X.—Troubles of the Closing Years.
The relief to the Catholic East was brief. The paroxysm of passion which caused Valentinian to break a blood-vessel and ended his life, 260 ended also the force of the imperial rescript. The Arians lifted their heads again. A council was held at Ancyra, 261 in which the homoousion was condemned, and frivolous and vexatious charges were brought against Gregory of Nyssa. 262 At Cyzicus a Semiarian synod blasphemed the Holy Spirit. 263 Similar proceedings characterized a synod of Antioch at about the same time. 264 Gregory of Nyssa having been prevented by illness from appearing before the synod of Ancyra, Eustathius and Demosthenes persisted in their efforts to wound Basil through his brother, and summoned a synod at Nyssa itself, where Gregory was condemned in his absence and deposed. 265 He was not long afterwards banished. 266 On the other hand the Catholic bishops were not inactive. Synods were held on their part, and at Iconium Amphilochius presided over a gathering at which Basil was perhaps present himself, and where his treatise on the Holy Spirit was read and approved. 267 The Illyrian Council was a result incommensurate with Basils passionate entreaties for the help of the westerns. From the midst of the troubles which beset the Eastern Church Basil appealed, 268 as he had appealed before, 269 for the sympathy and active aid of the other half of the empire. He was bitterly chagrined at the failure of his entreaties for support, and began to suspect that the neglect he complained of was due to coldness and to pride. 270 It has seemed to some that this coldness in the West was largely due to resentment at Basils non-recognition of the supremacy of the Roman see. 271 In truth the supremacy of the Roman see, as it has been understood in later times, was hardly in the horizon. 272 No bishop of Rome had even been present at Nicæa, or at Sardica, where a certain right of appeal to his see was conceded. A bishop of Rome signed the Sirmian blasphemy. No bishop of Rome was present to save the world from the lapse of Ariminum. Julian “might seem to have forgotten that there was such a city as Rome.” 273 The great intellectual Arian war was fought out without any claim of Rome to speak. Half a century after Basils death great orientals were quite unconscious of this supremacy. 274 At Chalcedon the measure of the growing claim is aptly typified by the wish of Paschasinus of Lilybæum, one of the representatives of Leo, to be regarded as presiding, though he did not preside. The supremacy is hardly in view even at the last of the four great Councils.
In fact the appeal of Basil seems to have failed to elicit the response he desired, not so much from the independent tone of his letters, which was only in accordance with the recognised facts of the age, 275 as from occidental suspicions of Basils orthodoxy, 276 and from the failure of men, who thought and wrote in Latin, to enter fully into the controversies conducted in a more subtle tongue. 277 Basil had taken every precaution to ensure the conveyance of his letters by messengers of tact and discretion. He had deprecated the advocacy of so simple-minded and undiplomatic an ambassador as his brother Gregory. 278 He p. xxxi had poured out his very soul in entreaty. 279 But all was unavailing. He suffered, and he had to suffer unsupported by a human sympathy on which he thought he had a just claim. 280
It is of a piece with Basils habitual silence on the general affairs of the empire that he should seem to be insensible of the shock caused by the approach of the Goths in 378. A letter to Eusebius in exile in Thrace does shew at least a consciousness of a disturbed state of the country, and he is afraid of exposing his courier to needless danger by entrusting him with a present for his friend. But this is all. 281 He may have written letters shewing an interest in the fortunes of the empire which have not been preserved. But his whole soul was absorbed in the cause of Catholic truth, and in the fate of the Church. His youth had been steeped in culture, but the work of his ripe manhood left no time for the literary amusement of the dilettante. So it may be that the intense earnestness with which he said to himself, “This one thing I do,” of his work as a shepherd of souls, and a fighter for the truth, and his knowledge that for the doing of this work his time was short, accounts for the absence from his correspondence of many a topic of more than contemporary interest. At all events, it is not difficult to descry that the turn in the stream of civil history was of vital moment to the cause which Basil held dear. The approach of the enemy was fraught with important consequences to the Church. The imperial attention was diverted from persecution of the Catholics to defence of the realm. Then came the disaster of Adrianople, 282 and the terrible end of the unfortunate Valens. 283 Gratian, a sensible lad, of Catholic sympathies, restored the exiled bishops, and Basil, in the few months of life yet left him, may have once more embraced his faithful friend Eusebius. The end drew rapidly near. Basil was only fifty, but he was an old man. Work, sickness, and trouble had worn him out. His health had never been good. A chronic liver complaint was a constant cause of distress and depression.
In 373 he had been at deaths door. Indeed, the news of his death was actually circulated, and bishops arrived at Cæsarea with the probable object of arranging the succession. 284 He had submitted to the treatment of a course of natural hot baths, but with small beneficial result. 285 By 376, as he playfully reminds Amphilochius, he had lost all his teeth. 286 At last the powerful mind and the fiery enthusiasm of duty were no longer able to stimulate the energies of the feeble frame.
The winter of 378–9 dealt the last blow, and with the first day of what, to us, is now the new year, the great spirit fled. Gregory, alas! was not at the bedside. But he has left us a narrative which bears the stamp of truth. For some time the bystanders thought that the dying bishop had ceased to breathe. Then the old strength blazed out at the last. He spoke with vigour, and even ordained some of the faithful who were with him. Then he lay once more feeble and evidently passing away. Crowds surrounded his residence, praying eagerly for his restoration to them, and willing to give their lives for his. With a few final words of advice and exhortation, he said: “Into thy hands I commend my spirit,” and so ended.
The funeral was a scene of intense excitement and rapturous reverence. Crowds filled every open space, and every gallery and window; Jews and Pagans joined with Christians in lamentation, and the cries and groans of the agitated oriental multitude drowned the music of the hymns which were sung. The press was so great that several fatal accidents added to the universal gloom. Basil was buried in the “sepulchre of his fathers”—a phrase which may possibly mean in the ancestral tomb of his family at Cæsarea.
So passed away a leader of men in whose case the epithet great is no conventional compliment. He shared with his illustrious brother primate of Alexandria the honour of rallying the Catholic forces in the darkest days of the Arian depression. He was great as foremost champion of a great cause, great in contemporary and posthumous influence, great in industry and self-denial, great as a literary controversialist. The estimate formed of him by his contemporaries is expressed in the generous, if somewhat turgid, eloquence of the laudatory oration of the slighted Gregory of Nazianzus. Yet nothing in Gregorys p. xxxii eulogy goes beyond the expressions of the prelate who has seemed to some to be “the wisest and holiest man in the East in the succeeding century.” 287 Basil is described by the saintly and learned Theodoret 288 in terms that might seem exaggerated when applied to any but his master, as the light not of Cappadocia only, but of the world. 289 To Sophronius 290 he is the “glory of the Church.” To Isidore of Pelusium, 291 he seems to speak as one inspired. To the Council of Chalcedon he is emphatically a minister of grace; 292 to the second council of Nicæa a layer of the foundations of orthodoxy. 293 His death lacks the splendid triumph of the martyrdoms of Polycarp and Cyprian. His life lacks the vivid incidents which make the adventures of Athanasius an enthralling romance. He does not attract the sympathy evoked by the unsophisticated simplicity of Gregory his friend or of Gregory his brother. There does not linger about his memory the close personal interest that binds humanity to Augustine, or the winning loyalty and tenderness that charm far off centuries into affection for Theodoret. Sometimes he seems a hard, almost a sour man. 294 Sometimes there is a jarring reminder of his jealousy for his own dignity. 295 Evidently he was not a man who could be thwarted without a rupture of pleasant relations, or slighted with impunity. In any subordinate position he was not easy to get on with. 296 But a man of strong will, convicted that he is championing a righteous cause, will not hesitate to sacrifice, among other things, the amenities that come of amiable absence of self-assertion. To Basil, to assert himself was to assert the truth of Christ and of His Church. And in the main the identification was a true one. Basil was human, and occasionally, as in the famous dispute with Anthimus, so disastrously fatal to the typical friendship of the earlier manhood, he may have failed to perceive that the Catholic cause would not suffer from the existence of two metropolitans in Cappadocia. But the great archbishop could be an affectionate friend, thirsty for sympathy. 297 And he was right in his estimate of his position. Broadly speaking, Basil, more powerfully than any contemporary official, worker, or writer in the Church, did represent and defend through all the populous provinces of the empire which stretched from the Balkans to the Mediterranean, from the Ægean to the Euphrates, the cause whose failure or success has been discerned, even by thinkers of no favourable predisposition, to have meant death or life to the Church. 298 St. Basil is duly canonized in the grateful memory, no less than in the official bead-roll, of Christendom, and we may be permitted to regret that the existing Kalendar of the Anglican liturgy has not found room for so illustrious a Doctor in its somewhat niggard list. 299 For the omission some amends have lately 300 been made in the erection of a statue of the great archbishop of Cæsarea under the dome of the Cathedral St. Paul in London. 301
Nov. 17, 375. Amm. Marc. xxx. 6. Soc. iv. 31.
xxx:261Mansi, iii. 499. Hefele, § 90.
xxx:262 xxx:263 xxx:264 xxx:265 xxx:266 xxx:267Ep. ccii., cclxxii. Hefele, § 90. Mansi, iii. 502–506. There is some doubt as to the exact date of this synod. cf. D.C.A. i. 807.
xxx:268 xxx:269Ep. lxx., addressed in 371 to Damasus.
xxx:270 xxx:271cf. D.C.B. i. 294: “Cest esprit, conciliant aux les orientaux jusquà soulever lintolérance orientale, est aussi inflexible avec les occidentaux quavec le pouvoir impérial. On sent dans ses lettres la révolte de lorient qui réclame ses prérogatives, ses droits dancienneté; lesprit dindépendance de la Grèce, qui, si elle supporte le joug matériel de Rome, refuse de reconnaitre sa suprématie spirituelle.” Fialon, Et. Hist. 133.
xxx:272 xxx:273 xxx:274cf. Proleg to Theodoret in this series, p. 9, note.
xxx:275A ses yeux, lOrient et lOccident ne sont ils pas, deux frères, dont les droits sont égaux, sans suprématie, sans aînesse?” Fialon, Et. Hist. p. 134. This is exactly what East and West were to most eyes, and what they were asserted to be in the person of the two imperial capitals by the Twenty-Eighth Canon of Chalcedon. cf. Bright, Canons of the First Four General Councils, pp. 93, 192, and note on Theodoret in this series, p. 293.
xxx:276 xxx:277 xxx:278 xxxi:279 xxxi:280“Foiled in all his repeated demands; a deaf ear turned to his most earnest entreaties; the council he had begged for not summoned; the deputation he had repeatedly solicited unsent; Basils span of life drew to its end amid blasted hopes and apparently fruitless labours for the unity of the faith. It was not permitted him to live to see the Eastern Churches, for the purity of whose faith he had devoted all his powers, restored to peace and unanimity.” Canon Venables, D.C.B. i. 295.
“He had to fare on as best he might,—admiring, courting, but coldly treated by the Latin world, desiring the friendship of Rome, yet wounded by her superciliousness, suspected of heresy by Damasus, and accused by Jerome of pride.” Newman, Church of the Fathers, p. 115.
xxxi:281Ep. cclxviii. So Fialon, Ét. Hist. p. 149: “On ny trouve pas un mot sur la désastreuse expédition de Julien, sur le honteux traité de Jovien, sur la révolte de Procope.” At the same time the argument from silence is always dangerous. It may be unfair to charge Basil with indifference to great events, because we do not possess his letters about them.
xxxi:282 xxxi:283Theod. iv. 32. Amm. Marc. xxxi. 13.
xxxi:284 xxxi:285 xxxi:286 xxxii:287 xxxii:288 xxxii:289Theod., H.E. iv. 16, and Ep. cxlvi.
xxxii:290 xxxii:291 xxxii:292 xxxii:293 xxxii:294 xxxii:295 xxxii:296e.g. his relations with his predecessor.
xxxii:297 xxxii:298e.g. T. Carlyle. “He perceived Christianity itself to have been at stake. If the Arians had won, it would have dwindled away into a legend.” J. A. Froude, Life of Carlyle in London, ii. 462.
xxxii:299In the Greek Kalendar January 1, the day of the death, is observed in honour of the saint. In the West St. Basils day is June 14, the traditional date of the consecration. The martyrologies of Jerome and Bede do not contain the name. The first mention is ascribed by the Bollandists to Usuard. (Usuards martyrology was composed for Charles the Bold at Paris.) In the tenth century a third day was consecrated in the East to the common commemoration of SS. Basil, Gregory of Nazianzus, and John Chrysostom.
xxxii:300 xxxii:301Basil lived at the period when the relics of martyrs and saints were beginning to be collected and honoured. (e.g. Ep. cxcvii.) To Damasus, the bishop of Rome, whose active sympathy he vainly strove to win, is mainly due the reverent rearrangement of the Roman catacombs. (Roma Sotteranea, Northcote and Brownlow, p. 97.) It was not to be expected that Basils own remains should be allowed to rest in peace; but the gap between the burial at Cæsarea and the earliest record of their supposed reappearance is wide. There was a Church of St. Basil at Bruges founded in 1187, which was believed to possess some of the archbishops bones. These were solemnly translated in 1463 to the Church of St. Donatian, which disappeared at the time of the French revolution. Pancirola (d. 1599) mentions a head, an arm, and a rib, said to be Basils, among the treasures of Rome.