sacerdotium.
This new
emphasis on the sacerdotium of Christian
presbyters is perhaps to be connected with the new position which in the fourth
and following centuries they were beginning to occupy as parish priests. It was
the necessity of the regular administration of the Eucharist which dictated the
commencements of the parochial system. While the custom of daily Eucharists was
neither universal nor perhaps earlier than the third century—it arose partly
out of Christian devotion, partly out of the allegorical interpretation of the
daily bread—the weekly Eucharist was both primitive and universal, and the
needs in this respect of the Christian people could ultimately be met only by a
wide extension of the independent action of the presbyterate. Though in the
larger cities it can never have been possible, even at the first, for the
Christian people to meet together at a single Eucharist, the bishop, as Ignatius
tells us, kept under his own control all arrangements for separate services,
and the presbyters, like the head-quarters staff of a general, were sent hither
and thither as occasion demanded. It may have been as definite localities came
to be permanently set apart for Christian worship, that the custom grew up of
attaching particular presbyters to particular churches.
Probably it was
during the long peace 211-249 that ground was first acquired for churches
within the walls at Rome: cemeteries were constructed by the ecclesiastical
authorities as soon as the beginning of the third century, but the earliest
mention of church property in the City is when the Emperor Alexander Severus
(222-235), as we learn from Lampridius, decided a
question of disputed ownership of land between the christiani and the popinarii in favor of the former, because of the religious use which they were going to make of
it. Certainly by the time of Diocletian Christian churches throughout the
Empire were of sufficient number and prominence to become, with the sacred
vessels and the sacred books, a special mark for the edict of persecution in
303. And just as the restoration of peace produced an outburst of calligraphic
skill devoted to the Bible, of which the Vatican and Sinaitic codices are the
enduring monuments, so, too, the ruined buildings were replaced by others more
numerous and more magnificent. Constantine erected churches over the graves of
the Apostles on the Vatican hill and the Ostian Way,
while inside the walls the Lateran basilica of the Savior and the Sessorian basilica of the Holy Cross
testified further to the policy of the emperor and the piety of his mother.
When Optatus wrote, fifty years later, there were
over forty Roman basilicas, all of them open to the African Catholics and
closed to the Donatists. But this number perhaps includes the cemetery
churches, for the parish churches of the City appear to have been exactly
twenty-five under Pope Hilary (461-468), in its life of whom the Liber Pontificalis enumerates a service of altar vessels for
use within the City, one golden bowl for the “station” and twenty-five silver
bowls (with twenty-five amae or cruets, and
fifty chalices) for the parish churches, scyphus stationarius,
scyphi per titulos. The station thus opposed to
the parishes is the reunion, on certain days of the year, of the whole body of
the Roman clergy and faithful under the pope at some particular church: it was
a corrective to the growth of parochial separatism, like the custom of sending
round every Sunday, from the pope's mass to the mass of every church within the
walls, the fermentum or portion of the consecrated bread.
It was part of
the same careful guard against the over-development of parochial independence,
that, though there were parish clergy at Rome in the fourth and fifth
centuries, there was as yet no parish priest. When Ambrosiaster wrote, it was the custom to allot two priests to each church. At a council
under Pope Symmachus in 499, sixty-seven priests of the City subscribe, each
with his title, “Gordianus presbyter tituli Pammachii” and so on: but the tituli are not more
than thirty, some of them having as many as four or five priests attached to
them. Indeed, thirty is perhaps too high a figure, for some tituli may
appear under more than one name—an original name from the donor or the reigning
pope, and a, supplementary name in honor of a saint.
Of the fourth century popes Damasus had named a
church after St Lawrence, and Siricius after St
Clement: the basilica built under Pope Liberius became St Mary Major under Xystus III (432-440), and the two basilicas founded
under Pope Julius (337-352) became in time the Holy Apostles and St Mary across
Tiber.
But if the
parochial system with its single rector was thus no part of Roman organization
as late as the end of the fifth century, it was in full vigor at Alexandria two centuries earlier. Epiphanius tells us that, though all the
churches belonging to the catholic body in Alexandria (he gives the names of
eight) were under one archbishop, presbyters were appointed to each of them for
the ecclesiastical necessities of the inhabitants in the several districts. The
history of Arius takes the parochial system fifty or sixty years behind
Epiphanius: it was as parish priest of the church and quarter named Baucalis that he was enabled to organize his revolt against
the theology dominant at head-quarters under the bishop Alexander. The failure
of the presbyter and victory of the bishop may have reacted unfavorably upon the position of the Alexandrine presbyters generally; the historian
Socrates expressly tells us that after the Arian trouble presbyters were not
allowed to preach there. At any rate it is just down to the time of Alexander
and his successor, Athanasius, that those writers who testify to peculiar
privileges of the Alexandrine presbyterate in the appointment of the patriarch
suppose them to have survived. The most precise evidence comes from a tenth
century writer, Eutychius, who relates that by
ordinance of St Mark twelve presbyters were to assist the patriarch, and at his
death to elect and lay hands upon one of themselves as his successor,
Athanasius being the first to be appointed by the bishops. Severus of Antioch,
in the sixth century, mentions that “in former days” the bishop was “appointed”
by presbyters at Alexandria. Jerome (in the same letter that was cited above,
but independent for the moment of Ambrosiaster)
deduces the essential equality of priest and bishop from the consideration that
the Alexandrine bishop “down to Heraclas and
Dionysius” (232-265) was chosen by the presbyters from among themselves without
any special form of consecration. Earlier than any of these is the story told
in connection with the hermit Poemen in the
Apophthegms of the Egyptian monks. Poemen was visited
one day by heretics who began to criticize the archbishop of Alexandria as
having only presbyterian ordination. Unfortunately the hermit declined to argue
'with them, gave them their dinner, and promptly dismissed them.
It is clear
that an Alexandrine bishop of the fourth century slandered by heretics can be
no one but Athanasius; and therefore this, the earliest evidence for
presbyterian ordination at Alexandria, is just that which is most demonstrably
false. For Athanasius was neither elected nor consecrated by presbyters: not
more than ten or twelve years after the event, the bishops of Egypt affirmed
categorically that the electors were “the whole multitude and the whole people”
and that the consecrators were “the greater number of ourselves”. Yet this very
emphasis on the part of the supporters of Athanasius reveals one line of the
Arian campaign against him; and the conjecture may be therefore hazarded that
it was by Arian controversialists that the allegations of Alexandrine presbyterianism were first circulated, and that
their real origin lay in the desire to turn the edge of any argument that might
be based upon the solidarity of the episcopate. If the Catholics called upon
the bishops of the East not to champion a rebellious presbyter, their opponents
would, on this view, "go one better" in their enthusiasm for
episcopacy, and answer that Athanasius was no more than a presbyter himself. It
is difficult for us, who have to reconstruct the history of the fourth century
out of Catholic material, to form any just conception either of the mass of the
lost Arian literature—exegetical and historical, as well as doctrinal and
polemical—or of its almost exclusive vogue for the time being throughout the
East, and of the influence which, in a thousand indirect ways, it must have
exerted upon Catholic writers of the next generations. Jerome, writing amid
Syrian surroundings, would eagerly accept the there current presentation of the Alexandrine tradition, though his knowledge of the
later facts caused him to throw back the dates from the known to the unknown,
from Athanasius and Alexander to Dionysius and Heraclas.
Of course there is no smoke without fire; and presumably the Alexandrine
presbyterate, in the generations immediately preceding the Council of Nicaea,
must have possessed some unusual powers in the appointment of their patriarch.
But it seems as likely that these were the powers which elsewhere belonged to
the people as that they were the powers which elsewhere belonged to the
bishops.
The explanation
here offered would no doubt have to be disallowed, if it were true, as has
sometimes been alleged, that Arianism all the world over stood for the rights
of presbyters, while the cause of Athanasius was bound up with the aggrandizement
of the episcopate. But the connection was purely adventitious at Alexandria, or
at any rate local, and the conditions did not reproduce themselves elsewhere.
There is no reason at all to suppose any general alliance between presbyters
and Arianism, or between the episcopate and orthodox: on the contrary, all the
evidence goes to show that in Syria and Asia Minor, and perhaps elsewhere, the
bishops were less Catholic than their flocks. At Antioch, for instance, where
Arian bishops were dominant during half a century, orthodox zeal was kept alive
by the exertions of Flavian and Diodorus, originally
as laymen, afterwards as priests. In so far as the doctrinal issue affected the
development of organization at all, it must on the whole, both because of the general
confusion of discipline and also because of the ill repute which the
tergiversations of so many bishops earned for their order, have enhanced the
tendency towards the emancipation of presbyters from episcopal control.
Whatever
special conditions may have affected the course of development at Rome or
Alexandria, it may be taken as generally true that, by the end of the fourth
century the Christian presbyter's right to celebrate the Eucharist was coming
to be regarded as inherent in his sacerdotium rather than as devolved upon him by the bishop. With this right went also the
right to be served by deacons as ministri, and
ultimately the right to preach. While the 18th canon of Nicaea still regards
the deacons as ministers of the bishop only, later in the fourth century the
eighth book of the Apostolic Constitutions speaks of “their service to both
bishops and priests”, and Ambrosiaster is aghast at
the audacity of trying to put presbyters and their servants on a par.
The right to
preach had never been formally associated with any order of the Christian
ministry: Ambrosiaster was certainly interpreting the
documents on his own account. It is clear that in early times even a layman,
like Origen, might at the bishop's request expound Scripture to the congregation.
Nevertheless, though the right might be thus deputed, the sermon was part of
the Eucharistic service, and Justin Martyr no doubt describes the normal
practice when he makes the president of the assembly in person expound and
apply the lections just read from Prophets or Gospels. In the fourth century it
was treated as axiomatic that the right to preach, as part of the liturgy,
could not even be deputed save to those to whom could also be deputed the right
to offer the Eucharist itself. It is true that in many parts of the West the
archdeacon did compose and pronounce a solemn thanksgiving once a year, at the
lighting of the Paschal candle on Easter Even: but even this extraliturgical sermon de laudibus cerei was unknown at Rome, and Jerome, or whoever
was the author of the letter addressed in 384 to a deacon of Piacenza (printed
in the appendix to Vallarsi’s edition), finds in it a
gross violation of Church order. Even the rights of presbyters in this respect
were inchoate and still strictly circumscribed. In the Eastern churches it was
customary for some of them to preach in the presence of the bishop and for the
bishop to preach after them: and Valerius of Hippo
was consciously introducing an Eastern use into Africa—he was himself a Greek,
and therefore unable to speak fluently to his Latin flock—when he commissioned
his presbyter Augustine “against the custom of the African churches” to expound
the Gospel and preach frequently in his presence. To Jerome, familiar with the
Eastern custom, it was pessimae consuetudinis that in some (doubtless Western) churches
presbyters kept silence in the presence of their bishop: their right to preach
attached directly to the pastoral office which they held, according to him, in
common with the bishop.
But because presbyters
might preach in the bishop's church, where he could note and correct at once
any defects in their teaching, it does not necessarily follow that they might
preach in the parish churches, and there does not seem to be any clear
indication in the fourth and fifth centuries that they did in fact do so. For
Rome indeed this is hardly surprising: we have seen how jealously parochial
independence was there limited, and even at the bishop's mass, if we may
believe the historian Sozomen, there were no sermons
either by priest or bishop. In fact St Leo’s sermons—he became pope just about
the time that Sozomen published his Church
History—are the first of which we hear after Justin's time in Rome. But in Gaul
too, and as late as the beginning of the sixth century, only the city priests,
the priests, that is, who served in the bishop's church, had the right to
preach: the second canon of the second Council of Vaison in 529 extends the right, apparently for the first time, to country parishes;
if the priest is at any time unable to preach through illness, the deacon is to
read to the people “homilies of the holy fathers”.
It is perhaps
surprising at first sight to find that in the fourth and fifth centuries
presbyters are establishing a new independence in face of the bishop, rather than
bishops exerting a new and stricter authority over presbyters. The conclusion
has been reached by direct evidence; but it is also the conclusion clearly
indicated by the analogy of the whole upward movement which we have seen at
work in respect both to the minor orders and to the diaconate.
But if this
movement exerted so powerful an influence on the one hand upon minor orders and
diaconate, and on the other hand upon the priesthood, we could not expect that
bishops should be exempt from it. How and where it led in their case it will be
part of our business, in the second half of this chapter, to trace. It was
outside their own borders that the bishops of the great churches were tempted
to look for a wider field of activity and a more commanding position. From the
very first the bishop of each community had represented it in its relation to
other Christian communities, had been, so to say, its minister for foreign
affairs.
The Visions of Hermas were to be communicated to “the cities outside” by
Clement, for that function belongs to him. The complex developments of this
function, from the second century to the fifth, must now engage our attention.
So far we have
been dealing only with the internal development of the individual Christian
community. But there is an external as well as an internal development to
trace; the separate communities were always in intimate touch with one another,
and the common feeling of the mass of them formed an authority which, from the
beginning, the law of Christian brotherhood made supreme. “If one member
suffer, all the members suffer”, “we have no such custom, neither the churches
of God”: the principles are laid down in our earliest Christian documents, and
the organization of the Catholic Church was an attempt to work them out in
practice. No doubt the result only imperfectly embodied the idea, and in the
process of translation into concrete form the means came sometimes to appear of
more value than the end.
The history of
the second century shows how naturally the formal processes of federation grew
out of what was at first the spontaneous response to the calls of membership of
the great Society, the natural effort to express the reality of Christian union
and fellowship. The Roman community, under the leadership of St Clement, writes
a letter of expostulation when the traditions of stability and order are
threatened by the dissensions between the Corinthian community and its
presbyters.
St Ignatius
addresses separate epistles to the churches of several cities in Asia Minor, on
or near his road to Rome, exhorting them to hold fast to the traditional
teaching and world-wide organization of the Christian Society. The church of
Smyrna announces to the church of Philomelium the
martyrdom of its bishop Polycarp: the churches of Lyons and Vienne send to
their brethren in Asia and Phrygia an account of the great persecution of 177,
and the confessors from the same cities intervene with Pope Eleutherus in favor of a sympathetic treatment of the Montanist
movement. Correspondence was reinforced by personal intercourse: Polycarp
journeyed to Rome to discuss the Easter difficulty with Pope Anicetus; Hegesippus, Melito and Abercius travelled widely among different churches; Clement
of Alexandria had sat at the feet of half-a-dozen teachers. Never was the
impulse to unity, the desire to test the doctrine of one church or of one
teacher by its agreement with the doctrine of the rest, stronger than in the
days when formal methods of arriving at the general sense of the scattered
communities had not as yet been hammered out. The Christian statesmen of the
age of the councils were only attempting to provide a more scientific means of
attaining an end which was vividly before the minds of their predecessors in
the sub-apostolic generations.
The crucial
step in the direction of organized action was taken when the bishops of neighboring communities began to meet together for mutual
counsel. Such concilia were no doubt, in the
first instance, called for specific purposes and at irregular times. Tertullian
alludes to decisions of church councils unfavorable to the canonicity of the Shepherd of Hermas, and
makes special mention on another occasion of councils in Greece. The earliest
notice of separate councils held simultaneously to discuss a pressing problem
of the day is also the earliest indication of the sort of area from which any
one of such councils would naturally be drawn; for when, about 196, tension
became acute in regard to the attitude of the bishops of proconsular Asia, who
refused to come into line with the Paschal observances of other churches,
councils were held, as we learn from Eusebius, of the bishops in Palestine and
in Pontus and in Gaul and in Osrhoene. During the
course of the third century these local or provincial councils became more and
more a regular and essential feature of church life and government. But there
was as yet very little that was stereotyped about the system. It was Cyprian
beyond all others who succeeded, during his brief ten years of episcopate, 248258,
in forging a very practical weapon for the needs of the time out of the
conciliar movement: and of Cyprian's councils some represented (proconsular)
Africa alone, some Africa and Numidia, some Africa, Numidia, and Mauretania
combined; the meetings were more or less annual, but the extent of the area
from which the bishops were summoned depended apparently upon the gravity of
the business to be dealt with. Again, if the civil province was in ordinary
cases the natural model to follow, there was no necessary dependence upon its
boundary lines, where these were artificial or arbitrary. For reasons of State
the senatorial province of proconsular Africa and the imperial province of
Numidia were so arranged that the more civilized districts and the seaboard
belonged to the one, the more backward interior to the other: but the Numidia
of ecclesiastical organization was the ethnic Numidia, the country of the
Numidians, not the Numidia of political geography. Perhaps it was just for this
reason, because ethnic and ecclesiastical Numidia was shared between two civil
provinces, that in assemblies of the Numidian bishops the president was not, as
elsewhere, the bishop of the capital of the province, but the bishop senior by
consecration.
Not the least
important result of the new direction given by Constantine to the relations of
Church and State was the authorization and encouragement of episcopal
assemblies on a larger scale than had in earlier days been possible. Where
difficulties, disciplinary or doctrinal, proved beyond the power of local
effort to resolve, councils were planned of a more than provincial type. The
Council of Arles in 314 was a general council, concilium plenarium, of the Western Church, summoned by
Constantine as lord of the Western Empire, to terminate the quarrel in Africa
between the partisans of Caecilian and the partisans of Donatus. Judgment went
in favor of Caecilian, whose party, because they
alone now remained in communion with the churches outside Africa, were henceforward
the Catholics, while the others became a sect known after the name of their
leader as the Donatists. The dispute between Alexander and Arius at Alexandria
was in its beginning as purely local as that between Caecilian and Donatus, but
the issue soon came to involve the comparison of the fundamental theologies of
the two great rival schools of Alexandria and Antioch. From a council such as
Arles it was but a step to the conception of a general council of the whole
Church, where bishops from all over the world should meet for comparison of the
forms which the Christian tradition had taken in their respective communities,
for open ventilation of points of controversy, and for the removal of
misunderstanding by personal intercourse. Constantine, now master of an
undivided empire, organized the first ecumenical council at Nicaea in 325. The
great experiment was not an immediate success: the Nicene council rather opened
than closed the history of Arianism on the larger stage, and it was not till
after the lapse of half a century that wisdom was seen to be justified of its
works, though the very keenness of the struggle made the long delayed and
hardly won triumph more complete in the end. No council ever fastened its hold
on Christian imagination in quite the same way as the Council of Nicaea.
Not that there
was ever any quarrel between the supporters and the opponents of the Homousion as to the rightness of the procedure which
had been called into being. The weapons with which the council and the creed
were fought were rival councils and rival creeds: the verdict of the court was
to be set aside by renewed trials and multiplied appeals in the hope of
modifying somehow the original judgment. Of all these supplementary councils
none was strictly general, though on three occasions—at Sardica and Philippopolis in 343, at Ariminum and Seleucia in
359, at Aquileia and Constantinople in 381—councils representing separately the
Greek and the Latin episcopate were held more or less at the same time in East
and West. Others, like that of Sirmium in 351, were
held, wherever the emperor happened to be in residence, by the bishops attached
at the moment to the court: others again were local and provincial. The
atmosphere of Rome was never perhaps quite congenial to councils: yet even the
Roman Church was swept into the movement, and the pronouncements of Pope Damasus (366-384) came before the world under the guise of
conciliar decisions.
The experience
of the fifty years that followed the Council of Tyre in 335 taught the lesson
that it was possible to have too much even of a good thing. Pagan historian and
Christian saint from different starting-points arrived at the same conclusion.
Ammianus Marcellinus, criticizing the character and career of the Emperor
Constantius, noted caustically that he threw the coaching system quite out of
gear because so many of the relays were employed in conveying bishops to and
from their councils at the expense of the State. And Gregory of Nazianzus, in
the year 382, refused to obey the summons to a new council, because, he says,
he never saw “any good end to a council nor any remedy of evils, but rather an
addition of more evil as its result. There are always contentions and strivings
for dominion beyond what words can describe”.
Perhaps it was
partly by a natural reaction against councils, in those districts especially
where they had followed most quickly upon one another, that the tendency to
aggrandize the important sees at the expense of other bishops—and at the
expense therefore of the conciliar movement, since in a council all bishops had
an equal vote—seems about this time to take a sudden leap forward. Valens the
Arian and Theodosius the Catholic alike made communion with some leading bishop
the test of orthodoxy for other bishops. A first edict of Theodosius on his way
from the West to take up the Eastern Empire in 380 expresses Western
conceptions by naming in this connection only Damasus of Rome and Peter of Alexandria: a later edict from Constantinople in 381
places Nectarius of Constantinople before Timothy of
Alexandria, and adds halfa-dozen bishops in Asia Minor and a couple in the
Danube lands as centres of communion for their respective districts.
Here then we
must pause for a moment to take into account the second main element in the
history of the federation of the Christian churches. Every federation has to
face this primary problem—the reconciliation of the equal rights of all
participating bodies with the proportional rights of each according to their
greater or less importance. The difficulty which modern constitutions have
tried to solve by the expedient of a dual organization, the one part of it
giving to all constituent units an equal representation, the other part of it a
proportionate representation according to population (or whatever other criterion
of value may be selected), was a difficulty which lay also before the early
Church. The unit of the Christian federation was the community, whose growth
and development is described in the first half of this chapter; and that
description has shown us that the necessary and only conceivable representative
of the individual community was its bishop. But some communities were small and
insignificant and unknown in history, others were larger in numbers, or more
potent in influence, or more venerable in traditions: were the bishops of these
diverse communities all to enjoy equal weight?
Such a question
was no doubt not consciously put until the scientific and reflective period of
Christian thought began, nor before the complex process of federation was approaching
completeness: that is to say, not before the end of the fourth century. But in
so far as it was put, it could receive but one answer. In the theory of
Christian writers from St Irenaeus and St Cyprian onwards, all bishops were
equal, for they were all appointed, to the same order and invested with the
same powers, whether the sphere in which they exercised them were great or
small; and this theory was given its sharpest expression in Jerome's assertion
(in the same 146th letter) that the bishop of Gubbio had the same dignity as the bishop of Rome, seeing that both were equally
successors of the Apostles. But in fact, and side by side with the fullest
recognition of this theoretical equality, the bishops of the greater or more
important churches were recognized, as the rules of the federation were
gradually crystallized, to hold positions of privilege, so that the ministry of
the Church came to consist not only of a hierarchy within each local community,
at the head of which stood the bishop, but of a further hierarchy among the
bishops themselves, at the head of which, in some sense, stood the bishop of
Rome. The first steps towards such a hierarchy were on the one hand the
traditional influence and privileges which had grown up unnoticed round the greater
sees, and on the other hand the position acquired by metropolitans in the
working out of the provincial system.
The canons of
the same councils which first provide for regular meetings of the bishops of
each province, reveal also the rapid aggrandizement of the bishop of the
metropolis, who presided over them. If at Nicaea the ‘commonwealth of bishops’
is the authority according to one canon, by another the ‘ratification of the
proceedings’ belongs to the metropolitan. The canons of Antioch, sixteen years
later, lay it down that the completeness of a synod consists in the presence of
the metropolitan, and, while he is not to act without the rest, they in turn
must recognize that the care of the province is committed to him and must be
content to take no step of any sort outside their own diocese apart from him.
Traditional sanction is already claimed for these prerogatives of the
metropolitan: they are “according to the ancient and still governing canon of
the fathers”.
Things were not
so far advanced in this direction, it is true, in the West. At any point in the
first five centuries the Latin Church lagged far behind the pitch of
development attained by its Greek contemporaries. Christianity had had a
century's start in the East, and at the conversion of Constantine it is
probable that if the proportion of Christians in the whole population was a
half, or nearly a half, among Greek-speaking peoples, it was not more than a
fifth, in many parts not more than a tenth, in the West. The Latin canons of Sardica in 343 show how little was as yet known of
metropolitans. Although many of the enactments deal with questions of
jurisdiction and judicature, the bishop of the metropolis is mentioned only
once, and then in general terms. The name metropolitan is as foreign to
these canons as to the earliest versions of the Nicene canons.
With this
backwardness of development among the Latins went also a much smaller degree of
subservience to the State: and it resulted from these two causes combined that
their church organization in the fourth and fifth centuries reflected the civil
polity much less closely than was the case in the East. The
"province" of the Nicene or Antiochene canons is the civil province,
its metropolitan is the bishop of the civil metropolis, and it is assumed that
every civil province formed also a separate ecclesiastical unit. It followed
logically that the division of a civil province involved division of the
ecclesiastical province as well. When the Arian emperor Valens, about 372,
divided Cappadocia into Prima and Secunda, it was
with the particular object of annoying the metropolitan of Caesarea, St Basil,
and of diminishing the extent of his jurisdiction by raising Anthimus of Tyana to metropolitan
rank; and though Basil resisted, Anthimus succeeded
in the end in establishing his claim. Before the end of the fourth century not
only every province but every group of provinces formed an ecclesiastical as
well as a civil unit: the provinces of the Roman Empire had by subdivision
become so numerous that Diocletian had grouped them into some dozen dioeceses with an exarch at the head of each, and the
Council of Constantinople in 381 forbids the bishops of one dioecese or exarchate to interfere with the affairs of "the churches beyond their
borders." So wholly modeled upon civil lines was
the ecclesiastical organization throughout the East, that in the middle of the
fifth century the canons of Chalcedon assume an absolute correspondence of the
one with the other. Every place which by imperial edict might be raised to the
rank of a city, gained ipso facto the right to a bishop (canon 17). Every
division for ecclesiastical purposes of a province which remained for civil
purposes undivided was null and void—even if backed up by an imperial edict—the real metropolis being alone entitled to a metropolitan (canon 12). Civil
and public lines must be followed in the arrangement of ecclesiastical
boundaries.
This conception
summed itself up in the claim put forward on behalf of the see of
Constantinople at the councils of 381 and 451. The bishops of these councils,
deferring, perhaps not unwillingly, to the pressure of the local authorities,
civil and ecclesiastical, gave to the bishop of Constantinople the next place
after the bishop of Rome, on the ground that Constantinople was New Rome, and
that “the fathers had assigned precedence to the throne of Old Rome because it
was the Imperial City”.
Nothing was
better calculated than such a claim to bring out the latent divergences of East
and West. Both in Church and State the rift between the Latin and the Hellenic
element had begun to widen perceptibly during the course of the fourth century.
Diocletian's drastic reorganization of the Imperial government gave the first
official recognition to the bipartite nature of the Roman realm, and after the
death of Julian in 363 the two halves of the Empire, though they lived under
the same laws, obeyed with rare and brief exceptions separate masters. Parallel
tendencies in the ecclesiastical world were working to the surface about the
same time. The Latinization of the Western Churches was complete before
Constantine: no longer clothed in the medium of a common language, the ideas
and interests of Latin-speaking and Greek-speaking communities grew unconsciously
apart. The rival ambitions of Rome and Constantinople expressed this antinomy
in its acutest form.
The right of
the civil government to be in its own sphere the accredited representative of
Divine power on earth, the duty of the Christian Society to preserve at all costs
its separateness and independence as the salt of mankind, the city set upon a
hill—these were fundamental principles which could both appeal to the sanction
of the Christian Scriptures. To hold the balance evenly between them has been,
through the long centuries since Christianity began to play a leading part upon
the political stage, the worthy task of philosophers and statesmen. That one
scale should outweigh the other was perhaps inevitable in the first attempts,
and it was at least instructive for future generations that the experiment of
an over-strained allegiance to each of the two theories should have been given
full trial in one part or another of Christendom.
To Byzantine
churchmen the vision of the Christian State and the Christian Emperor proved so
dazzling that they transferred to them something of the religious awe with
which their ancestors had venerated the genius of Rome and Augustus. The memory
of Constantine was honored as of a ‘thirteenth
apostle’. The resentment of the native Monophysite churches of Syria and Egypt
against such of their fellow-countrymen as remained in communion with
Constantinople concentrated itself in the scornful epithet of Melkite or King’s
man.
The Latins were
more moved by the sentiment of the Roman name, and less by its incarnation in
the Emperor. As Romans and Roman citizens, they felt the majesty of the Roman Respublica to attach to place even more than to person. If
Rome was no longer the abode of emperors, it was in their eyes not Rome but
emperors who lost thereby. The event which stirred men in the West to the
depths of their being was not the conversion of Constantine but the fall of
Rome. When Alaric led his Goths to the storm of the City in 410, there seemed
to be need for a new theory of life and for revision of first principles. The
great occasion was greatly met. St Augustine wrote his twenty-two books de Civitate Dei to answer the obvious objection
that Rome, inviolate under her ancestral gods, perished only when she turned to
Christ. True it was that the City of the World had fallen: but it had fallen in
the Divine providence, when the times were ripe for a new and higher order of
things to take its place. The reign of the City of God had been ushered in.
It was a
natural corollary of the principles of Western churchmen that the Divine
Society could not possibly be bound to imitate the organization of the earthly
society which it was to supplant. Pope Innocent, in direct opposition to the
practice of the East, wrote to Alexander of Antioch in 415 that the civil
division of a province ought not to carry ecclesiastical division with it; the
world might change, not so the Church. Pope Leo refused his assent to the
so-called 28th "canon" of Chalcedon, not merely as an innovation, but
because its deduction of the ecclesiastical primacy of Rome from her civil
position was quite inconsistent with the doctrine cherished by the popes upon
the subject since at least the days of Damasus .
Here then we
have a bifurcation of Eastern and Western ideas, leading to a clear-cut issue,
in which both sides appealed to the truth of facts. Which of them represented
the genuine Christian tradition? Certainly the case of provincial organization favored the Eastern view, for it was taken over bodily from
the State. But then it was relatively modern; a far higher antiquity attached
to the privileged position of the greater sees, and it was upon the origin and
history of their privileges that the answer really turned.
Of course there
never had been a time when some churches had not stood out above the rest, and
the bishops of those churches above other bishops. The Council of Nicaea, side
by side with the canons that prescribed the normal organization by provinces
and metropolitans, recognized at the same time certain exceptional prerogatives
as guaranteed by "ancient custom. In Egypt especially, Alexandria eclipsed
its neighbor cities to a degree unparalleled
elsewhere in the East; and while it might not have been easy to sanction the
authority of the Alexandrine bishop over the whole of "Egypt Libya and
Pentapolis," if it had been quite unique in its extent, the Nicene fathers
could shelter themselves under the plea that "the same thing is customary
at Rome." A gloss in an early Latin version of the canons interprets the
Roman parallel to consist in the "care of the suburbicarian
churches," that is to say, the churches of the ten provinces of the
Vicariate of Rome—central and southern Italy with the islands of Sicily and
Sardinia. Over these wider districts the Roman and Alexandrine popes
respectively exercised direct jurisdiction, to the exclusion in either case of
the ordinary powers of metropolitans. The further prescription of the Nicene
canon that “in the case of Antioch and in the other provinces” the churches
were to keep their privileges, was understood by Pope Innocent to cover similar
direct jurisdiction of Alexander of Antioch over Cyprus; and a version of the
canons “transcribed at Rome from the copies” of the same pope defines the
sphere of Antioch as “the whole of Coele-Syria”."
What was it
then that had given these three churches of Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch the
special position to the antiquity of which the Nicene council witnesses? Roman
theologians from Damasus onwards would have answered
unhesitatingly that the motive was deference to the Prince of the Apostles, who
had founded the churches of Rome and Antioch himself, and the church of
Alexandria through his disciple Mark. But this answer is open to two fatal
retorts: it does not explain why Alexandria, the see of the disciple, should
rank above Antioch, a see of the master, and it does
not explain why our earliest authorities, both Roman and non-Roman, so
persistently couple the name of St Paul with the name of St Peter as joint patron
of the Roman Church. Cyprian is the first writer to talk of the "chair of
Peter" only.
Therefore we
are driven back upon the secular prominence of the three cities as the obvious
explanation of their ecclesiastical dignity. Yet if the appeal to history of
the two councils which elevated Constantinople to the second place was thus not
without a large measure of justification, their bald expression of Byzantine
theory does not really, any better than the contemporary Roman view, cover the
whole of the facts. If rank and influence in the ecclesiastical sphere
depended, more than on anything else, on rank and influence in the civil
sphere, it did not depend on it entirely. The personality and memory of great
churchmen went for something. Carthage was no doubt the civil capital of the
diocese of Africa, and Milan of the diocese of Italy: but it would be rash to
assert that the inheritance which St Cyprian left to Carthage and St Ambrose to
Milan was quite worthless or ephemeral. And if this was true of the great
bishops of the third and fourth centuries, it was still more true of the
apostles whom the whole Church united in venerating. Legends of apostolic
foundation were often baseless enough, but their very frequency testified to
the value set upon the thing claimed. Throughout the course of the long
struggle with Gnosticism, the teaching of the apostles was the unvarying
standard of Christian appeal: and evidence of that teaching was found not only
in the written Creed and Scriptures but in the unwritten tradition of the
churches and episcopal successions founded by apostles.
From the second
century onwards a catena of testimony makes and acknowledges the claim of the
Roman Church to be, through its connection with St Peter and St Paul, in a
special sense the depository and guardian of an apostolic tradition, a type and
model for other churches.
The pontificate
of Damasus (366-384) has been more than once
mentioned in the preceding pages as the period of the first definite
self-expression of the papacy. The continuous history of Latin Christian
literature does not commence till after the middle of the fourth century; the
dogmatic and exegetical writings of Hilary in Gaul (c. 355) and Marius
Victorinus in Rome (c. 360) are the first factors in a henceforward unbroken
series. On the beginnings of this new literary development followed quickly the
movement, of which we have already noticed symptoms in other directions, for
interpreting existing conditions and constructing out of them a coherent and
scientific scheme. These conditions had grown up gradually, naturally, and
almost at haphazard: it now seemed time to try to put them on to a firm
theological basis, and in the process much that had been fluid, immature,
tentative, was crystallized into a hard and fast system. It fell to the able
and masterful Damasus, in the last years of a long
life and a troubled pontificate, to attempt what his predecessors had not yet
attempted, and to formulate in brief and incisive terms the doctrine of Rome
upon Creed and Bible and Pope. A council of 378 or 379, after reciting the
Nicene symbol, laid down the sober lines of Catholic theology as against the
various forms of one-sided speculation, Eunomian and
Macedonian, Photinian and Apollinarian, to which the
confusions of the half-century since Nicaea had given birth; and the East could
do no better than accept the Tome of Damasus, as
seventy years later it accepted the Tome of Leo. Another council in 382
published the first official Canon of Scripture in the West—the influence of
Jerome, at that time papal secretary, is traceable in it—and the first official
definition of papal claims. Roman primacy is grounded, with obvious reference
to the vote of the council of 381 in favor of
Constantinople, on “no synodal decisions” but directly on the promise of Christ
to Peter recorded in the Gospel. Respect for Roman tradition imposes next a
mention of “the fellowship of the most blessed Paul”; but the dominant motif
reappears in the concluding paragraph, and the three sees whose prerogative was
recognized at Nicaea are transformed into a Petrine hierarchy with its prima sedes at Rome, its secunda sedes at Alexandria, and its tertia sedes at Antioch.
St Augustine’s
theory of the Civitas Dei was, in germ, that of the medieval papacy, without
the name of Rome. In Rome itself it was easy to supply the insertion, and to
conceive of a dominion still wielded from the ancient seat of government, as
world-wide and almost as authoritative as that of the Empire. The inheritance
of the imperial traditions of Rome, left begging by the withdrawal of the
secular monarch, fell as it were into the lap of the Christian bishop. In this
connection it is a significant coincidence that the first description which
history has preserved to us of the outward habit of life of a Roman pontiff
belongs to the same period, probably to the same pope, as the formulation of
the claim to spiritual lordship. Ammianus was a pagan, but not a bigoted one.
He professes, and we need not doubt that he felt, a genuine respect for simple
provincial bishops, whose plain living and modest exterior "commended them
to the Deity and His true worshippers." But the atmosphere of the capital,
the ostentatio rerum Urbanarum,
was fatal to unworldliness in religion. After relating that in the year 366 one
hundred and thirty-seven corpses were counted at the end of the day in the
Liberian basilica, on the occasion of the fight between the opposing factions
of Damasus and Ursinus, the historian grimly adds
that the prize was one which candidates might naturally count it worth any
effort to obtain, seeing that an ample revenue, showered on the Roman bishop by
the piety of Roman ladies, enabled him to dress like a gentleman, to ride in
his own carriage, and to give dinner-parties not less well-appointed than the
Caesar’s.
Some forty or
fifty years after Damasus the Roman author of the
original form of the so-called Isidorian collection
of canons, incorporating in his preface the substance of the Damasine definition on the subject of the three Petrine sees,
adds to Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch mention also of the honor paid, for the sake of James the brother of the Lord and of John the apostle and
evangelist, to the bishops of Jerusalem and Ephesus. Mere veneration of the
pillars of the apostolic Church is not enough to account for this modification
of the original triad; the reasons must be sought in the circumstances of the
day. If Ephesus is said to “have a more honorable place in synod than other metropolitans”, it may be merely that Ephesus, the most
distinguished church of those over which Constantinople, from the time of St
John Chrysostom, asserted jurisdiction, was a convenient stalking-horse for the
movement of resistance to Constantinopolitan claims; but it is also possible
that the phrase was penned after the ecumenical Council of Ephesus in 431,
where Memnon of Ephesus was seated next after the bishops of Alexandria and
Jerusalem. If the bishop of Jerusalem is “accounted honorable by all for the reverence due to so hallowed a spot”, and nevertheless “the
first throne”, sedes prima, “was never by the ancient
definition of the fathers reckoned to Jerusalem, lest it should be thought that
the throne of our Lord Jesus Christ was on earth and not in heaven”, we cannot
help suspecting that at the back of the writer's mind hovers an uneasy
consciousness that the apostolic traditions of Rome, which were so readily
brought into play against Constantinople, might find an inconvenient rival in
Jerusalem. Not that at Jerusalem, apart from a certain emphasis on the position
of James the Lord's brother, there was ever any conscious competition with
Rome: but it was true that, about the time that this canonical collection was
published, the see of Jerusalem was just pushing a campaign of aggrandizement,
carried on for over a century, to a triumphant conclusion.
The claims of
Jerusalem were comparatively modest at the start, and it did not occur to Damasus for instance that they need be taken into serious
consideration. Two initial difficulties hampered their early course. Although
Jerusalem was the mother church of Christendom, and the home and centre of the
first apostolic preaching, Aelia Capitolina,
the Gentile city founded by Hadrian, had no real continuity with the Jewish
city on the ruins of which it rose. The church of Jerusalem had been a church
of Jewish Christians, the church of Aelia was a
church of Gentile Christians, and for a couple of generations too obscure to
have any history. A probably spurious list of bishops is all the record that
survives of it before the third century. Then came the taste for pilgrimages—in AD 333 a pilgrim made the journey all the way from Bordeaux—and the
growing cult of the Holy Places: Jerusalem was the scene of the most sacred of
Christian memories, and locally at any rate Aelia was
Jerusalem. From the time of Constantine onwards the identification was
complete. The second difficulty was of a less archaic kind, and took longer to
circumvent. Aelia-Jerusalem did not even dominate its
own district, but was quite outshone by its near neighbor at Caesarea. Politically Caesarea was capital of the province: ecclesiastically
it was the home of the teaching and the library of Origen, and the Origenian
tradition was kept alive by Pamphilus the confessor
and by Eusebius, bishop of the church at the time of the Nicene council. It was
hardly likely that the council would do anything derogatory to the friend of
Constantine, the most learned ecclesiastic of the age: and in fact all the
satisfaction that the bishop of Jerusalem obtained at Nicaea was the apparent
right to rank as the first of the suffragans of the province—like Autun in the province of Lyons, or London in the province
of Canterbury. Local patriotism felt the sop thus thrown to it to be quite
unsatisfying, and for a hundred years the sordid strife “for the first place”
went on between the bishop of Jerusalem and the bishop of Caesarea. In the
confusion of the doctrinal struggle it was easy enough for an orthodox bishop
to refuse allegiance to an Arianising metropolitan:
and Caesarea being in close relations with Antioch, it was natural for the
bishops of Jerusalem to turn to their neighbors at
Alexandria, nor, we may suppose, was Alexandria disinclined to favor encroachment upon the territory of its Antiochene
rival. Western churchmen, with their profound belief in the finality of every
decision of Nicaea, looked coldly on the movement, and it is one of the counts
in Jerome's catalogue of grievances against John of Jerusalem. But at the first
Council of Ephesus, with Cyril of Alexandria in the chair and John of Antioch
absent, Juvenal of Jerusalem secured the second place, though he still failed
to abrogate the metropolitical rights of Caesarea. At the Latrocinium of Ephesus in 449, again under Alexandrine presidency, he managed to sit even
above Domnus of Antioch. The business of the Council
of Chalcedon was to reverse the proceedings of the Latrocinium,
and it might have been anticipated that with the eclipse of Alexandrine
influence the fortunes of Jerusalem would also suffer. But a timely tergiversation
on the doctrinal issue saved something for Juvenal and his see: the council
decreed a partition of patriarchal rights over the "East" between the
churches of Antioch and Jerusalem.
Very similar
were the proceedings which established the "autocephalous" character
of the island church of Cyprus. The Cypriots too began by renouncing the
communion of the Arian bishops of Antioch: they too espoused the cause of Cyril
against John at the Council of Ephesus, and were rewarded accordingly: and just
as the Empress Helena's discovery of the Cross served the claims of the church
of Jerusalem, so the discovery of the coffin containing the body of Barnabas
the Cypriot, with the autograph of St Matthew’s Gospel, was held to demonstrate
finally the right of the Cypriots to ecclesiastical isolation.
With this
evidence before us, it is hard to deny that the history of the generations
which first experienced the "fatal gift" of Constantine supplied only
too good ground for St Gregory's complaint of contentions and strivings for
dominion among Christian bishops. But though these contentions disturbed the
work of councils, councils did not create them and Gregory was hardly fair if
he laid on councils the responsibility for them: rather, in this direction lay
the remedy and counterpoise, seeing that councils represented the parliamentary
and democratic side of church government—stood, that is to say, in idea at
least, for free and open discussion as against the untrammeled decrees of authority, and for the equality of churches as against the
preponderance of metropolitan or patriarch or pope. No more grandiloquent
utterance of these principles could indeed possibly be found than the words
with which the Council of Ephesus concludes its examination of the Cypriot
claim. "Let none of the most reverend bishops annex a province which has
not been from the first under the jurisdiction of himself and his predecessors;
and so the canons of the fathers shall not be overstepped, nor pride of worldly
power creep in under the guise of priesthood, nor we lose little by little,
without knowing it, that freedom which our Lord Jesus Christ, the Liberator of
all men, purchased for us with his blood."
And councils
really were, at any rate in two main departments of their activity, the organ
through which the mind of the federated Christian communities did arrive at
some definite and lasting self-expression, namely in the Creed and in the Canon
Law. In both directions, it is true, East and West moved only a certain part of
the way together : in both too, while the impulse was given by councils, the
influence of the great churches added something to the completeness of the
work: in the case of the Creed, what became a universal usage in the liturgy
was at first only a usage of Antioch and Constantinople; in the case of the
Canon Law the collective decisions of councils were supplemented by the
individual judgments of popes or doctors before the corpus of either Western or
Eastern Law was complete. Nevertheless it remains the fact that it was from and
out of the conciliar movement that Church Law, as such, came into being at all
; that the canons of certain fourth and fifth century councils are the only
part of this Law common to both East and West; and that again the only common
formulation of Christian doctrine was also the joint work of councils, which
for that very reason enjoy the name of ecumenical, Nicaea, Constantinople, and
Chalcedon.
1. The origins
of the Christian Creed or Symbolum are lost in the
obscurity which hangs over the sub-apostolic age. We know it first in a
completed form as used in the Roman church about the middle of the second
century. From Rome it spread through the West, taking the shape ultimately of
our Apostles' Creed; and one view of its history would make this Roman Creed
the source of all Eastern Creeds as well.
But a summary
statement of Christian belief for the use of catechumens must have been wanted
from very early times, and it is possible that what St Paul "handed over
at the first" to his Corinthian converts (1 Cor. xv. 3) was nothing else
than a primitive form of the Creed. Anyhow, from whatever source it was
derived, a common nucleus was expanded or modified to meet the needs of
different churches and different generations, so that a family likeness existed
between all early Creeds, but identity between none of them.
At the Council
of Nicaea the Creed was for the first time given an official and authoritative
form, and was at the same time put to a novel use. The baptismal Creed of the
church of Palestinian Caesarea, itself a much more technically theological
document than any corresponding Creed in the West, was propounded by Eusebius:
out of this Creed the Council constructed its own confession of faith, no
longer for baptismal and general use, but as the "form of sound
words" by acceptance of which the bishops of the churches throughout the
world were to exclude the Arian conception of Christianity. The example of the
Creed of Nicaea on the orthodox side was followed in the next generation by
numerous conciliar formularies expressing one shade or another of opposing
belief. When the Nicene cause finally triumphed, the Nicene Creed was received
all the world over as the expression of the Catholic Faith; and the Council of
Ephesus condemned as derogatory to it the composition of any new formula,
however orthodox.
The Council of
Ephesus represented the Alexandrine position: at Constantinople, however, a new
Creed was already in use, which was like enough to the Nicene Creed to pass as an
expanded form of it, and was destined in the end to annex both its name and
fame. This Creed of Constantinople had been developed out of some older Creed,
probably that of Jerusalem, by the help of the test phrases of the Nicaenum and of further phrases aimed at the opposite heresies
of the semi-Sabellian Marcellus and the semi-Arian Macedonius. It may be supposed that this Creed had been
laid before the fathers of the council of 381: for at the Council of Chalcedon,
where of course Constantinopolitan influences were dominant, it was recited as
the Creed of the 150 fathers of Constantinople, on practically equal terms with
the Creed of the 318 fathers of Nicaea. In another fifty years the two Creeds
were beginning to be hopelessly confused, at least in the sphere of
Constantinople, and the Constantinopolitanum was introduced into the liturgy as the actual Creed of Nicaea. In the course of
the sixth century it became not only the liturgical but also the baptismal
Creed throughout the East. In the West it never superseded the older baptismal
Creeds—except apparently for a time under Byzantine influence in Rome—but as a
liturgical Creed it was adopted in Spain on the occasion of the conversion of
King Reccared and his Arian Visigoths in 589, and
spread thence in the course of time through Gaul and Germany to Rome.
2. Canon Law,
even more clearly than the Creed, Sowed its development to the work of
councils.
The conception
of a Church Law, ius ecclesiasticum, ius canonicum,
was not matured till the fourth century, and then largely as a result of the
new position of the Church in relation to the State, and in conscious or
unconscious imitation of the Civil Law. Down to the close of the era of
persecutions the discipline of the Church was administered under consensual
jurisdiction without any written code other than the Scriptures, in general
subordination to the unwritten or regula, the
“rule of truth”, “the ecclesiastical tradition”. Primitive books like the Didascalia Apostolorum and the Apostolic Church Order give us a naive picture of the unfettered action
of the bishop as judge with his presbyters as assessors. But as time went on
the questions to be dealt with grew more and more complex; it became no longer
possible to keep the world at arm's length, and the relations of Christians with
the heathen society round them required an increasingly delicate adjustment;
the simplicity of the rigorist discipline, by which in the second century all
sins of idolatry, murder, fraud, and unchastity were visited with lifelong
exclusion from communion, yielded at one point after another to the demands of
Christian charity and to the need of distinctions between case and case. The
problem became pressing when the persecution of Decius suddenly broke up the
long peace, and multitudes of professing Christians were tempted or driven to a
momentary apostasy. The Novatianist minority seceded
rather than hold out to these unwilling idolaters the hope of any readmission
to the sacraments: the Church was forced to face the situation, and it was
obviously undesirable that individual bishops should adjudicate upon similar
circumstances in wholly different ways. It was here that St Cyprian struck out
his successful line: his first councils were called to deal with the
disorganization which the persecution left behind it, and the bishops at least
of Africa were induced to agree upon a common policy worked out on a uniform
scale of treatment.
There is,
however, nothing to show that at Cyprian's councils any canons were committed
to writing, to serve as a permanent standard of church discipline. That crucial
step was only taken fifty years later, as the persecution initiated by
Diocletian relaxed and the bishops of various localities could meet to take
common counsel for the repair of moral and material damage. During the decade
305-315 the bishops of Spain met at Elvira, the bishops of Asia Minor at Ancyra
and at Neocaesarea, the Western bishops generally at
Arles; and the codes of these four councils are the earliest material preserved
in later Canon Law.
The decisions
of such councils had however no currency, in the first instance, outside their
own localities, and even the Council of Arles was a concilium plenarium only of the West; but the feeling was
already gaining strength, and it was quite in accordance with the
ecclesiastical policy of Constantine, that uniformity was desirable even in
many matters where it was not essential, and an ecumenical council offered
unique opportunities of arriving at a common understanding. So we find the Council
of Nicaea issuing, side by side with its doctrinal definition, a series of
disciplinary regulations, among which are incorporated, often in a greatly
modified form, some canons of the Eastern Council of Ancyra and some canons of
the Western Council of Arles.
These Nicene canons
are the earliest code that can be called Canon Law of the whole Church, and at
least in the West they enjoyed something like the same finality in the realm of
discipline that the Nicene Creed enjoyed in the realm of doctrine. “Other canon
than the Nicene canons the Roman church receives not, the Nicene canons alone
is the Catholic Church bound to recognize and to follow,” writes Innocent of
Rome in the cause of St Chrysostom. Leo does not exclude quite so rigorously
the possibility of additions to the Church's code: but the Nicene fathers still
exercise an authority unhampered by time or place.
The principle
was simplicity itself, but it came to be worked out with a naive disregard of
facts. On the one hand the genuine Nicene code was not accepted quite entire,
and where Western tradition and Nicene rules were inconsistent, it was not
always the tradition that went under: the canon against kneeling at Eastertide
is, in all early versions that we can connect with Rome, entirely absent; the
canon against the validity of Paulianist baptism was
misinterpreted to mean that the Paulianists did not
employ the baptismal formula. On the other hand many early codes that had no
sort of real connection with the Nicene councils sheltered themselves under its
name and shared its authority. The canons of Ancyra, Neocaesarea and Gangra, possibly also those of Antioch, were all included
as Nicene in the early Gallican collection. The canons of Sardica,
probably because of the occurrence in them of the name of Hosius of Cordova,
are in most of the oldest collections joined without break to the canons of
Nicaea: and a rather acrimonious controversy was carried on between Rome and
Carthage in the years 418 and 419, because Pope Zosimus cited the Sardican canons as Nicene, and the Africans neither found
these canons in their own copies nor could learn anything about them in the
East. The original form of the collection known as Isidore’s was apparently
translated from the Greek under Roman auspices at about this time: the canons
of Nicaea are those quas sancta Romana recipit ecclesia, the codes of the six Greek councils
Ancyra, Neocaesarea, Gangra, Antioch, Laodicea, and
Constantinople follow, and then the Sardican canons.
A Gallican editor of this version, later in the fifth century, combines the
newer material with the older tradition in the shape of a canon proposed by
Hosius, giving the sanction of the Nicene or Sardican council to the three codes of Ancyra, Neocaesarea, and Gangra.
We must not
suppose that all this juggling with the name Nicene was in the strict sense
fraudulent: we need not doubt the good faith of St Ambrose when he quoted a
canon against digamous clergy as Nicene, though it is really Neocaesarean, or of St Augustine when he concludes that the
followers of Paul of Samosata did not observe the ‘rule of baptism’, because
the Nicene canons ordered them to be baptized, or for that matter of popes
Zosimus and Boniface because they made the most of the Sardican prescriptions about appeals to Rome, which their manuscripts treated as Nicene.
The fact was that the twenty canons of Nicaea were not sufficient to form a
system of law: the new wine must burst the old bottles, and by hook or by crook
the code of authoritative rules must be enlarged, if it was to be a serviceable
guide for the uniform exercise of church discipline. In the fourth century the
councils had committed their canons to writing. In the fifth century came the
impulse to collect and codify the extant material into a corpus of Canon Law.
The first steps
were taken, as might be expected, in the East. Somewhere about the year 400,
and in the sphere of Constantinople-Antioch, the canons of half-a-dozen
councils, held in that part of the world during the preceding century, were brought
together into a single collection and numbered continuously throughout. The editio princeps, so to say, of this Greek
code contained the canons of Nicaea (20), Ancyra (25), Neocaesarea (14), Gangra (20), Antioch (25), and Laodicea (59): it was rendered
into Latin by the Isidorian collector, and it was
used by the officials of the church of Constantinople at the Council of
Chalcedon, for in the fourth session canons 4 and 5 of Antioch were read as
canon 83 and canon 84, and in the eleventh session canons 16 and 17 of Antioch
as canon 95 and canon 96. The canons of Constantinople were the first appendix
to the code: they are translated in the Isidorian collection, and they are cited in the acts of Chalcedon, but in neither case
under the continuous numeration. When Dionysius Exiguus,
early in the sixth century, made a quasi-official book of Canon Law for the
Roman church, he found the canons of Constantinople numbered with the rest,
bringing up the total to 165 chapters: his two other Greek authorities, the
canons of the Apostles and the canons of Chalcedon, were numbered
independently. The earliest Syriac version adds to the original nucleus only
those of Constantinople and Chalcedon, with a double system of numeration, the
one separate for each council, the other continuous throughout the whole
series. And in the digest of Canon Law, published about the middle of the sixth
century by John Scholasticus of Antioch (afterwards intruded as patriarch of
Constantinople), the “great synods of the fathers after the apostles” are ten
in number--i.e. not counting the Apostolic Canons the councils proper are
brought up to ten by the inclusion of Sardica,
Constantinople, Ephesus, and Chalcedon—and "besides these, many canonical
rules were laid down by Basil the Great."
Two features in
the work of John the Lawyer illustrate the transition from earlier to later
Canon Law. In the first place the list of authorities is no longer confined
strictly to councils, to whose decrees alone canonical validity as yet attached
in the fourth and fifth centuries: a new element is introduced with the Canons
of St Basil, and by the time we arrive at the end of the seventh century, when
the constituent parts of Eastern Canon Law were finally settled at the Quinisextine council in Trullo, the enumeration of Greek
councils is followed by the enumeration of individual doctors of the Greek
Church, and an equal authority is attributed to the rules or canons of both. In
the second place John represents a new movement for the arrangement of the material
of Church Law, not on the older historical and chronological method, by which
all the canons of each council were kept together, but on a system of
subject-matter headings, so that in every chapter all the appropriate rules,
however different in date or inconsistent in character, would be set down in
juxtaposition. Three of John's contemporaries were doing the same sort of thing
for Latin Church Law that he had done for Greek—the deacon Ferrandus of Carthage in his Breviatio Canonum, Cresconius, also an
African, in his Concordia Canonum, and Martin,
bishop of Braga in north-western Spain, in his Capitula. But the day of
the great medieval systematisers was not yet: these tentative efforts after an
orderly system seem to have met at most with local success, and the business of
canonists was still directed in the main to the enlargement of their codes,
rather than to the co-ordination of the diverse elements existing side by side
in them.
Early Greek
Church Law was simple and homogeneous enough, for it consisted of nothing but
Greek councils: even the first beginnings of the corpus of Latin Church Law
were more complex, because not one element but three went to its composition.
We have seen that its nucleus consisted in the universal acceptance of the canons
of Nicaea, and in the grafting of the canons of other early councils on to the
Nicene stock. Thus, whereas Greek canon law admitted no purely Latin element
(and in that way had no sort of claim to universality), Latin canon law not
only admitted but centred round Greek material. Of course, as soon as the idea
of a corpus of ecclesiastical law took shape in the West, a Latin element was
bound to add itself to the Greek; and this Latin element took two forms. The
natural supplement to Greek councils were Latin councils: and every local
collector would add to his Greek code the councils of his own part of the
world, Gallic, Spanish, African, as the case might be. But just about the same
time with the commencement of the continuous series of councils whose canons
were taken up into our extant Latin codes, commences a parallel series of papal
decretals: the African councils begin with the Council of Carthage in 390 and
the Council of Hippo in 393, the decretals with the letter of Pope Siricius to Himerius of Tarragona
in 385. Such decretal letters were issued to churches in most parts of the
European West, Illyria included, but not to north Italy, which looked to Milan,
and not to Africa, which depended on Carthage. As their immediate destination
was local, not one of them is found in the early Western codes so universally
as the Greek councils; on the other hand their circulation was larger than that
of any local Western council, and some or others of them are found in almost
every collection. It would even appear that a group of some eight decretals of Siricius and Innocent, Zosimus and Celestine, had been put
together and published as a sort of authoritative handbook before the papacy of
Leo (441-461). Outside Rome, there were thus three elements normally present in
a Western code, the Greek, the local, and the papal. In a Roman collection, the
decretals were themselves the local element: thus Dionysius Exiguus’medition consists of two parts, the first containing the Greek councils (and by
exception the Carthaginian council of 419), the second containing papal letters
from Siricius down to Gelasius and Anastasius II. But even the code of Dionysius, though
superior to all others in accuracy and convenience, was made only for Roman
use, and for more than two centuries had only a limited vogue elsewhere. Each
district in the West had its separate Church Law as much as its separate
liturgy or its separate political organization; and it was not till the union
of Gaul and Italy under one head in the person of Charles the Great, that the
collection of Dionysius, as sent to Charles by Pope Hadrian in 774, was given
official position throughout the Franklin dominions.
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