INTRODUCTORY NOTE TO THE WRITINGS OF ATHENAGORAS
[Translated by the Rev. B. P. Pratten.]
[a.d. 177.] In placing Athenagoras here, somewhat out of the order usually
accepted, I commit no appreciable violence against chronology, and I gain a
great advantage for the reader. To some extent we must recognise, in
collocation, the principles of affinity and historic growth. Closing up the
bright succession of the earlier Apologists, this favourite author affords also
a fitting introduction to the great founder of the Alexandrian School, who comes
next into view. His work opens the way for Clement's elaboration of Justin's
claim, that the whole of philosophy is embraced in Christianity. It is charming
to find the primal fountains of Christian thought uniting here, to flow on for
ever in the widening and deepening channel of Catholic orthodoxy, as it gathers
into itself all human culture, and enriches the world with products of
regenerated mind, harvested from its overflow into the fields of philosophy and
poetry and art and science. More of this when we come to Clement, that man of
genius who introduced Christianity to itself, as reflected in the burnished
mirror of his intellect. Shackles are falling from the persecuted and imprisoned
faculties of the faithful, and soon the Faith is to speak out, no more in tones
of apology, but as mistress of the human mind, and its pilot to new worlds of
discovery and broad domains of conquest. All hail the freedom with which,
henceforth, Christians are to assume the overthrow of heathenism as a foregone
conclusion. The distasteful exposure of heresies was the inevitable task after
the first victory. It was the chase and following-up of the adversary in his
limping and cowardly retreat, "the scattering of the rear of darkness." With
Athenagoras, we touch upon tokens of things to come; we see philosophy yoked to
the chariot of Messiah; we begin to realize that sibylline surrender of outworn
Paganism, and its forecast of an era of light:-
"Magnus ab integro saeclorum nascitur ordo,
quo ferrea primum
Desinet, ac toto surget gens aurea mundo."
In Athenagoras, whose very name is a retrospect, we discover a remote result of
St. Paul's speech on Mars Hill. The apostle had cast his bread upon the waters
of Ilissus and Cephisus to find it after many days. "When they heard of the
resurrection of the dead, some mocked; "but here comes a philosopher, from the
Athenian agora, a convert to St. Paul's argument in his Epistle to the
Corinthians, confessing"the unknown God," demolishing the marble mob of deities
that so "stirred the apostle's spirit within him," and teaching alike the
Platonist and the Stoic to sit at the feet of Jesus. "Dionysius the Areopagite,
and the woman named Damaris," are no longer to be despised as the scanty
first-fruits of Attica. They too have found a voice in this splendid trophy of
the Gospel; and, "being dead, they yet speak" through him.
To the meagre facts of his biography, which appear below, there is nothing to be
added;1 and I shall restrain my disposition to be a commentator, within the
limits of scanty notations. In the notes to Tatian and Theophilus, I have made
the student acquainted with that useful addition to his treatise on Justin
Martyr, in which the able and judicious Bishop Kaye harmonizes those authors
with Justin. The same harmony enfolds the works of Athenagoras,2 and thus
affords a synopsis of Christian teaching under the Antonines; in which precision
of theological language is yet unattained, but identity of faith is clearly
exhibited. While the Germans are furnishing the scholar with critical editions
of the ancients, invaluable for their patient accumulations of fact and
illustration, they are so daring in theory and conjecture when they come to
exposition, that one enjoys the earnest and wholesome tone of sober comment that
distinguishes the English theologian. It has the great merit of being inspired
by profound sympathy with primitive writers, and unadulterated faith in the
Scriptures. Too often a German critic treats one of these venerable witnesses,
who yet live and yet speak, as if they were dead subjects on the
dissecting-table. They cut and carve with anatomical display, and use the
microscope with scientific skill; but, oh! how frequently they surrender the
saints of God as mere corpses, into the hands of those who count them victims of
a blind faith in a dead Christ.
It will not be necessary, after my quotations from Kaye in the foregoing sheets,
to do more than indicate similar illustrations of Athenagoras to be found in his
pages. The dry version often requires lubrications of devoutly fragrant
exegesis; and providentially they are at hand in that elaborate but modest work,
of which even this generation should not be allowed to lose sight.The
annotations of Conrad Gesner and Henry Stephans would have greatly enriched this
edition, had I been permitted to enlarge the work by adding a version of them.
They are often curious, and are supplemented by the interesting letter of
Stephans to Peter Nannius, "the eminent pillar of Louvain," on the earliest
copies of Athenagoras, from which modern editions have proceeded. The Paris
edition of Justin Marty (1615) contains these notes, as well as the Greek of
Tatian, Theophilus, and Athenagoras, with a Latin rendering. As Bishop Kaye
constantly refers to this edition, I have considered myself fortunate in
possessing it; using it largely in comparing his learned comments with the
Edinburgh Version.
A few words as to the noble treatise of our author, on the Resurrection. As a
finn and loving voice to this keynote of Christian faith, it rings like an
anthem through all the variations of his thought and argument. Comparing his own
blessed hope with the delusions of a world lying in wickedness, and looking
stedfastly to the life of the world to come, what a sublime contrast we find in
this figure of Christ's witness to the sensual life of the heathen, and even to
the groping wisdom of the Attic sages. I think this treatise a sort of growth
from the mind of one who had studied in the Academe, pitying yet loving poor
Socrates and his disciples. Yet more, it is the outcome of meditation on that
sad history in the Acts, which expounds St. Paul's bitter reminiscences, when he
says that his gospel was, "to the Greeks, foolishness." They never "heard him
again on this matter." He left them under the confused impressions they had
expressed in the agora, when they said, "he seemeth to be a setter-forth of new
gods." St. Luke allows himself a smile only half suppressed when he adds,
"because he preached unto them Jesus and Anastasis," which in their ears was
only a barbarian echo to their own Phoebus and Artemis; and what did Athenians
want of any more wares of that sort, especially under the introduction of a poor
Jew from parts unknown? Did the apostle's prophetic soul foresee Athenagoras, as
he "departed from among them"? However that may be, his blessed Master "knew
what he would do." He could let none of Paul's words fall to the ground, without
taking care that some seeds should bring forth fruit a thousand-fold. Here come
the sheaves at last. Athenagoras proves, also, what our Saviour meant, when he
said to the Galileans, "Ye are the light of the world." The following is the
original Introductory Notice:-
It is one of the most singular facts in early ecclesiastical history, that the
name of Athenagoras is scarcely ever mentioned. Only two references to him and
his writings have been discovered. One of these occurs in the work of Methodius,
On the Resurrection of the Body, as preserved by Epiphanius (Hoer., lxiv.) and
Photius (Biblioth., ccxxxiv.). The other notice of him is found in the writings3
of Philip of Side, in Pamphylia, who flourished in the early part of the fifth
century. It is very remarkable that Eusebius should have been altogether silent
regarding him; and that writings, so elegant and powerful as are those which
still exist under his name, should have been allowed in early times to sink into
almost entire oblivion.
We know with certainty regarding Athenagoras, that he was an Athenian
philosopher who had embraced Christianity, and that his Apology, or, as he
styles it, "Embassy" (presbei/a), was presented to the Emperors Aurelius and
Commodus about a.d. 177. He is supposed to have written a considerable number of
works, but the only other production of his extant is his treatise on the
Resurrection. It is probable that this work was composed somewhat later than the
Apology (see chap. xxxvi.), though its exact date cannot be determined. Philip
of Side also states that he preceded Pantaenus as head of the catechetical
school at Alexandria; but this is probably incorrect, and is contradicted by
Eusebius. A more interesting and perhaps well-rounded statement is made by the
same writer respecting Athenagoras, to the effect that he was won over to
Christianity while reading the Scriptures in order to controvert them.4 Both his
Apology and his treatise on the Resurrection display a practised pen and a
richly cultured mind. He is by far the most elegant, and certainly at the same
time one of the ablest, of the early Christian Apologists.