BURY'S MEDIEVAL HISTORY
IV
THE TRIUMPH OF CHRISTIANITY
THE old or official religions of
Greece and of Rome had lost most of their power long before Constantine first
declared that Christianity was henceforth to be recognised as a religio licita and
then proceeded to bestow the Imperial favor on the faith which his predecessors
had persecuted. Hellenism had destroyed their influence over the cultivated
classes, and other religions, coming from the East, had captivated the masses
of the people. If temples, dedicated to the gods of Olympus, were still
standing open; if the time-honored rites were still duly and continuously
celebrated; if the official priesthood, recognised and largely supported by the
state, still performed its appointed functions; these things no longer
compelled the devotion of the crowd. The Imperial cult of the Divi and Divae once so
popular, had also lost its power to attract and to charm; the routine of ceremonial
worship was still performed; the well-organized priesthood spreading all over
the Empire maintained its privileged position; but crowds no longer thronged
the temples, and the rites were neglected by the great mass of the population.
Yet this did not mean, as has often
been supposed, the universal triumph of Christianity. It may almost be said
that Paganism was never so active, so assertive, so combative, as in the third
century. But this paganism, for long the successful rival of Christianity and
its real opponent, was almost as new to Europe as Christianity itself.
Something must be known about it and its environment ere the reaction under
Julian and the final triumph of Christianity can be sympathetically understood.
During the earlier centuries of the
Roman Empire the process of disintegration was completed which had begun with
the conquests of Alexander the Great. Instead of a system of self-contained
societies, solidly united internally and fenced off from all external social,
political, and religious influences, which characterized ancient civilization,
this age saw a mixing of peoples and a cosmopolitan society hitherto unknown.
If fighting went on continuously
somewhere or other on the extended frontiers of the great Empire, peace reigned
within its vast domains. A system of magnificent roads, for the most part
passable all the year round, united the capitals with the extremities, from
Britain and Spain on the west to the Euphrates on the east. The Mediterranean
had been cleared of pirates, and lines of vessels united the great cities on
its shores. Travelling, whether for business, health, or pleasure, was possible
under the Empire with a certainty and a safety unknown in after centuries until
the introduction of steam. It was facilitated by a common language, a coinage
universally valid, and the protection of the same laws. Men could start from
the Euphrates and travel onwards to Spain using one lingua-franca everywhere
understood. Greek could be heard in the streets of every commercial town — in
Rome, Marseilles, Cadiz, and Bordeaux, on the banks of the Nile, of the
Orontes, and of the Tigris.
Cosmopolitan Society
With all these things to favour it, the movements of peoples within the Empire had
become incalculably great, and all the larger cities were cosmopolitan.
Families from all lands, of differing religions and social habits, dwelt within
the same walls. National, social, intellectual, and religious differences faded
insensibly. Thinking became eclectic as it had never been before.
This growing community in habit of
thought and even of religious belief was fed by something peculiar to the
times. The soldier of many lands, the travelled trader, the tourist in search
of pleasure, and the invalid wandering in quest of health were common then as
now. But a special characteristic of the end of the third and the beginning of
the fourth century was the widely wandering student, the teacher far from the
land of his birth, and the itinerant preacher of new religions. The Empire was
well provided with what we should now call universities. Rome, Milan, and
Cremona were seats of higher learning for Italy; Marseilles, Bordeaux, and Autun for Gaul; Carthage for North Africa; Athens and Apollonia for Greece; Tarsus for Cilicia; Smyrna for Asia; Beyrout and Antioch for Syria; and Alexandria for Egypt.
The number of foreign students to be found at each was remarkable. Young Romans
enrolled themselves at Marseilles and Bordeaux. Greeks crossed the seas to
attend lectures at Antioch, and found as their neighbors men from Assyria,
Phoenicia, and Egypt. At Alexandria the number of students from distant parts
of the Empire exceeded largely those from the neighborhood. At Athens, whose
schools were the most famous in the beginning of the fourth century, the crowds
of Barbarians (for so the citizens called those foreign students) were so great
that it was said that their presence threatened to spoil the purity of the
language. Everywhere, in that age of wandering, the student seemed to prefer to
study far from home and to flit from one place of learning to another.
Nor were the professors much
different. They commonly taught far from their native land. Even at Athens it
became increasingly rare to find a teacher who belonged by birth to Greece.
They too travelled from one university seat to another. Lucian, Philostratus, Apuleius, all who portray the age and the
class, describe their wanderings.
Missionaries of new cults went about
in the same way. Bands of itinerant devotees, the prophets and priests of
Syrian, Persian, possibly of Hindu cults, passed along the great Roman roads.
Solitary preachers of Oriental faiths, with all the fire of missionary
enthusiasm, tramped from town to town, drawn by an irresistible impulse to
Rome, the centre of power, the protectress of the
religions of her myriad subjects, the tribune from which, if a speaker could
only ascend it, he might address the world. The end of the third and the
beginning of the fourth century was an age of religious excitements, of
curiosity about strange faiths, when all who had something new to teach about
the secrets of the soul and of the universe, hawked their theories as traders
their merchandise.
This mixture of peoples, this new
cosmopolitanism, this hurrying to and fro of religious teachers, brought it
about that Oriental faiths, at first only the religions of groups of families
who had brought their cults with them into the West, made numerous converts and
spread themselves over the Roman Empire. These Oriental religions prospered the
more because from the middle of the third century onwards Rome was looking to
the East for many things. From it came the deftest artisans and mechanics who
gave to life most of its material comforts. It largely contributed to feed Rome
with its grain. Its philosophy (for most of the greatest stoical thinkers were
not Greeks but Orientals) gave the substructure to Roman Law; and the most
famous Law School in the third, fourth, and fifth centuries was not in Rome but
at Beyrout. Ulpian came from Tyre and Papinian from Syria. The greatest non-Christian thinkers of
these centuries were neither Greeks nor Romans but Orientals. Plotinus was an
Egyptian; Iamblichus, Porphyry, and Libanius were Syrians; Galen was an
Asiatic. Oriental ideas were slowly changing Rome's political institutions
themselves, and the Princeps of a Republic, as was Octavius,
became, in the persons of Diocletian and Constantine, an Oriental monarch.
Rome, by the discipline of its legions, by the mingled severity and generosity
of its rule, by the justice of its legislation, had conquered the East. Eastern
thought, wedded to Hellenism, was in its turn subjugating the Empire. Its
religions had their share in the conquest.
Among those Oriental faiths which
spread themselves over civilized Europe some were much more popular than
others. All entered the Empire at an early date and won their way very slowly
at first. Most of them seem to have made some alliance with the survivals of
such Greek mysteries as those of Eleusis and of Dionysos All of them, save that of Alithras, had been affected
and to some extent changed by Hellenism before they entered into the full light
of history in the beginning of the third century.
From Asia Minor came the worship of
Cybele with its hymns and dances, its mysterious ideas of a deity dying to live
again, its frenzies and trances, its soothsayings,
and its blood-baths of purification and sanctification. From Syria came the
cult of the Dea Syra,
described by Lucian the skeptic, with its sacred prostitutions, its more than
hints of human sacrifices, its mystics and its pillar saints. Persia sent forth
the worship of Mithras, with its initiations, its sacraments, its mysteries,
and the stern discipline which made it a favorite religion among the Roman
legionaries. Egypt gave birth to many a cult. Chief among them was the worship
of Isis. Before the end of the second century it had far outstripped
Christianity and could boast of its thousands where the religion of the Cross
could only number hundreds. It had penetrated everywhere, even to far-off
Britain. A ring bearing the figure of the goddess' constant companion, the
dog-headed Anubis, has been discovered in a grave in the Isle of Man. Votaries
of Isis could be found from the Roman Wall to Land's End.
The worship of Isis may be taken as
a type of those Oriental faiths before whose presence the official gods of
Olympus were receding into the background. The cult had a body of clergy,
highly organized, a book of prayers, a code of liturgical actions, a tonsure,
vestments, and an elaborate impressive ceremonial. The inner circle of its
devotees were called "the religious," like the monks of the Middle
Ages; those who were altogether outside the faith were termed
"pagans" ; the service of the goddess was a "holy war," and
her worshippers of all grades were banded together in a "militia."
Apuleius, himself converted to the faith, has, in his Metamorphoses, described
its ceremonies of worship and enabled us to see how desires after a better life
drew men like himself to reverence the deity and enroll himself among her
followers. He has described, with a vividness that makes us see them, the
stately processions which moved with deliberate pace through the crowded narrow
streets of oriental towns, and drew after them to the temple many a hitherto
unattached inquirer. We can enter the temple with him and listen to the solemn
exhortation of the high-priest; hear him dwell upon the past sins and follies
of the neophyte and the unfailing goodness and mercy of the goddess whose eyes
had followed him through them all and who now waited to receive him if he truly
desired to become her disciple and worshipper. The initiation was a secret rite
and Apuleius is careful not to profane it by description; but we learn that
there was a baptism, a fast of ten days, a course of priestly instruction,
sponsors given to the neophyte, and, in the evening, a reception of the new
brother by the congregation, when everyone greeted him kindly and presented him
with some small gift. We can penetrate with him into the secret chamber
reserved for the higher initiation where he was taught that he would endure a
voluntary death which he was to look upon as the gateway into a higher and
better life. We can dimly see him excited with wild anticipations, dizzy with protracted
fasting, almost suffocated by surging vapors, blinded by sudden and unexpected
flashes of light, undergo his hypnotic trance during which he saw unutterable
things. "I trod the confines of death and the threshold of Proserpine; I
was swept round all the elements and back again; I saw the sun shining at
midnight in purest radiance; gods of heaven and gods of hell I saw face to face
and adored in presence." We can understand how such an hypnotic trance
marked a man for life.
Isis worship, humanized by
Hellenism, extracted from the crude wild legends of Egypt the thought of a
suffering and all-merciful Mother-Goddess who yearned to ease the woes of
mankind. It raised the beast-gods of the Nile and the tales about them into
emblems and parables. It captured the common man by its thaumaturgy. For the
more cultured intelligences it had a more sublime theology which appealed to
the philosophy of the day. In all this it was a type, perhaps the best, of
those Oriental cults which were permeating the Empire.
All those religions, whatever their
special form of teaching or variety of cult, brought with them thoughts foreign
to the old official worships of Greece and Rome; though not altogether strange
to the Mysteries which had for long been the real people's religion in Greece
nor to the cult of Dionysus which in various forms had preserved its vitality.
They taught (or perhaps it would be
more correct to say that the action of the subtle Greek intellect, playing upon
the crude ideas which these Oriental religions presented to it, evolved from
them) a series of religious conceptions foreign to the old paganism, and these
became common parts of the newer non-Christian intelligence which was powerful
in the third and fourth centuries.
A sharp distinction, much more
definite than anything previous, was drawn between the soul and the body. The
soul belonged to a different sphere and was more estimable than the body. The
former was the inhabitant of a higher and better world and was therefore
immortal. The thoughts of individuality and personality became much clearer. In
the same way the thoughts of Godhead as a whole and of the world as a whole —
conceptions scarcely separate before — were distinguished more or less clearly.
Godhead became what the world was not, and yet something good and great which
was the primal basis of all things.
The earlier philosophical
depreciation of the world of matter became more emphatic, and raised the
question whether the creation of the whole material world and of the body which
belonged to it was not after all a mistake; whether the body was not a prison
or at least a house of correction in which the soul was grievously detained;
whether the soul could ever become what it really was until it had
undergone a deliverance from the body. Such deliverance was called salvation,
and much practical thinking was expended on the proper means of effecting it.
Might not knowledge and the means it suggested of living purely or with as
little bodily contamination as possible while this life lasted, be the
beginnings of entrance into the real and eternal life of the soul? Was it not
most likely that souls had been gradually confined in bodies, and must not the
process of delivery be gradual also? The gradual Way of Return to God became a
feature in almost all those Eastern cults, by whatever means they sought to
accomplish it.
Perhaps however the most novel
thought was the conviction that something more than knowledge, beyond any means
of living purely which human wisdom could suggest, something outside man and
belonging to the sphere of divinity, was needed to start the soul on this
gradual Way of Return and sustain his faltering footsteps along the difficult
path. Contact with the Godhead was needed to save and redeem. Such contact was
to be found in a consecration (mysterium, sacramentum, initiation) wherein the soul, in some hypnotic
trance, was possessed by the deity who overpowered it and forever afterwards
led it step by step along the path of salvation or Way of Return. Perhaps
something more than any such consecration was needed; might not some surer way
be found if only diligently sought for? It might be in one of the older cults
whose inner meaning had never been rightly understood; or in some mystery not
yet completely accessible; or in a divinely commissioned man who had not yet
appeared. It might even be found within the soul itself, if men could only
discover and use the true powers of the human soul (Higher Thought). At all
events it was held that true religion really implied a detachment from the
world, and included a strict discipline of soul and body while life lasted.
The New Paganism
Such a paganism was very different
from the polytheism with its furred, feathered, and scaly deities which first
confronted Christianity and was attacked by the early Christian apologists. The
later ones recognised its power. Firmicus Maternus, writing in the time of Constantine, dismisses
with good-humored scorn the deities of Olympus and their myths, but criticizes
with thorough earnestness the Oriental religions. It had, in spite of its
external multiformity, a natural cohesion in virtue of the circle of common
thoughts above described. It hardly deserves the name of polytheism; for its
idea of one abstract divinity, separate from the world of matter, made it
monotheism of kind; and evidence shows that its votaries regarded Isis, Cybele,
and the rest more as the representatives and impersonations of the one godhead
than as individual deities. Inscriptions from tombstones reveal that worshippers
did not attach themselves to one cult exclusively. The varying forms of
initiation were all separate methods of attaining to union with the one
divinity, the different ceremonies of purification were all ways of reaching
the same end, and, as one might succeed where another failed, they could be all
tried impartially. Just as we find men and women in the beginning of the
sixteenth century enrolling themselves in several religious associations of
different kinds (witness Dr. Pfeffinger, a member of
thirty-two religious confraternities), so in the third and fourth centuries
members of both sexes were initiated into several cults and performed the
lustrations prescribed by very different worships, in order to miss no chance
of union with divinity and to leave no means of purification and sanctification
untried. The tombstone of Vettius Agorius Praetextatus, the friend of Symmachus,
who took part in the Saturnalia of Macrobius, records
that he had been initiated into several cults and that he had performed the taurobolium. His
wife, Aconia Paulina, was more indefatigable still.
This lady, a member of the exclusive circle of the old pagan nobility of Rome,
went to Eleusis and was initiated with baptism, fasting, vigil, hymn-singing
into the several mysteries of Dionysus, of Ceres, and Koré.
Not content with these, she went on to Lerna and
sought communion with the same three deities in different rites of initiation.
She travelled to Aegina, was again initiated, slept or waked in the porches of
the small temples there in the hope that the divinities of the place in dream
or waking vision might communicate to her their way of salvation. She became a
hierophant of Hecate with still different and more dreaded rites of
consecration. Finally, like her husband, she submitted herself to the dreadful,
and to us disgusting, purification won in the taurobolium. A great pit was dug
into which the neophyte descended naked; it was covered with stout planks
placed about an inch apart; a young bull was led or forced upon the planks; it
was stabbed by the officiating priest in such a way that the thrust was mortal
and that the blood might flow as freely as possible. As the blood poured down
on the planks and dripped into the pit the neophyte moved backwards and
forwards to receive as much as possible of the red warm shower and remained
until every drop had ceased to drip. Inscription after inscription records the
fact that the deceased had been a tauroboliatus or a tauroboliata, hid gone through this blood-bath in search of
sanctification. Evidence from inscriptions seems to show that in the declining
days of paganism, the energy of its votaries drove them in greater numbers to
accumulate initiations and to undergo the more severe rites of purification.
Neo-Platonism and Christianity
This multiform and yet homogeneous
paganism had the further support of a system of philosophy expounded and
enforced by the greatest non-Christian thinkers of the age. Neo-Platonism, the
last birth of Hellenic thought, not without traces of Oriental parentage, has
the look of a philosophy of hesitation and expectancy. It had lost the firm
tread of Plato and Aristotle, and feared that the human intelligence unaided
could not penetrate and explain all things. The intellectual faculty of man was
reduced to something intermediate between mere sense perception and some vague
intuition of the supernatural, and the whole energy of the movement was
concentrated on discovering the means to follow out this intuition and to
attain by it not only communion but union with what was completely and
externally divine.
Its great thinker was Plotinus (d.
269). His disciples Porphyry (233-304) and Iamblichus (d. circa 330) made it
the basis and buttress of paganism when it was fighting for its life against a
conquering Christianity. If the Universe of things seen and unseen be an
emanation from Absolute Being, the Primal Cause of all things, the fountain
from which all existence flows and the haven to which everything that has
reality in it will return when its cycle is complete, then every heathen deity
has its place in this flow of existence. Its cult, however crude, is an obscure
witness to the presence of the intuition of the supernatural. The legends which
have gathered round its name, if only rightly understood, are mystic
revelations of the divine which permeates all things. Its initiations and rites
of purification are all meant to help the soul on the same path of return by
which it completes its cycle of wanderings. The new paganism can be represented to be the collected
flower and fruit of all the older faiths presented and ready to satisfy the
deeper desires of the spirit of man. Neo-Platonism could present itself as a
naturalistic, rational polytheism, retaining all the old structures of
tradition, of thought and of social organisation. The "common man"
was not asked to forsake the deities he was wont to reverence. The Roman was
not required to despise the gods who, as his forefathers believed, had led them
to the conquest of the world. The cultured Hellenist was taught to overstep,
without disturbing, creeds which for him were worn out and to seek and find
communion with the Divine which lies behind all gods. The very conjuror was
encouraged to cultivate his magic. Pantheism, that wonder-child of thought and
of the fantasy, included all within the wide sweep of its sheltering arms and
made them feel the claim of a common kinship. Jesus Himself, had His followers
allowed, might have had a place between Dionysus and Isis; but Christianity,
which according to Porphyry had departed widely from the simple teaching of the
mystic of Galilee, was sternly excluded from the Neo-Platonist brotherhood of
religions. Its idea of a creation in time seemed irreligious to Porphyry; its
doctrine of the Incarnation introduced a false conception of the union between
God and the world; its teaching about the end of all things he thought both
irreverent and irreligious; above all things its claim to be the one religion,
its exclusiveness, was hateful to him. He was too noble a man (philosophus nobilis, says
Augustine) not to sympathize with much in Christianity, and seems to have
appreciated it more and more in his later writings. Still his opinion remained
unchanged: "The gods have declared Christ to have been most pious; he has
become immortal, and by them his memory is cherished. Whereas the Christians
are a polluted set, contaminated and enmeshed in error." Christianity was
the one religion to be fought against and if possible conquered.
The growing strength of Christianity
What Neo-Platonism did theoretically
the force of circumstances accomplished on the practical side. The Oriental
creeds had not merely gained multitudes of private worshippers; they had forced
their way among the public deities of Rome. Isis, Mithra,
Sol Invictus, Dea Syra, the Great Mother, took their places alongside of
Jupiter, Venus, Mars, etc., and the Sacra peregrina appeared on the calendar of public
festivals. As most of these Oriental cults contained within them the monotheist
idea it is possible that they might have fought for preeminence and each
aspired to become the official religion of the Empire. But they all recognised
Christianity to be a common danger, and M. Cumont has
shown that this feeling united them and made them think and act as one.
Such was the paganism which faced
Christianity in the fourth century — a marvelous mixture of philosophy and
religion, not without grandeur and nobility of thought, feeling keenly the
unity of nature, the essential kinship of man with the Divine, and knowing
something of the yearning in man's heart for redemption and for communion with
God. It was able to fascinate and enthrall many of the keenest intellects and
loftiest natures of the time. It laid hold on Julian.
Christianity was the common opponent
of all these cults. It had entered the field last and seemed easily outstripped
in the race. In its beginning it was but a ripple on the surface of a Galilean
lake. Now, in the fourth century, it had compelled Imperial recognition and
alliance. In strength and in weakness its claim had been always the same. It
was the one, the only true, the universal religion.
From its beginning it had never
lacked at least a few wealthy and cultured adherents, but during the first two
centuries the overwhelming majority of its converts had come from the poorer
classes — slaves, freedmen, laborers. It had early drawn upon itself the
contempt of society and the hatred of the populace. It was held to be something
inhuman. Its votaries were "the third race." They had all the unsocial
vices of the Jews and even worse vices of their own. Christians had
appropriated the epithet flung at them in scorn. They were "the third
race," a peculiar people, separate from the rest of mankind, a nation by
themselves.
The last decade of the second
century witnessed the beginnings of a change. Men of all ranks and classes
became converts—members of the Senatorial and Equestrian Orders, distinguished
pleaders, physicians, officers in the army, officials in the civil service,
judges, even governors of provinces. Their wives, sisters, and daughters
accompanied or more frequently preceded them. Then the tone of society began to
change, gradually and insensibly. Scorn and contempt gave place to feelings of
toleration. Before the end of the third century no one gave credit to the old
scandalous reproaches which had keen flung at the followers of Jesus, even when
an Emperor tried to revive them. Statesmen were compelled to consider the
movement — not now because it affected a town or a province, but as something
pervading the Empire. They found that it possessed two characteristic were
enormous sources of strength — a peculiar power of assimilation and a compact
organization.
From the first Christianity had
proclaimed that the whole life of man belonged to it. This meant that
everything that made man's life wider, deeper, fuller; whatever made it more
joyous or contented; whatever sharpened the brain, strengthened and taught the
muscles, gave full play to man's energies, could be taken up into and become part
of the Christian life. Sin and foulness were sternly excluded; but, that done,
there was no element of the Greco-Roman civilization which could not be
appropriated by Christianity. So it assimilated Hellenism or the fine flower
and fruit of Greek thought and feeling; it appropriated Roman law and
institutions; it made its own the simple festivals of the common people. All
were theirs; and they were Christ's and
Christ was God's.
Then the Christian churches were
compactly organized. Their polity had been a natural growth. Its power of
assimilation had enabled Christianity to absorb what was best in Roman civil
and temple organisation, to exclude the worst elements of the bureaucracy, and
to preserve much democratic popular life. Its local rulers belonged to the
people they at once ruled and served. No over-centralization crushed the local
and provincial life. Christian societies formed themselves into groups, more or
less compact, and made use of the synod to effect the grouping. One common life
throbbed through the network of synods. The feeling of brotherhood did not
exhaust itself in sentiment. If one part were attacked all the others were
swift to help. Nothing within the Empire save the army could compare with the
compact organisation of the Christian Church.
In the middle of the third century
the Emperor and the Empire learnt to dread this organized force within their
midst. The despised "third race" had become indeed a nation within
the Empire. The first impulse was to exterminate what seemed to be a source of
danger. One well-organized universal persecution followed another. From each
Christianity emerged with sadly diminished numbers (for the lapsed were always
a larger body than the martyrs), but with spirit unbroken and with organisation
intact and usually strengthened.
Constantine himself had watched the
last, the most prolonged and relentless of all — that under Diocletian and his
successors — and had marked its failure. From his entrance into public life he
made it plain that, while his rivals clung to the method of repression, he had
completely abandoned it. Christianity won toleration and then Imperial
patronage.
Legislation against Paganism. 337-361
It cannot have been difficult for
Constantine to carry out his policy towards the Christian religion. We cannot
ascertain the proportion of Christians to pagans at the close of the second
decade of the fourth century, but it may be assumed that, when their
organisation is taken into account, they were able to control public
opinion in the most populous and important provinces of the Empire. All he had
to do "was to let the leading provinces have the religion they
desired"; the rest of the Empire would follow in their wake. He was
content to adopt the principle of toleration; though for himself Christianity
became more and more the one religion in which "crowning reverence is
observed towards the holiest powers of heaven." He probably carried the
public opinion of the Empire with him. The paganism of the fourth century was
for the most part quiet and desired only to be left in peace. Perhaps Ammianus
Marcellinus, himself a pagan, expressed the general opinion of his
co-religionists when he praised the Emperor Valentinian because he tolerated all creeds, gave no orders that any one divinity should be
worshipped, and did not strive to bend the necks of his subjects to adore what
he did.
The sons of Constantine changed all
this. They proposed to destroy paganism by legislation. Their laws, doubtless,
inflicted much injury on individual pagans, and, in the hands of such
unprincipled Imperial sycophants as Paulus and Mercurius, were the pretexts for many executions,
banishments, and confiscation of goods; but they remained inoperative in all
the greater pagan centers. The worship of the gods went on as before in Rome,
Alexandria, Heliopolis, and in many other cities. But they could not fail to
irritate. If the laws were inoperative, they remained to threaten. Proposed
destruction of temples and prohibition of heathen ceremonies meant in many
cases the abandonment of the games and spectacles to which the careless
multitude were strongly attached. Scholars saw in the advancing power of the
Church the destruction of the old learning which gave its charm to their lives.
Christianity itself, troubled by the meddling of the heads of the State, seemed
to be rent in pieces by its controversies, to have lost its original purity and
simplicity, and to have degenerated into "old-wife superstitions"
(Ammianus). So wherever paganism abounded, and in places too where it only
lingered, there was a general feeling of discontent ready to welcome the first
signs of a reaction and eagerly listening to whispers that the last of the race
of Constantine, if he lived to assume to the Imperial purple, would undo what
his kinsmen had accomplished.
Julian's Youth and Education. 332-344
At the death of Constantine his
nephew, Flavius Claudius Julianus, was six years old.
The child escaped, almost by accident, the massacre of his family connived at
if not ordered by Constantius. He lived for more than twenty years in constant
peril, in the power of that suspicious cousin who scarcely knew whether he
wished to slay or to spare him. He was kept secluded, now in one or other of
the great cities of the East, for long in a palace far from the haunts of men,
solacing himself with hard uninterrupted studies. Then for seven brief years he
startled the Roman world by his meteor-like career, and died from wounds
received in battle against the Persians at the age of thirty-two. Two things
about him filled the imagination of his contemporaries and have drawn the
attention of succeeding generations: that he a recluse, suddenly snatched from
his loved studies in poetry and philosophy, proved himself all at once not
merely an intrepid soldier but a skilful general, and a born leader of men; and
that he, a baptized Christian, who had actually been accustomed to read the
lessons at public worship, threw off like a mask the Christianity he had
professed and spent the last years of his short life in a feverish attempt to
restore the old and expiring paganism. It is this last fact that made him the
object of undying hate and unconquerable love to his contemporaries, and still
excites the interest of mankind.
His own writings which have survived
make it plain that from his earliest years he looked at Christianity and
Christians through the blood-red mist of the massacre of his relations—father,
brother, uncles, cousins. His education did little to remove the impression.
The lonely, imaginative, lovable child had never known his mother's care, but
he inherited her fondness for Homer, Hesiod, and the masters of Greek poetry. Mardonius, who had been his mother's tutor, was his also,
and the boy went through the same course of study. The tutor was passionately
fond of Greek literature and especially of Homer, and he imbued mother and son
with his own tastes. For the rest he was something of a martinet. The young
Julian had the strictest moral training and never forgot those early lessons.
He was taught to be temperate and self-restrained; to look with dislike on
pantomimes, races, and the other more or less licentious amusements of the
populace. His tutor made him read in Plato, Aristotle, Theophrastus, and other
pagan moralists, and was unwearied in enforcing pure living after these
examples of antiquity. Julian was all his life a puritan pagan, and this
puritanism of his was perhaps his greatest obstacle in accomplishing the task
to which he subsequently dedicated himself. He never entered a theatre save
when he was commanded to do so by the Emperor, and was seldom on a race-course
in his life. He was naturally a dreamy, sensitive child, full of yearning
fancies, which he kept to himself. He tells us that from early boyhood he felt
a strange elevation of soul when he watched the sun and saw it dispensing light
and heat; that he worshipped the stars and understood their whispered thoughts.
He was filled with enthusiasm for everything Greek and the very word Hellas
sent a thrill through him when he pronounced it. Seven years were spent under
the care of the kindly, stern preceptor, and the impress they made was lasting.
In 344 Constantius suddenly sent
Julian into obscurity. His elder brother, Gallus, who had escaped the massacre
of 337 because he was so sickly that he was not expected to live, accompanied
him. They were sent to Macellum, a palace in a remote
part of Cappadocia —splendid enough with its baths, its springs, and its
gardens, but which Julian looked upon as a prison. There he was supplied with
teachers in abundance, Christian clergy who were supposed to teach the faith to
the young princes, and from whose instructions Julian doubtless acquired that
superficial knowledge of the Scriptures he afterwards showed that he possessed.
Books were granted him, and he seems to have been permitted to send to
Alexandria for what Greek literature he desired. He mentions specially volumes
from the library of Bishop George because, along with many treatises on
Christianity for which he did not care, they included the writings of
philosophers and rhetoricians. But he bitterly complained that neither he nor
his brother were allowed to see any suitable companions, and he believed that
all their attendants were imperial spies. The boy, reserved before, shrank further
into himself. Outwardly he was a pattern of devotion. He received Christian
instruction; was taught the "evidences of Christianity" and used the
knowledge later to expose its weaknesses; was trained to give alms, to observe
fasts, to venerate the shrines of saints to the extent of aiding to build them
with his own hands; and occasionally to officiate as reader at public worship.
Privately he fed his mind on the lessons of Mardonius and studied such books of philosophy and rhetoric as he could command. Ammianus
Marcellinus, who knew him well, says that from his early years he felt
attracted to the worship of the gods.
After six years in the gilded prison
of Macellum the brothers were summoned to
Constantinople — Gallus to be made Caesar or Vice-Emperor, to misgovern
frightfully the province entrusted to his care, and in consequence to meet a
not undeserved death, though to his brother it was another crime to be charged
against Constantius, a Christian and the murderer of kinsmen; Julian to meet
soon the supreme moment of his religious life. He was set at first to pursue
his studies in the capital city and the scholar appointed to take charge of him
was Hecebolius, the fourth century Vicar of Bray,
whose religion was always that of the reigning Emperor. But too many admiring
eyes followed the princely student, and Constantius ordered him to Nicomedia,
the centre of the cultured paganism of the East and the home of its
acknowledged leader, the great rhetorician Libanius. Julian had promised not to
attend the lectures of Libanius; he kept his pledge in the letter and broke it
in the spirit. He got notes written out for him and pored over them day and
night. But more important than all lectures was the intercourse with men such
as he had never met before. At Nicomedia, Julian first came in touch with those
for whom the old gods were living, who had the gift of "seers," to
whom prophecies and prodigies were matters of fact. He saw and conversed with
men who "had easy access to the ears of the gods," who could
"command winds, waves, and earthquakes." He knew Aedesius who was said to receive oracles from the deities by night, and whose wife Sosipatra had "lived from girlhood amid prodigies of
all kinds." He was told of the wonderful séances presided over by Maximus
and of the marvels which occurred at them. This Maximus was one of the most
celebrated theurgics or "mediums" of fourth
century Neo-Platonism. His favorite occupation, he said, was to live in
constant communion with the gods. He had long white hair, brilliant magnetic
eyes, and his disciples boasted that his influence was irresistible over all
those with whom he came in contact. Eusebius of Myndus,
also a Neo-Platonist, told Julian of his powers. "He made a number of us
descend into the temple of Hecate. There he saluted the goddess. Then he said :
'Be seated, friends, see what happens, then judge whether I am not superior to
most men.' We all sat down. He burnt a grain of incense and chanted a whole
hymn in a low voice. The statue began to smile, then to laugh. We were afraid
at the sight. 'Do not be alarmed,' he said, 'you will see that the lamps which
the goddess holds in her hands will light of themselves.' As he spoke the light
streamed from the lamps." Julian eagerly begged to be introduced to the man
who was so powerful with the gods, and Maximus was even more ready to gain one
who stood so near the Imperial throne. No accounts survive of the
spiritualistic séances at which he assisted; but their effect on the nervous,
sensitive young man was irresistible. Maximus converted him heart and soul to
the new paganism and was the confidential adviser of Julian from that time
onwards. The young man entered into a new life. The religion which Homer and
Hesiod had sung, which Plato and Aristotle had speculated upon, which he had
known as a student from books, became all at once living to him. His day-dreams
of the past vanished, or rather changed into an actual present. The passion for
Greece which had gradually grown to be the ruling force in his character had
now the support of every-day experience. The gods sung by the old Greek poets,
and many a passionate Oriental deity unknown to them, could be seen and their
presence felt. He could himself have communion with them through mysterious
rites of divination. They had created the noblest thing on earth, Greek civilization;
they were even now molding and controlling events; they could give courage and
inspiration to their votaries. From his sojourn at Nicomedia onwards, Julian
believed that all his actions were determined by divine voices which he heard
and obeyed. This natural religion was not the crude polytheism his Christian
teachers had said. Hellenism had made it a unity. A great First Cause, the
Father and King of all men, had parceled out the lands and peoples among the
deities, His viceroys. They were the real rulers of provinces and cities and
governed them according to their natural habits and dispositions. What was
Christianity when compared with this ancient and universal worship, supported
by the wealth of civilization which had come down from the past? It was a cult
of barbarian origin, born in an obscure province, ignorant of Hellenic culture, its very Scriptures written in a barbarous Greek
offensive to the ears of elicited men. Was Greece to abdicate in favor of
Galilee? Perish the thought! So Julian believed, and longed to steep himself in
Hellenism at its purest source — the Schools at Athens.
Julian made Caesar. 355
He gained his wish through the
sisterly kindness of the Empress Eusebia. At Athens,
as at all the schools of higher learning, the majority of the teachers were
pagans, and Julian with more than his usual eagerness devoted himself to their
lectures and to all the benefits of the place. "He was continually seen
surrounded by crowds of youths, old men, philosophers, and rhetoricians."
Outwardly he was still a Christian, for his life depended on his conformity to
the Imperial creed; but inwardly he had consecrated himself heart and soul to
paganism, had already "became conscious that he had a divine mission, and
that he was a favorite of the gods. The double life he had to live, the
knowledge that he was surrounded by spies ready to report anything compromising
to his Imperial cousin, must have acted upon his naturally nervous and emotional
temperament and betrayed itself in many outward ways. His portrait drawn by a
fellow-student, Gregory of Nazianzus, though the work
of an enemy, needs only a little toning down—twitching shoulders, eyes glancing
from side to side, something conceited in nostrils and face, feet that were
never still, hasty laugh, sentences begun and never finished, irrelevant
answers. Julian had more to do at Athens than study philosophy; he had to
penetrate to the centre of Greek religion. He was secretly initiated into the
ancient mysteries of Eleusis; and there are hints of other initiations either
there or afterwards — of the worship of Mithras, of the purifying rite of the taurobolium.
Constantius was childless — the
punishment of the gods whose temples he had despoiled, said the pagans; a
retribution for the slaughter of his kinsmen, his own conscience sometimes
whispered. The needs of the Empire demanded assistance. It is hard to say
whether the Emperor or the student was the more unwilling, the one to summon and
the other to obey the call. Julian was ordered to Milan where the Court was. He
was made Caesar, was married to Helena, the Emperor's sister, and sent to Gaul
to protect the province from invading Germans. The recluse bookworm, the man
whose emotional nature had succumbed without suspicion to the suggestions of
spiritualist séances, was suddenly confronted with one of the hardest tasks
that practical life could offer. He had to restore a half-ruined province and
to overcome an enemy grown bold by success. He was totally ignorant of the arts
of war and of administration. It need not cause surprise that he proved an
intrepid soldier. He was the last of a race of warriors, and the blood spoke.
His studies had taught him the need of concentration and thoroughness; he set
himself to learn and speedily mastered the elements of drill and discipline.
But what the world did wonder at was that, hampered as he was by the assistants
whom the jealousy of the Emperor had forced upon him, he showed himself a
general who defeated his foes as much by strategy as by fighting.
The Germans had been driven back;
the administration of Gaul was improved and its finances reformed, when the
legions, irritated at commands from the distant Emperor, mutinied and called
upon their general to assume the purple (Jan. 360). After long hesitation
Julian consented. It meant civil war. But the gods encouraged him, his
mission called him, the soldiers rallied round him, and he marched against
Constantius.
There was no battle. Constantius
died before the armies met, and Julian became sole ruler over the Roman Empire.
Julian declares himself a Pagan. 355-361
During the whole of Julian's five
years' stay in Gaul he publicly professed the Christian religion which
privately he had repudiated. He allowed his name to be attached to the
persecuting edicts of Constantius, while in secret he began the day with a
prayer to Hermes. His dissimulation went the length of joining with Constantius
in threatening anyone with torture who took part in the very ceremonies of
divination which he himself was all the while practicing in private. The only
trace of his real feelings is that no Christian emblems appear on the coins
which he struck in Gaul. This double life did not cease-when he assumed the
purple. He ostentatiously joined in the public devotions of the people during
the festival of Epiphany (361), while in private he was practicing all manner
of secret incantations and divinations aided by an adept in the mysteries of
Eleusis. It may be that he waited until he was sure of the sympathies of the
army. He seems to have taken care that most of the soldiers who followed him
from Gaul were pagans; and that the Christian troops were left behind to guard
the province. At all events it was not until he reached Sirmium on the lower
Danube, where the magistrates, citizens, and soldiers received him with
acclamations, that he declared himself a pagan, and could write to Maximus:
"We worship the gods openly; most of the soldiers who follow me reverence them!
We have thanked the gods in the sight of men with many hecatombs." He
entered Constantinople a professed pagan, believing himself commissioned by the
gods to restore the ancient religion, a Dionysus and a Hercules in one, the
prophet and king of a pagan revival.
In his treatment of Christianity he
believed that he showed impartiality and refrained from persecution, and, if
due allowance be made for his private hatred of those whom he contemptuously
called Galileans, it is possible to believe that he was sincere in his
professions.
His first act was to issue an edict
permitting all bishops, exiled by Constantius for their attachment to the
Nicene theology, to return and resume possession of their confiscated property
but not their sees. More than once the leaders, clerical and laic, of the
various parties into which Christianity was then divided, were summoned to his
palace and told that they were at liberty to follow and advocate any form of
belief they pleased. Ammianus Marcellinus, himself a pagan and a devoted
admirer of Julian, declares that the Emperor did this in the firm belief that
the Christians were so thoroughly divided that this liberty would end in their
destroying each other by their mutual quarrels. If so the intention shows how
little Julian understood the faith he despised. The bishops who had thronged
the antechambers of Constantius and used backstairs intrigues against their
rivals were very poor specimens of Christianity. The freedom of discussion
which Julian permitted, the absence of Imperial interference, were the means of
uniting not destroying the Church.
The greater part of the Emperor's
edicts against Christianity were undoubtedly meant by him to make restitution
to paganism and to the State of property and privileges which had been wrongly
bestowed. The churches were commanded to restore the temple-sites and lands
which had been given them for ecclesiastical purposes. If churches had been
erected they were ordered to be demolished and the temples rebuilt at the
expense of the Christians. The clergy and Christian poor had been granted sums
of money from municipal treasuries; and these grants were to cease.
Constantine's legislation had given to the Christian clergy privileges enjoyed
by the heathen priesthood. To Julian's mind paganism was the religion of the
State and alone it carried privileges with it. So the special laws guaranteeing
to the Church rights of inheritance, and laws exempting the clergy from
personal taxation and freeing them from the obligation to serve on municipal councils,
were abrogated. Ammianus Marcellinus probably expresses the popular opinion
when he declares that this legislation, however just in theory, was harsh in
practice from its cumulative weight and the haste with which it was enforced.
Julian's treatment of Christians. 361-363
No edict of Julian's excited the
indignation of the Christians so thoroughly as that upon education. It enacted
that no Christian was to be allowed to teach in schools where the literature of
Greece and Rome formed the basis of education; that all teachers must expound
and insist upon the religion of the authors studied; but that Christian
children might attend the schools. Perhaps the Emperor's reasons for his
legislation increased their wrath; for pedantry is more irritating than force,
and Julian's pedantic nature is displayed in his reasonings. "Homer,
Hesiod, Demosthenes, Thucydides, Isocrates, Lysias,
all founded their learning on the gods. Did not some of them believe themselves
to be consecrated to Hermes and others to the muses? It seems therefore absurd
to me that those who explain their works should not worship the gods they
reverenced." He did not like to remember that Mardonius,
his own honored teacher, had been a Christian. His fixed idea was that
Christianity could have no connection with Hellenic thought or civilization,
that its affectation of interest in ancient Greek literature was hypocrisy, and
that it was his duty as ruler to keep men from occasions of practicing such a
vice. From one point of view the edict seemed to affect the Christians but
slightly. They had long been accustomed to send their children to schools in
which the most famous teachers were pagans; but now they believed that the
Emperor desired to use all the public schools throughout the Empire for proselytizing
purposes. In the end this edict did more good than harm to Christianity. It
showed in a striking way both the steadfastness and the resources of the
Christians. The two most distinguished Christian teachers, Prohaeresius of Athens and C. Marius Victorians of Rome, at once resigned their
appointments. The former was the most esteemed teacher in the East, Libanius
only excepted. Julian did his utmost to win him over to paganism. When he
remained firm, the Emperor offered to make him an exception to his rule; but
the Christian refused to accept any concession which was not to be shared by
his humbler brethren. Christian teachers all over the East assiduously devoted
themselves to acquire the elegancies of the Greek tongue and to write school-books
in that language which could serve as substitutes for the authors they were
forbidden to use.
The Emperor naturally abolished the
Labarum, and changed all other Christian into pagan emblems. He permitted,
encouraged, the worship of his statues; he purged the Praetorian guard (not the
whole army) of Christians. He also dismissed from his service all Christian
attendants, and endeavored to make the civil service completely pagan.
At least one distinguished Christian
had little cause to thank Julian for his toleration, and his treatment of
Athanasius almost suggests that the Emperor felt that the great bishop was the
opponent from whom his plans had most to fear. On Julian's edict restoring to
their homes and properties Christian bishops who had been banished by
Constantius, Athanasius naturally returned to Alexandria and was warmly
welcomed by his people. Julian was indignant. He insisted that his edict had
not authorized the banished bishops to resume their ecclesiastical work, and
ordered Athanasius to be sent away from the city and then from Egypt. "By
all the gods," he wrote to the governor of Egypt, "nothing could give
me more pleasure than that thou should expel from every corner of Egypt that
criminal Athanasius, who has dared, during my reign, to baptize Greek wives of
illustrious citizens. He must be persecuted."
Julian's efforts to restore and put
new life into paganism are much more interesting than his attempts to damage
Christianity. He called the religion he had so fervently adopted Hellenism, and
his co-religionists Hellenes: Christianity was a barbarian cult, its supporters
Galileans.
But in reality the Christianity of
the fourth century had absorbed much of what was best and most enduring in
Hellenism; while the religion of Julian drew more of its contents from Oriental
than from Hellenist sources. One cult into which he had been initiated and
which he greatly esteemed, Mithraism, was the only one of those Oriental
religions which seems to have been entirely unaffected by Hellenist thought.
The religion which Julian attempted
to force on the Empire was a mosaic of decadent philosophy, bloody sacrifices,
rituals old and new, "spiritualism," and divinations of all sorts.
Its piety came from the cult of the Mysteries. It contained so much that
was new that it was much more an attempted reconstruction or reformation
than a revival of paganism.
Julian was quick to see that no
religion could be universally accepted which had not behind it some common
stable truths, and that Christianity had gained enormously from that compact
system of doctrine which it had laboriously built up during the three centuries
of its existence. If critics, like Celsus, had made
capital out of the intellectual differences within Christianity, paganism was
in a worse case. Heathenism had no basis
of intellectual certainty; it had no universally accepted or acknowledged
system of doctrine. If pagan philosophy were appealed to, it was anything but
an harmonious system — one teacher said one thing only to be refuted by
another. The Hermotimus of Lucian had somewhat
wickedly shown that the opinions of philosophy were as various as the thinkers
were numerous. But the philosophic thinking of the age of Julian was eclectic,
and Neo-Platonism was supposed to reconcile all sorts of opinions. By ignoring
some and rounding off the sharp corners of others it might be plausibly made
out that all philosophies really meant to say the same things if they were only
rightly understood. So Julian went to Neo-Platonism for the intellectual basis
or dogmatic theology of his new catholic State Religion. His philosophical
acumen was by no means equal to that of his masters and he modestly confessed
it. Iamblichus had taught him all that he knew, and that philosopher, in the
opinion of Julian, had so explored the heights and depths of human and divine
thought that nothing remained for any man save to accept his conclusions. The
Neoplatonic thought of a Trinity of existence took the central place of the
Christian in this new pagan theology.
Three worlds exist. First and
highest is the realm of pure ideas where the Supreme Principle, the One, the
Highest Good, the Great First Cause, lives and reigns. Below it is the
intellectual world over which presides the same Supreme Principle, but now represented
by an emanation from Itself, wholly spiritual, the Logos of the Platonic
philosophy. The third is the world of sense existence, the universe of things
seen and handled, and there, as beseems its surroundings, the ruler, the
emanation from the Supreme Principle, assumes a visible form and can be seen
while
The "common man," of
course, could not be expected to understand or care for such high matters; but
pagan philosophy had never thought much of the "common man" (which
was its weakness), and he had always the gods nearest him to worship in that
instinctive way which was alone possible for an intelligence such as his. Yet
Julian, with more sympathetic feeling for his needs than most pagan-thinkers,
made provision that even he should be taught the underlying unity and
catholicity of his ancestral faith. Just as in Christianity, Jesus was the
revealer of the Father, and men were taught to see the One Supreme God in the
Son Incarnate, the Mediator, so Julian called on all men to see in the great
orb of day the visible Manifestation of the Supreme Principle, the First Cause,
Who has begotten him and placed him in the heavens, the medium through which He
dispenses His benefits throughout the universe of men and things. Even
Christians, Julian thinks, might come to see this if their minds were not so
darkened. They believe in Jesus, whom neither they nor their fathers have ever
seen; but they do not believe that the God Helios is the true revealer of God,
Helios whom the whole human race from the beginning of time has seen and has honored
as their munificent and potent benefactor, Helios the living animated
beneficent image of the Supreme Father, Who is exalted above all the powers of
reason. Man has body as well as soul, he has senses as he has capacities for
intellectual thinking, therefore he needs visible gods to represent the gods
invisible whom the Supreme Principle has sent forth from Himself and who suit
the religious needs not merely of the different nations and tribes of mankind
but also of the various divisions of men such as shopkeepers, tax-gatherers,
dancers, etc. These thousands of deities are all in their places
representatives of the One Supreme Principle, Who has sent them forth and on
Whom they depend. The sun among the stars is an emblem of this divine unity in
diversity.
Having thus demonstrated, as he
believed, by exhortations and treatises, the unity which underlay the surface
diversity of polytheism, Julian gave full scope to his desire to honor every
manifestation of the one Supreme Principle, and to make use of every means
whereby man could both show his reverence for and seek communion with the
divine. His first care was to make it clear to all that the worship of the old
gods was to be the privileged cult. Bishops were banished from the antechambers
and audience halls of the palace and in their stead came pagan priests and
Neoplatonic philosophers—chief among them being Maximus the "medium."
The Emperor was unwearied in issuing decrees that all the ancient temples were
to be thrown open and that the ceremonies of all the ancient cults were to be
duly performed. It might be said that he converted his palace into a temple—so
determined was he that every heathen festival should be observed and every
detail of appropriate rite and sacrifice duly attended to—and it was said that
his knowledge of the various rituals surpassed that of the priests themselves.
His devotion to the whole sacrificial system of paganism has been recorded both
by enemies and friends. We are told of one solemn sacrifice at which the
victims included one hundred bulls, rams, sheep, and goats, as well as
innumerable white birds from land and sea. He issued minute directions about
the number of the sacrifices which were to be offered by day and by night in
the reopened temples. He wished that all the old gods should be invoked —
Saturn, Jupiter, Apollo, Mars, Pluto, Bacchus, Silenus,
Aesculapius, Castor and Pollux, Rhea, Juno, Minerva, Latona, Venus, Hecate, the Muses, etc., etc. ; but
personally, like the pagans of the age he lived in, he was more devoted to the
deities of Oriental origin — to the Attis cult, to
Mithras, and most of all to Isis and Serapis. Dionysus,
whose cult had many of the Oriental characteristics, seems to have been his
most favored among the gods of Greece.
The office of Pontifex Maximus was an Imperial prerogative and the one most prized by
Julian. He was unwearied in the performance of all the duties it required and
he used it in his attempt to create that Catholic Pagan State Church. The very
conception is decisive proof that Julian aimed, not at the revival but at a
thorough reconstruction of paganism. He had the thought of a great independent
spiritual community, wide as the Empire — a community so holy and separated
that men and women who abandoned Christianity could only be admitted into it
after the performance of prescribed purifying rites. This community was to be
ruled over by a priesthood set apart for the service and forming a graded
hierarchy. At the head of all was the Pontifex Maximus;
next came pagan metropolitans or the high-priests of provinces; under them were
high-priests who had rule over the temples and priests within the districts
assigned to them. It is improbable that Julian had completed the hierarchical
organisation of the Empire before his death, but large parts of the East had
been put in order. We have some briefs which he, as supreme pontiff, sent down
to his metropolitans in which he regulated many things from the dress and
morals of the clergy to the training of temple choirs — so minute was the
interference of the Pontifex Maximus. Now it is
possible that one form of paganism, the Imperial cult, had been strictly organized
in the West and its provincial priests may have had some jurisdiction over the
ministers of other cults; Maximin Daza had attempted to do something similar in
the East; but the attempt to gather every cult of polytheism into one organized
communion was not merely new, it was a startling novelty. Julian's conception
of a pagan priesthood entirely devoted to the service of religion was certainly
not Hellenist; nor was it Roman; it was Oriental; the cults of Egypt, of Syria,
and of Asia had separated priesthoods. It was a new thing to be introduced into
a universal State Church whose religion called itself Hellenism.
Reorganization of Paganism
Julian thought a great deal about
this priesthood of his and recognised its supreme importance for the
reformation he dreamt of making. As the priest, from the office he fills, ought
to be an example to all men, he should be selected with care — if possible a
man of good family, neither very rich, nor very poor; but the indispensable
qualifications are that he loves God and his neighbor. Love to God may be
tested by observing whether the members of his family attend the temple
services with regularity (Julian was very indignant when he discovered that the
wives and daughters of some pagan priests were actually Christians), and love
to one's neighbor by charity to the poor. Julian further insisted that the priest
must be careful about what he reads. He is to shun all lascivious writings such
as the old comedies or the contemporary erotic novels. He is to be equally
circumspect in his conduct. He must not go to the theatre, nor to spectacles,
and is not to frequent wine-shops. He is not to consort with actors nor to
admit them to his house, he is even recommended not to accept too many
invitations to dinner. On the other hand he is to see that he is master within
his temple. He is to wear within it gorgeous vestments in honor of the gods
whom he serves; but outside the sanctuary, when he mingles with men, he is to
wear the ordinary dress. He is not to permit even the commander of the forces
or the governor of the province to enter the temple with ostentation. He is to
know the service thoroughly and to be able to repeat all the divine hymns.
Occasionally he is to deliver addresses on philosophical subjects for the
instruction of the multitude.
Julian also desired that the priests
should organize schemes of charitable relief, more especially for the poor who
attend the temple services. He thought that some such widely organized scheme
might help to counteract the popularity of the "Galileans." He seems
also to have contemplated the institution of religious communities of men and
women vowed to a life of chastity and meditation — another proof that his
so-called Hellenism was based much more on Oriental religions than on those of
Greece.
The Emperor in all this legislation
or advice was at pains to declare that he was acting, not as Emperor, but as
"Pontifex Maximus of the religion of my
country."
One feature of Julian's attempt to
make the worship of the gods the universal and privileged religion of the