| Athanasius,
Bishop of Alexandria, Theologian, Doctor
Bishop of Alexandria; Confessor and Doctor of the
Church; born c. 298 AD; died May 2, 373 AD. Athanasius was the greatest
champion of Catholic belief on the subject of the Incarnation that the
Church has ever known and in his lifetime earned the characteristic title of
"Father of Orthodoxy", by which he has been distinguished ever
since.
Athanasius was born and lived in Alexandria, Egypt,
the chief center of learning of the Roman Empire. His parents were
both prominent and well-to-do. His early
writings betray evidences of the sort of education
that was given, for the most part, only to children and youths of a better
class. It began with grammar, went on to rhetoric, and received its final
touches under some one of the more fashionable lecturers in the philosophic
schools. It is possible, of course, that he owed his remarkable training in
letters to his saintly predecessor's favor, if not to his personal care.
Athanasius was one of those rare personalities that derive incomparably more
from their own native gifts of intellect and character than from the
fortuitousness of descent or environment.
The Alexandria of his boyhood was an epitome,
intellectually, morally, and politically, of that ethnically many-colored
Greco-Roman world, over which the Church of the fourth and fifth centuries
was beginning at last, with undismayed consciousness, after nearly three
hundred years of endless propaganda, to realize its supremacy.
Alexandria, at the time, was also the most important
centre of trade in the whole empire; and its primacy as an emporium of ideas
was more commanding than that of Rome or Constantinople, Antioch or
Marseilles.
Saints Athanasius and Cyril were Archbishops of
Alexandria. These wise teachers of truth and defenders of Christ's Church
share a joint Feast in recognition of their dogmatic writings which affirm
the truth of the Orthodox Faith, correctly interpret the Holy Scripture, and
censure the delusions of the heretics.
In 313 the Emperor Constantine issued
the Edict of Milan, which changed Christianity from a
persecuted to an officially favored religion. About six years later, a
presbyter (elder, priest) Arius of Alexandria began to teach concerning the
Word of God (John 01:01) that "God begat
him, and before he was begotten, he did not exist."
Athanasius was at that time a newly ordained
deacon, secretary to Bishop Alexander of Alexandria, and a member of his
household. His reply to Arius was that the begetting, or uttering, of the
Word by the Father is an eternal relation between Them, and not a temporal
event. Arius was condemned by the bishops of Egypt (with the exceptions of
Secundus of Ptolemais and Theonas of Marmorica), and went to Nicomedia, from
which he wrote letters to bishops throughout the world, stating his
position.
The Emperor Constantine undertook to resolve the
dispute by calling a council of bishops from all over the Christian world.
This council met in Nicea, just across the straits from what is now
Istanbul, in the year 325, and consisted of 317 bishops. Athanasius
accompanied his bishop to the council, and became recognized as a chief
spokesman for the view that the Son was fully God, co-equal and co-eternal
with the Father.
St Athanasius took part in the First Ecumenical
Council when he was still a deacon. He surpassed everyone there in his zeal
to uphold the teaching that Christ is consubstantial (homoousios)
with the Father, and not merely a creature, as the Arians proclaimed.
The party of Athanasius was overwhelmingly in the
majority. (The western, or Latin, half of the Empire was very sparsely
represented, but it was solidly Athanasian, so that if its bishops had
attended in force, the vote would have been still more lopsided.) It
remained to formulate a creedal statement to express the consensus. The
initial effort was to find a formula from Holy Scripture that would express
the full deity of the Son, equally with the Father. However, the Arians
cheerfully agreed to all such formulations, having interpreted them already
to fit their own views. (Those of you who have conversed with members of the
Watchtower Society, who consider themselves the spiritual heirs of Arius,
will know how this works.) Finally, the Greek word "homo-ousios" (meaning
"of the same substance, or nature, or essence") was introduced, chiefly
because it was one word that could not be understood to mean what the Arians
meant. Some of the bishops present, although in complete disagreement with
Arius, were reluctant to use a term not found in the Scriptures, but
eventually saw that the alternative was a creed that both sides would sign,
each understanding it in its own way, and that the Church could not afford
to leave the question of whether the Son is truly God (the Arians said "a
god") undecided. So the result was that the Council adopted a creed which is
a shorter version of what we now call the Nicene Creed, declaring the Son to
be "of one substance with the Father." At the end, there were only two
holdouts, the aforesaid Secundus and Theonas.
(For a dramatic but historically accurate account
of the Council of Nicea, see the play, The Emperor Constantine, by
Dorothy L Sayers, available in book form.)
No sooner was the council over than its consensus
began to fall apart. Constantine had expected that the result would be
unity, but found that the Arians would not accept the decision, and that
many of the orthodox bishops were prepared to look for a wording a little
softer than that of Nicea, something that sounded orthodox, but that the
Arians would accept. All sorts of compromise formulas were worked out, with
all shades of variation from the formula of Nicea.
In 328, Alexander died, and Athanasius succeeded
him as bishop of Alexandria. He refused to participate in these
negotiations, suspecting (correctly as it turned out) that once the orthodox
party showed a willingness to make reaching an agreement their highest
priority, they would end up giving away the store. He defended the full
deity of Christ against emperors, magistrates, bishops, and theologians. For
this, he was regarded as a trouble-maker by Constantine and his successors,
and was banished from Alexandria a total of five times by various emperors.
(Hence the expression "Athanasius contra mundum," or, "Athanasius against
the world.") Eventually, Christians who believed in the Deity of Christ came
to see that once they were prepared to abandon the Nicene formulation, they
were on a slippery slope that led to regarding the Logos as simply a
high-ranking angel. The more they experimented with other formulations, the
clearer it became that only the Nicene formulation would preserve the
Christian faith in any meaningful sense, and so they re-affirmed the Nicene
Creed at the Council of Constantinople in 381, a final triumph that
Athanasius did not live to see.
It was a final triumph as far as councils of
bishops were concerned, but the situation was complicated by the fact that
after Constantine there were several Arian emperors (not counting the
Emperor Julian, who was a pagan, but correctly saw that the most effective
way to fight Christianity was to throw all his weight on the side of the
Arians). Under one of them Arian missionaries were sent to convert the
Goths, who became the backbone of the Roman Army (then composed chiefly of
foreign mercenaries) with the result that for many years Arianism was
considered the mark of a good Army man. The conversion of Clovis, King of
the Franks, in 496, to orthodox Christianity either gave the Athanasian
party the military power to crush Arianism or denied the Arian Goths the
military supremacy that would have enabled them to crush Athanasian
Christianity, depending on your point of view.
Since Alexandria had the best astronomers, it was
the duty of the Bishop of Alexandria to write to the other bishops every
year and tell them the correct date for Easter. Naturally, his annual letter
on this topic contained other material as well. One Easter Letter (or
Paschal Letter) of Athanasius is well known for giving a list of the books
that ought to be considered part of the canonical Scriptures, with a
supplementary list of books suitable for devotional reading.
For the New Testament, he lists the 27 books that
are recognized today. (If you will look at your list of New Testament books,
you may note that Matthew through 2 Thessalonians were never in dispute,
that the next four were subject to relatively little dispute, and that the
remaining books had more trouble being accepted. There were also a few books
that looked as if they might make the list, but eventually did not, the most
conspicuous being the Epistle of Barnabas, the Epistle of Clement, and the
Shepherd of Hermas.)
For the Old Testament, his list is like that used
by most Protestants, except that he omits Esther, and includes Baruch, with
the letter of Jeremiah. His supplementary list is Wisdom, Sirach, Tobias,
Judith, and Esther. He does not mention Maccabees.
Two quotations from the writings of Athanasius
follow:
We were made "in the likeness of God." But in
course of time that image has become obscured, like a face on a very old
portrait, dimmed with dust and dirt.
When a portrait is spoiled, the only way to
renew it is for the subject to come back to the studio and sit for the
artist all over again. That is why Christ came--to make it possible for
the divine image in man to be recreated. We were made in God's likeness;
we are remade in the likeness of his Son.
To bring about this re-creation, Christ still
comes to men and lives among them. In a special way he comes to his
Church, his "body", to show us what the "image of God" is really like.
What a responsibility the Church has, to be
Christ's "body," showing him to those who are unwilling or unable to see
him in providence, or in creation! Through the Word of God lived out in
the Body of Christ they can come to the Father, and themselves be made
again "in the likeness of God."
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St. Athanasius
the Great of Alexandria

St. Basil &
St. Alexandria |