In the
half-century after the First Ecumenical Council held in Nicea in 325, if there
was one man whom the Arians feared and hated more intensely than any other, as
being able to lay bare the whole error of their teaching, and to marshal, even
from exile or hiding, the beleaguered forces of the Orthodox, it was Saint
Athanasios the Great. This blazing lamp of Orthodoxy, which imperial power and
heretics' plots could not quench when he shone upon the lampstand, nor find
when he was hid by the people and monks of Egypt, was born in Alexandria about
the year 296. He received an excellent training in Greek letters and especially
in the sacred Scriptures, of which he shows an exceptional knowledge in his
writings. Even as a young man he had a remarkable depth of theological
understanding; he was only about twenty years old when he wrote his treatise
"On the Incarnation." Saint Alexander, the Archbishop of Alexandria,
brought him up in piety, ordained him his deacon, and after deposing Arius for
his blasphemy against the Divinity of the Son of God, took Athanasios to the
First Council in Nicea in 325. Saint Athanasios was to spend the remainder of
his life laboring in defense of this Holy Council. In 326, before his death,
Alexander appointed Athanasios his successor.
In 325, Arius had
been condemned by the Council of Nicea; yet through his hypocritical confession
of Orthodox belief, Saint Constantine the Great was persuaded by Arius's
supporters that he should be received back into the communion of the Church.
But Athanasios, knowing well the perverseness of his mind, and the disease of
heresy lurking in his heart, refused communion with Arius. The heresiarch's
followers then began framing false charges against Athanasios. Finally Saint Constantine
the Great, misled by grave charges of the Saint's misconduct (which were
completely false), had him exiled to Tiberius (Treves) in Gaul in 336. When
Saint Constantine was succeeded by his three sons Constantine II, Constans, and
Constantius, in 337, Saint Athanasios returned to Alexandria in triumph. But
his enemies found an ally in Constantius, Emperor of the East, and he spent a
second exile in Rome. It was ended when Constans prevailed with threats upon
his brother Constantius to restore Athanasios (see also Nov. 6). For ten years
Saint Athanasios strengthened Orthodoxy throughout Egypt, visiting the whole
country and encouraging all: clergy, monastics, and lay folk, being loved by
all as a father. After Constans's death in 350, Constantius became sole
Emperor, and Athanasios was again in danger. On the evening of February 8, 356,
General Syrianus with more than five thousand soldiers surrounded the church in
which Athanasios was serving, and broke open the doors. Athanasios's clergy
begged him to leave, but the good shepherd commanded that all the flock should
withdraw first; and only when he was assured of their safety, he also,
protected by divine grace, passed through the midst of the soldiers and
disappeared into the deserts of Egypt, where for some six years he eluded the
soldiers and spies sent after him.
When Julian the
Apostate succeeded Constantius in 361, Athanasios returned again, but only for
a few months. Because Athanasios had converted many pagans, and the priests of
the idols in Egypt wrote to Julian that if Athanasios remained, idolatry would
perish in Egypt, the heathen Emperor ordered not Athanasios's exile, but his
death. Athanasios took a ship up the Nile. When he learned that his imperial
pursuers were following him, he had his men turn back, and as his boat passed
that of his pursuers, they asked him if he had seen Athanasios. "He is not
far," he answered. After returning to Alexandria for a while, he fled
again to the Thebaid until Julian's death in 363. Saint Athanasios suffered his
fifth and last exile under Valens in 365, which only lasted four months because
Valens, fearing a sedition among the Egyptians for their beloved Archbishop,
revoked his edict in February, 366.
The great
Athanasios passed the remaining seven years of his life in peace. Of his
fifty-seven years as Patriarch, he had spent some seventeen in exiles. Shining
from the height of his throne like a radiant evening star, and enlightening the
Orthodox with the brilliance of his words for yet a little while, this
much-suffering champion inclined toward the sunset of his life, and in the year
373 took his rest from his lengthy sufferings, but not before another luminary
of the truth -- Basil the Great -- had risen in the East, being consecrated
Archbishop of Caesarea in 370. Besides all of his other achievements, Saint
Athanasios wrote the life of Saint Anthony the Great, with whom he spent time
in his youth; ordained Saint Frumentius first Bishop of Ethiopia; and in his
Paschal Encyclical for the year 367 set forth the books of the Old and New
Testaments accepted by the Church as canonical. Saint Gregory the Theologian,
in his "Oration On the Great Athanasios", said that he was
"Angelic in appearance, more angelic in mind; ... rebuking with the tenderness
of a father, praising with the dignity of a ruler ... Everything was
harmonious, as an air upon a single lyre, and in the same key; his life, his
teaching, his struggles, his dangers, his return, and his conduct after his
return ... he treated so mildly and gently those who had injured him, that even
they themselves, if I may say so, did not find his restoration
distasteful."
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