Chapter 14 - ST. BASIL AND ST. GREGORY OF NAZIANZUM; COUNCIL OF
CONSTANTINOPLE, PART 1 (AD 373-381)
Although St. Athanasius was now dead, God did not fail to raise
up champions for the true faith. Three of the most famous of these
were natives of Cappadocia--namely, Basil, his brother Gregory of
Nyssa, and his friend Gregory of Nazianzum. But although Gregory
of Nyssa was a very good and learned man, and did great service
to the truth by his writings, there was nothing remarkable in the
story of his life; so I shall only tell you about the other two.
Basil and Gregory of Nazianzum were both born about the year 329.
Basil was of a noble Christian family. Gregory's father had belonged
to a strange sect called Hypsistarians, whose religion was a mixture
of Jewish and heathen notions, but he had been converted from it
by his wife, Nonna, who was a very pious and excellent woman, and,
before his son's birth, he had risen to be bishop of Nazianzum.
The two youths became acquainted at school in Cappadocia, and,
when they were afterwards sent to the famous schools of Athens,
they grew into the closest friendship. They lived and read and walked
together: Gregory says that they had all things common, and that
it was as if they had only one soul in two bodies. Athens was an
excellent place for learning all that the wise men of this world
could teach, and therefore students flocked to it from distant countries.
But it was a dangerous place for Christian young men; for the teachers
were heathen philosophers, and knew well how to entangle them in
arguments, so that many of the pupils, who did not rightly understand
the grounds of their faith, were deceived into giving it up. Thus,
at the very time when Basil and Gregory were at Athens, Julian was
also there, sucking up the heathen notions which led to so much
evil when he afterwards became emperor. But the two Cappadocians
kept themselves clear from all the snares of "philosophy and
vain deceit" (Coloss. ii. 8); and although they were the foremost
of all the students in Athens for learning, and might have hoped
to make a great figure in the world by their talents, they resolved
to give up all worldly ambition, and to devote themselves to the
ministry of the Church.
So they were both ordained to be clergymen, and their friendship
continued as warm as ever. (Gregory did many kind offices to Basil,
and at length, when the archbishopric of Caesarea, the chief city
of Cappadocia, fell vacant, Gregory had a great share in getting
his friend chosen to it. Basil was now in a very high office, with
many bishops under him; and he had become noted as one of the chief
defenders of the Catholic faith. And when the emperor Valens set
up Arianism in all other parts of his dominions, Basil remained
at his post, and kept the Church of Caesarea free from the heresy.
Valens came into Cappadocia, and was angry that, while his wishes
were obeyed everywhere else, Basil should hold out against them:
so he sent an officer named Modestus to Caesarea, and ordered him
to require the archbishop to submit, on pain of being turned out.
Modestus told Basil his errand, and threatened him with loss of
his property, torture, banishment, and even death, in case of his
refusal. But Basil was not at all daunted. "Think of some other
threat," he said, "for these have no influence on me.
As for loss of property, I run no risk, for I have nothing to lose
except these mean garments and a few books. Nor does a Christian
care for banishment, since he has no home upon earth, but makes
every country his own, or rather, he looks on the whole world as
God's, and on himself as God's pilgrim upon earth. Neither can tortures
harm me, for my body is so weak that the first blow would kill me;
and death would be a gain, for it would but send me the sooner to
Him for whom I live and labour, and to whom I have long been journeying."
Modestus returned to his master with an account of what had been
said, and Valens himself soon after came to Caesarea. But when he
went to the cathedral on the festival of the Epiphany, and saw Basil
at the head of his clergy, and witnessed their solemn service, he
was struck with awe. He wished to make an offering, as the custom
was, but none of the clergy went to receive his gift, and he almost
fainted at the thought of being thus rejected from the Church, as
if he had no part or lot in it. He afterwards sent for Basil, and
had some conversation with him, and the end of the affair was, that
he not only left Basil in possession of his see, but bestowed a
valuable estate on a hospital which the archbishop had lately founded.
While Basil had risen, by Gregory's help, to be an archbishop,
Gregory himself was still a presbyter. He would not have taken even
this office but that his father ordained him to it almost by force;
and he had a great dread of being raised to the high and difficult
office of a bishop. But Basil, for certain reasons, wished to establish
a bishop in a little town called Sasima, and he fixed on his old
friend, without, perhaps, thinking so much as he ought to have thought,
whether the place and the man were likely to suit each other. The
old bishop of Nazianzum did all that he could to overcome his son's
unwillingness, and Gregory was consecrated; but he thought himself
unkindly used, and complained much of Basil's behaviour in the matter.
After a time, Basil and other leaders of the "orthodox"
(that is, of those who "held the right faith") urged Gregory
to undertake a mission to Constantinople, and he agreed to go, in
the hope of being able to do some good (AD 378). The bishopric of
that great city had been in the hands of Arians for nearly forty
years, and although there were many people of other sects there,
the orthodox were but a handful. Gregory, when he began his labours,
found that there was a strong feeling against him and his doctrine.
He could not get the use of any church, and was obliged to hold
his service in a friend's house. He was often attacked by the Arian
mob; he was stoned; he was carried before the magistrates on charges
of disturbing the peace; the house which he had turned into a chapel
was broken into by night, and shocking outrages were committed in
it. But the good Gregory held on notwithstanding all this, and,
after a while, his mild and grave character, his eloquent and instructive
preaching, and the piety of his life, wrought a great change, so
that his little place of worship became far too small to hold the
crowds which flocked to it. While Gregory was thus employed, Basil
died, in the year 380.
PART II
Both parts of the empire were now again under orthodox princes.
Valens had lost his life in wars without leaving any children (AD
378), so that Valentinian's sons, Gratian and Valentinian the Second,
were heirs to the whole. But Gratian felt the burden of government
too much for himself, a lad of nineteen, and for his little brother,
who was but seven years old; and he gave up the East to a brave
Spaniard, named Theodosius, in the hope that he would be able to
defend it.
Theodosius came to Constantinople in the year 380, and found things
in the state which has just been described. He turned the Arian
bishop and his clergy out of the churches, and gave Gregory possession
of the cathedral. Gregory knew that the emperor wished to help the
cause of the true faith, and he did as Theodosius wished; but he
was very sad and uneasy at being thus thrust on a flock of which
the greater part as yet refused to own him.
Theodosius then called a council, which met at Constantinople in
the year 381, and is reckoned as the second General Council (the
Council of Nicaea having been the first). One act of this council
was to add to the Nicene Creed some words about the Holy Ghost,
by way of guarding against the errors of a party who were called
Macedonians after one Macedonius, who had been bishop of Constantinople,
for these people denied the true doctrine as to the Holy Ghost,
although they had given up the errors of Arius as to the Godhead
of our blessed Lord.
But afterwards, some of the bishops who attended the council fell
to disputing about the choice of a bishop for Antioch; and Gregory,
who tried to persuade them to agree, found that, instead of heeding
his advice, they all fell on him, and they behaved so shamefully
to him that he gave up his bishopric, which, indeed, he had before
wished to do. Theodosius was very sorry to lose so good a man from
that important place; but Gregory was glad to get away from its
troubles and anxieties to the quiet life which he best loved. He
took charge of the diocese of Nazianzum (which had been vacant since
his father's death, some years before), until a regular bishop was
appointed to it; and he spent his last days in retirement, soothing
himself with religious poetry and music. One of the holiest men
of our own Church, Bishop Ken (the author of the Morning and Evening
Hymns), used often to compare himself with St. Gregory of Nazianzum;
for Bishop Ken, too, was driven from his bishopric in troubled times,
and, in the poverty, sickness, and sorrow of his last years, he,
too, used to find relief in playing on his lute, and in writing
hymns and other devout poems.
Theodosius was resolved to establish the right faith, according
as the council had laid it down. But it seems that at one time some
of the bishops were afraid lest an Arian, named Eunomius, should
get an influence over his mind, and should persuade him to favour
the Arians. And there is a curious story of the way in which one
of these bishops who was a homely old man, from some retired little
town, tried to show the emperor that he ought not to encourage heretics.
On a day when a number of bishops went to pay their respects at
court, this old man, after having saluted the emperor very respectfully,
turned to his eldest son, the young emperor Arcadius, and stroked
his head as if he had been any common boy. Theodosius was very angry
at this behaviour, and ordered that the bishop should be turned
out. But as the officers of the palace were hurrying him towards
the door, the old man addressed the emperor, and told him that as
he was angry on account of the slight offered to the prince, even
so would the Heavenly Father be offended with those who should refuse
to His Son the honours which they paid to Himself. Theodosius was
much struck by this speech; he begged the bishop's forgiveness,
and showed his regard for the admonition by keeping Eunomius and
the rest of the Arians at a distance.
The emperor then made some severe laws, forbidding all sorts of
sects to hold their worship, and requiring them to join the Catholic
Church. Now this was, no doubt, a great mistake; for it is impossible
to force religious belief on people; and although Christian princes
ought to support the true faith by making laws in favour of it,
it is wrong to make men pretend a belief which they do not feel
in their hearts. But Theodosius had not had the same opportunities
which we have since had of seeing how useless such laws are, and
what mischief they generally do; so that, instead of blaming him,
we must give him credit for acting in the way which he believed
most likely to promote the glory of God and the good of his subjects.
And, although some of his laws seem very severe, there is reason
to think that these were never acted on.
But about the same time, in another part of the empire, which had
been usurped by one Maximus, an unhappy man, named Priscillian,
and some of his companions, were put to death on account of heresy.
Such things became sadly too common afterwards; but at the time
the punishment of Priscillian struck all good men with horror. St.
Martin, Bishop of Tours, who was called "The Apostle of the
Gauls", did all that he could to prevent it. St. Ambrose (of
whom you will hear more in the next chapter; would not, on any account,
have to do with the bishops who had been concerned in it; and the
chief of these bishops was afterwards turned out of his see, and
died in banishment. We may do well to remember that this first instance
of punishing heresy with death, was under the government of an usurper,
who had made his way to power by rebellion and murder.
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