Greetings,
In this edition of my "
Wisdom from the Apostolic Fathers" series, I will be highlighting the life of
St. Gregory of Nyssa, an important Christian theologian from the 4th century.
The Catholic Encyclopedia describes his life this way:
"Date of birth unknown; died after 385 or 386. He belongs to the group known as the "Cappadocian Fathers", a title which reveals at once his birthplace in
Asia Minor and his
intellectual characteristics. Gregory was born of a deeply religious
family, not very rich in worldly goods, to which circumstances he probably owed the
pious training of his youth. His mother Emmelia was a
martyr's daughter; two of his brothers, Basil of Cæsarea and
Peter of Sebaste, became
bishops like himself; his eldest sister, Macrina, became a model of
piety and is
honoured as a saint. Another brother, Naucratius, a lawyer, inclined to a life of asceticism, but died too young to realize his desires. A letter of Gregory to his younger brother, Peter, exhibits the feelings of lively gratitude which both cherished for their elder brother Basil, whom Gregory calls "our father and our master". Probably, therefore, the difference in years between them was such as to have enabled Basil to supervise the
education of his younger brothers. Basil's training was an antidote to the lessons of the
pagan
schools, wherein, as we
know from a letter of
St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Gregory of Nyssa spent some time, very probably in his early youth, for it is
certain that while still a youth Gregory exercised the
ecclesiastical office of
rector. His
family, it would seem, had endeavoured to turn his thoughts towards the
Church, for when the young man chose a secular career and began the study of rhetoric, Basil remonstrated with him long and earnestly; when he had failed he called on Gregory's friends to influence him against that objectionable secular calling. It was all in vain; moreover, it would seem that the young man married. There exists a letter addressed to him by
Gregory of Nazianzus condoling with him on the loss of one Theosebeia, who must have been his wife, and with whom he continued to live, as with a sister, even after he became
bishop. This is also evident from his treatise "De virginitate".
Some think that Gregory spent a certain time in retreat before his
consecration as
bishop, but we have no
proof of the fact. His extant letters make no mention of such retirement from the world. Nor are we better informed of the circumstances of his election to the See of
Nyssa, a little town on the banks of the Halys, along the road between Cæsarea and
Ancyra. According to
Gregory of Nazianzus it was Basil who performed the episcopal
consecration of his brother, before he himself had taken possession of the See of Sozima; which would place the beginning of Gregory of Nyssa's episcopate about 371. Was this brusque change in Gregory's career the result of a sudden vocation?
St. Basil tells us that it was
necessary to overcome his brother's repugnance, before he accepted the office of
bishop. But this does not help us to an answer, as the episcopal charge in that day was beset with many dangers. Moreover in the fourth century, and even later, it was not uncommon to express dislike of the episcopal
honour, and to fly from the prospect of election. The fugitives, however, were usually discovered and brought back, and the
consecration took place when a show of resistance had saved the candidate's
humility. Whether it was so in Gregory's case, or whether he really did feel his own unfitness, we do not
know. In any case, St. Basil seems to have regretted at times the constraint thus put on his brother, now removed from his influence; in his letters he complains of Gregory's naive and clumsy interference with his (Basil's) business. To Basil the synod called in 372 by Gregory at
Ancyra seemed the ruin of his own labours. In 375 Gregory seemed to him decidedly incapable of ruling a Church. At the same time he had but faint praise for Gregory's
zeal for
souls.
On arriving in his
see Gregory had to face great difficulties. His sudden elevation may have turned against him some who had hoped for the office themselves. It would appear that one of the courtiers of
Emperor Valens had solicited the
see either for himself or one of his friends. When Demosthenes, Governor of
Pontus, convened an assembly of Eastern
bishops, a certain Philocares, at one of its sessions, accused Gregory of wasting
church property, and of irregularity in his election to the episcopate, whereupon Demosthenes ordered the
Bishop of
Nyssa to be seized and brought before him. Gregory at first allowed himself to be led away by his captors, then losing heart and discouraged by the cold and brutal treatment he met with, he took an opportunity of escape and reached a place of safety. A Synod of
Nyssa (376) deposed him, and he was reduced to wander from town to town, until the death of
Valens in 378. The new emperor, Gratian, published an edict of tolerance, and Gregory returned to his
see, where he was received with
joy. A few months after this (January, 379) his brother Basil died; whereupon an era of activity began for Gregory. In 379 he assisted at the Council of Antioch which had been summoned because of the Meletian
schism. Soon after this, it is supposed, he visited Palestine. There is reason for
believing that he was sent officially to remedy the disorders of the
Church of Arabia. But possibly his journey did not take place till after the Council of Constantinople in 381, convened by
Emperor Theodosius for the welfare of religion in that city. It asserted the
faith of Nicæa, and tried to put an end to
Arianism and
Pneumatism in the East. This council was not looked on as an important one at the time; even those present at it seldom refer to it in their writings. Gregory himself, though he assisted at the council, mentions it only casually in his funeral oration over
Meletius of Antioch, who died during the course of this assembly.
An edict of
Theodosius (30 July, 381; Cod. Theod., LXVI, tit. I., L. 3) having appointed certain
episcopal sees as centres of
Catholic communion in the East, Helladius of Cæsarea, Gregory of Nyssa and Otreius of
Melitene were chosen to fill them. At Constantinople Gregory gave evidence on two occasions of his talent as an orator; he delivered the discourse at the
enthronization of
St. Gregory of Nazianzus, also the aforesaid oration over
Meletius of Antioch. It is very probable that Gregory was present at another Council of Constantinople in 383; his "Oratio de deitate Filii et Spiritus Sancti" seems to confirm this. In 385 or 386 he preached the funeral sermon over the imperial Princess Pulcheria, and shortly afterwards over Empress Flaccilla. A little later we meet him again at Constantinople, on which occasion his counsel was sought for the repression of
ecclesiastical disorders in Arabia; he then disappears from history, and probably did not long survive this journey. From the above it will be seen that his life is little known to us. It is difficult to outline clearly his
personality, while his writings contain too many flights of eloquence to permit final judgment on his real character."
Let us all follow the example of this great Saint.
No comments:
Post a Comment