INTRODUCTORY NOTE TO CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
[a.d. 153-193-217.] The second century of illumination is drawing to a close, as
the great name of this Father comes into view, and introduces us to a new stage
of the Church's progress. From Britain to the Ganges it had already made its
mark. In all its Oriental identity, we have found it vigorous in Gaul and
penetrating to other regions of the Weir. From its primitive base on the Orontes,
it has extended itself to the deltas of the Nile; and the Alexandria of Apollos
and of St. Mark has become the earliest seat of Christian learning. There,
already, have the catechetical schools gathered the finest intellectual trophies
of the Cross; and under the aliment of its library springs up something like a
Christian university. Pantaenus, "the Sicilian bee" from the flowery fields of
Enna, comes to frame it by his industry, and store it with the sweets of his
eloquence and wisdom. Clement, who had followed Tatian to the East, tracks
Pantaenus to Egypt, and comes with his Attic scholarship to be his pupil in the
school of Christ. After Justin and Irenaeus, he is to be reckoned the founder of
Christian literature; and it is noteworthy how sublimely he begins to treat
Paganism as a creed outworn, to be dismissed with contempt, rather than
seriously wrestled with any longer.
His merciless exposure of the entire system of "lords many and gods many," seems
to us, indeed, unnecessarily offensive. Why not spare us such details? But let
us reflect, that, if such are our Christian instincts of delicacy, we owe it to
this great reformer in no small proportion. For not content to show the Pagans
that the very atmosphere was polluted by their mythologies, so that Christians,
turn which way they would, must encounter pestilence, he becomes the ethical
philosopher of Christians; and while he proceeds to dictate, even in minute
details, the transformations to which the faithful must subject themselves in
order "to escape the pollutions of the world," he sketches in outline the
reformations which the Gospel imposes on society, and which nothing but the
Gospel has ever enabled mankind to realize. "For with a celerity unsurpassable,
and a benevolence to which we have ready access," says Clement, "the Divine
Power hath filled the universe with the seed of salvation." Socrates and Plato
had talked sublimely four hundred years before; but Lust and Murder were yet the
gods of Greece, and men and women were like what they worshipped. Clement had
been their disciple; but now, as the disciple of Christ, he was to exert a power
over men and manners, of which they never dreamed.
Alexandria becomes the brain of Christendom: its heart was yet beating at
Antioch, but the West was still receptive only, its hands and arms stretched
forth-towards the sunrise for further enlightenment. From the East it had
obtained the Scriptures and their authentication, and from the same source was
deriving the canons, the liturgies, and the creed of Christendom. The universal
language of Christians is Greek. To a pagan emperor who had outgrown the ideas
of Nero's time, it was no longer Judaism; but it was not less an Oriental
superstition, essentially Greek in its features and its dress. "All the churches
of the West,"1 says the historian of Latin Christianity, "were Greek religious
colonies. Their language was Greek, their organization Greek, their writers
Greek, their Scriptures and their ritual were Greek. Through Greek, the
communications of the churches of the West were constantly kept up with the
East. ... Thus the Church at Rome was but one of a confederation of Greek
religious republics rounded by Christianity." Now this confederation was the
Holy Catholic Church.
Every Christian must recognise the career of Alexander, and the history of his
empire, as an immediate precursor of the Gospel. The patronage of letters by the
Ptolemies at Alexandria, the translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into the
dialect of the Hellenes, the creation of a new terminology in the language of
the Greeks, by which ideas of faith and of truth might find access to the mind
of a heathen world,-these were preliminaries to the preaching of the Gospel to
mankind, and to the composition of the New Testament of our Lord and Saviour. He
Himself had prophetically visited Egypt, and the idols were now to be removed
before his presence. There a powerful Christian school was to make itself felt
for ever in the definitions of orthodoxy; and in a new sense was that prophecy
to be understood, "Out of Egypt have I called my Son."
The genius of Apollos was revived in his native city. A succession of doctors
was there to arise, like him, "eloquent men, and mighty in the Scriptures."
Clement tells us of his masters in Christ, and how, coming to Pantaenus, his
soul was filled with a deathless element of divine knowledge.2 He speaks of the
apostolic tradition as received through his teachers hardly at second-hand. He
met in that school, no doubt, some, at least, who recalled Ignatius and Polycarp;
some, perhaps, who as children had heard St. John when he could only exhort his
congregations to "love one another." He could afterwards speak of himself as in
the next succession after the apostles.
He became the successor of Pantaenus in the catechetical school, and had Origen
for his pupil, with other eminent men. He was also ordained a presbyter. He
seems to have compiled his Stromata in the reigns of Commodus and Severus. If,
at this time, he was about forty years of age, as seems likely, we must conceive
of his birth at Athens, while Antoninus Pius was emperor, while Polycarp was yet
living, and while Justin and Irenaeus were in their prime.
Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem, speaks of Clement, in turn, as his master: "for
we acknowledge as fathers those blessed saints who are gone before us, and to
whom we shall go after a little time; the truly blest Pantaenus, I mean, and the
holy Clemens, my teacher, who was to me so greatly useful and helpful." St.
Cyril of Alexandria calls him "a man admirably learned and skilful, and one that
searched to the depths all the learning of the Greeks, with an exactness rarely
attained before." So Theodoret says, "He surpassed all others, and was a holy
man." St. Jerome pronounces him the most learned of all the ancients; while
Eusebius testifies to his theological attainments, and applauds him as an
"incomparable master of Christian philosophy." But the rest shall be narrated by
our translator, Mr. Wilson.
The following is the original Introductory Notice:-
Titus Flavius Clemens, the illustrious head of the Catechetical School at
Alexandria at the close of the second century, was originally a pagan
philosopher. The date of his birth is unknown. It is also uncertain whether
Alexandria or Athens was his birthplace.3
On embracing Christianity, he eagerly sought the instructions of its most
eminent teachers; for this purpose travelling extensively over Greece, Italy,
Egypt, Palestine, and other regions of the East.
Only one of these teachers (who, from a reference in the Stromata, all appear to
have been alive when he wrote4 ) can be with certainty identified, viz.,
Pantaenus, of whom he speaks in terms of profound reverence, and whom he
describes as the greatest of them all. Returning to Alexandria, he succeeded his
master Pantaenus in the catechetical school, probably on the latter departing on
his missionary tour to the East, somewhere about a.d. 189.5 He was also made a
presbyter of the Church, either then or somewhat later.6 He continued to teach
with great distinction till a.d. 202, when the persecution under Severus
compelled him to retire from Alexandria. In the beginning of the reign of
Caracalla we find him at Jerusalem, even then a great resort of Christian, and
especially clerical, pilgrims. We also hear of him travelling to Antioch,
furnished with a letter of recommendation by Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem.7
The dose of his career is covered with obscurity. He is supposed to have died
about a.d. 220.
Among his pupils were his distinguished successor in the Alexandrian school,
Origen, Alexander bishop of Jerusalem, and, according to Baronius, Combefisius,
and Bull, also Hippolytus.
The above is positively the sum of what we know of Clement's history.
His three great works, The Exhortation to the Heathen (lo/goj o9 protreptiko\ j
pro\ s #Ellhnaj), The Instructor, or Paedagogus (paidagwgo/j), The Miscellanies,
or Stromata (Strwmatei=j), are among the most valuable remains of Christian
antiquity, and the largest that belong to that early period.
The Exhortation, the object of which is to win pagans to the Christian faith,
contains a complete and withering exposure of the abominable licentiousness, the
gross imposture and sordidness of paganism. With clearness and cogency of
argument, great earnestness and eloquence, Clement sets forth in contrast the
truth as taught in the inspired Scriptures, the true God, and especially the
personal Christ, the living Word of God, the Saviour of men. It is an elaborate
and masterly work, rich in felicitous classical allusion and quotation,
breathing throughout the spirit of philosophy and of the Gospel, and abounding
in passages of power and beauty.
The Paedagogus, or Instructor, is addressed to those who have been rescued from
the darkness and pollutions of heathenism, and is an exhibition of Christian
morals and manners,-a guide for the formation and development of Christian
character, and for living a Christian life. It consists of three books. It is
the grand aim of the whole work to set before the converts Christ as the only
Instructor, and to expound and enforce His precepts. In the first book Clement
exhibits the person, the function, the means, methods, and ends of the
Instructor, who is the Word and Son of God; and lovingly dwells on His benignity
and philanthropy, His wisdom, faithfulness, and righteousness.
The second and third books lay down rules for the regulation of the Christian,
in all the relations, circumstances, and actions of life, entering most minutely
into the details of dress, eating, drinking, bathing, sleeping, etc. The
delineation of a life in all respects agreeable to the Word, a truly Christian
life, attempted here, may, now that the Gospel has transformed social and
private life to the extent it has, appear unnecessary, or a proof of the
influence of ascetic tendencies. But a code of Christian morals and manners (a
sort of "whole duty of man" and manual of good breeding combined) was eminently
needed by those whose habits and characters had been moulded under the debasing
and polluting influences of heathenism; and who were bound, and were aiming, to
shape their lives according to the principles of the Gospel, in the midst of the
all but incredible licentiousness and luxury by which society around was
incurably tainted. The disclosures which Clement, with solemn sternness, and
often with caustic wit, makes of the prevalent voluptuousness and vice, form a
very valuable contribution to our knowledge of that period.
The full title of the Stromata, according to Eusebius and Photius, was Ti/tou
Flaui/ou Klh/mentoj tw=n kata\ th\ n a0lhqh= filosofi/an gnwstikw=n u9pomnhma/twn
strwmatei=j8 -"Titus Flavius Clement's miscellaneous collections of speculative
(gnostic) notes bearing upon the true philosophy." The aim of the work, in
accordance with this title, is, in opposition to Gnosticism, to furnish the
materials for the construction of a true gnosis, a Christian philosophy, on the
basis of faith, and to lead on to this higher knowledge those who, by the
discipline of the Paedagogus, had been trained for it. The work consisted
originally of eight books. The eighth book is lost; that which appears under
this name has plainly no connection with the rest of the Stromata. Various
accounts have been given of the meaning of the distinctive word in the title (Strwmateu/j);
but all agree in regarding it as indicating the miscellaneous character of its
contents. And they are very miscellaneous. They consist of the speculations of
Greek philosophers, of heretics, and of those who cultivated the true Christian
gnosis, and of quotations from sacred Scripture. The latter he affirms to be the
source from which the higher Christian knowledge is to be drawn; as it was that
from which the germs of truth in Plato and the Hellenic philosophy were derived.
He describes philosophy as a divinely ordered preparation of the Greeks for
faith in Christ, as the law was for the Hebrews; and shows the necessity and
value of literature and philosophic culture for the attainment of true Christian
knowledge, in opposition to the numerous body among Christians who regarded
learning as useless and dangerous. He proclaims himself an eclectic, believing
in the existence of fragments of truth in all systems, which may be separated
from error; but declaring that the truth can be found in unity and completeness
only in Christ, as it was from Him that all its scattered germs originally
proceeded. The Stromata are written carelessly, and even confusedly; but the
work is one of prodigious learning, and supplies materials of the greatest value
for understanding the various conflicting systems which Christianity had to
combat.
It was regarded so much as the author's great work, that, on the testimony of
Theodoret, Cassiodorus, and others, we learn that Clement received the
appellation ofStrwmateu/j (the Stromatist). In all probability, the first part
of it was given to the world about a.d. 194. The latest date to which he brings
down his chronology in the first book is the death of Commodus, which happened
in a.d. 192; from which Eusebius9 concludes that he wrote this work during the
reign of Severus, who ascended the imperial throne in a.d. 193, and reigned till
a.d. 211. It is likely that the whole was composed ere Clement quitted
Alexandria in a.d. 202. The publication of the Paedagogus preceded by a short
time that of the Stromata; and the Cohortatio was written a short time before
the Paedagogus, as is clear from statements made by Clement himself.
So multifarious is the erudition, so multitudinous are the quotations and the
references to authors in all departments, and of all countries, the most of
whose works have perished, that the works in question could only have been
composed near an extensive library-hardly anywhere but in the vicinity of the
famous library of Alexandria. They are a storehouse of curious ancient lore,-a
museum of the fossil remains of the beauties and monstrosities of the world of
pagan antiquity, during all the epochs and phases of its history. The three
compositions are really parts of one whole. The central connecting idea is that
of the Logos-the Word-the Son of God; whom in the first work he exhibits drawing
men from the superstitions and corruptions of heathenism to faith; in the
second, as training them by precepts and discipline; and in the last, as
conducting them to that higher knowledge of the things of God, to which those
only who devote themselves assiduously to spiritual, moral, and intellectual
culture can attain. Ever before his eye is the grand form of the living personal
Christ,-the Word, who "was with God, and who was God, but who became man, and
dwelt among us."
Of course there is throughout plenty Of false science, and frivolous and
fanciful speculation.
Who is the rich man that shall be saved? (ti/j o9 swzo/menoj plou/sioj; ) is the
title of a practical treatise, in which Clement shows, in opposition to those
who interpreted our Lord's words to the young ruler as requiring the
renunciation of worldly goods, that the disposition of the soul is the great
essential. Of other numerous works of Clement, of which only a few stray
fragments have been preserved, the chief are the eight books of The Hypotyposes,
which consisted of expositions of all the books of Scripture. Of these we have a
few undoubted fragments. The Adumbrations, or Commentaries on some of the
Catholic Epistles, and The Selections from the Prophetic Scriptures, are
compositions of the same character, as far as we can judge, as The Hypotyposes,
and are supposed by some to have formed part of that work.
Other lost works of Clement are :-
The Treatise of Clement, the Stromatist, on the Prophet Amos.
On Providence.
Treatise on Easter.
On Evil-speaking.
Discussion on Fasting.
Exhortation to Patience; or, To the newly baptized.Ecclesiastical Canon; or,
Against the Judaizers.
Different Terms.
The following are the names of treatises which Clement refers to as written or
about to be written by him, but of which otherwise we have no trace or mention
:-On First Principles; On Prophecy; On the Allegorical Interpretation of Members
and Affections when ascribed to God; On Angels; On the Devil; On the Origin of
the Universe; On the Unity and Excellence of the Church; On the Offices of
Bishops, Presbyters, Deacons, and Widows; On the Saul; On the Resurrection; On
Marriage; On Continence; Against Heresies.
Preserved among Clement's works is a fragment called Epitomes of the Writings of
Theodotus, and of the Eastern Doctrine, most likely abridged extracts made by
Clement for his own use, and giving considerable insight into Gnosticism.
Clement's quotations from Scripture are made from the Septuagint version, often
inaccurately from memory, sometimes from a different text from what we possess,
often with verbal adaptations; and not rarely different texts are blended
together.10
The works of Clement present considerable difficulties to the translator; and
one of the chief is the state of the text, which greatly needs to be expurgated
and amended. For this there are abundant materials, in the copious annotations
and disquisitions, by various hands, collected together in Migne's edition;
where, however, corruptions the most obvious have been allowed to remain in the
text.
The publishers are indebted to Dr. W. L. Alexander for the poetical translations
of the Hymns of Clement.