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A31414 Apostolici, or, The history of the lives, acts, death, and martyrdoms of those who were contemporary with, or immediately succeeded the apostles as also the most eminent of the primitive fathers for the first three hundred years : to which is added, a chronology of the three first ages of the church / by William Cave ... Cave, William, 1637-1713. 1677 (1677) Wing C1590; ESTC R13780 422,305 406

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parts and duties of their Office and that they did not judge it fit and reasonable to neglect the one that they might attend the other that therefore they should chuse out among themselves some that were duly qualified and present them to them that they might set them apart peculiarly to superintend this affair that so themselves being freed from these incumbrances might the more freely and uninterruptedly devote themselves to prayer and preaching of the Gospel Not that the Apostles thought the care of the Poor an Office too much below them but that this might be discharged by other hands and they as they were obliged the better attend upon things of higher importance Ministeries more immediately serviceable to the souls of men This was the first original of Deacons in the Christian Church they were to serve Tables that is to wait upon the necessities of the Poor to make daily provisions for their public Feasts to keep the Churches Treasure and to distribute to every one according to their need And this admirably agrees to one ordinary notion of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Foreign Writers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lucian Chronosol scu de Legg Saturnal Tom. 2. p. 823. where 't is used for that peculiar Servant who waited at Feasts whose Office it was to distribute the portions to every Guest either according to the command of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Orderer of the Feast or according to the rule of Equality to give every one alike But though 't is true this was a main part of the Deacons Office yet was it not the whole For had this been all the Apostles needed not to have been so exact and curious in their choice of persons seeing men of an ordinary rank and of a very mean capacity might have served the turn nor have used such solemn Rites of Consecration to Ordain them to it No question therefore but their serving Tables implied also their attendance at the Table of the Lords Supper 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h. e. non ●olum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. Epist ad Trall Append. Usser p. 17. For in those days their Agapae or common Love-Feasts whereat both Rich and Poor sate down together were at the same time with the Holy Eucharist and both administred every day so that their ministration respected both the one and the other And thus we find it was in the practice of the Church for so Justin Martyr tells us it was in his time Apol. II. p. 97. that when the President of the Assembly had consecrated the Eucharist the Deacons distributed the Bread and the Wine to all that were present and after carried them to those who were necessarily absent from the Congregation Nor were they restrained to this one particular Service but were in some cases allowed to Preach Baptize and Absolve Penitents especially where they had the peculiar warrant and authority of the Bishop to bear them out nor need we look far beyond the present Story to find St. Philip one of the Deacons here elected both preaching the Gospel and baptizing Converts with great success VI. THAT this excellent Office might be duly managed the Apostles directed and enjoined the Church to nominate such persons as were fitted for it pious and good men men of known honesty and integrity of approved and untainted reputations furnished and endowed with the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost wise and prudent men who would discreetly discharge the trust committed to them The number of these persons was limited to seven probably for no other reason but because the Apostles thought these sufficient for the business unless we will also suppose the whole body of Believers to have been disposed into seven several Divisions for the more orderly and convenient managery of their common Feasts and distributions to the Poor and that to each of these a Deacon was appointed to superintend and direct them without further designing any peculiar Mystery which * Vid. Baron ad Ann. 112. n. 7. Tom. 2. some would fain pick out of it However the Church thought good for a long time to conform to this Primitive Institution insomuch that the Fathers of the † Conc. Neo-Caes can 15. Couc Tom. 1. Col. 1484. Neo-Caesarean Council ordained that in no City how great soever there should be more then seven Deacons a Canon which they found upon this place and ⸫ Hist Eccl. lib. 7. c. 19. p. 734. Sozomen tells us that in his time though many other Churches kept to no certain number yet that the Church of Rome in compliance with this Apostolical example admitted no more then seven Deacons in it The People were infinitely pleased with the order and determination which the Apostles had made in this matter and accordingly made choice of seven whom they presented to the Apostles who as the solemnity of the thing required first made their address to Heaven by Prayer for the divine blessing upon the undertaking and then laid their hands upon them an ancient symbolic Rite of Investiture and Consecration to any extraordinary Office The issue of all was that the Christian Religion got ground and prospered Converts came flocking over to the Faith yea very many of the Priests themselves and of their Tribe and Family of all others the most zealous and pertinacious asserters of the Mosaic Constitutions the bitterest adversaries of the Christian Doctrine the subtlest defenders of their Religion laid aside their prejudices and embraced the Gospel So uncontroulable is the efficacy of divine truth as very often to lead its greatest enemies in triumph after it VII THE first and chief of the persons here elected who were all chosen out of the LXX Disciples as * Haeres XX. p. 27. Epip●anius informs us and whom the Ancients frequently stile Arch-deacon as having the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as † Homil. XV. in Act. p. 555. Chrysostom speaks the Primacy and Precedence among these new-elected Officers was our St. Stephen whom the Author of the Epistle to ⁂ Epist ad H●ron in Bibl. PP Gr. Lat. p. 37. Hero under the name of Ignatius as also the Interpolator of that to the Ep. ad Trall p. 6. Ibid. Trallians makes in a more peculiar manner to have been Deacon to St. James as Bishop of Jerusalem He is not onely placed first in the Catalogue but particularly recommended under this character a man full of Faith and of the Holy Ghost he was exquisitly skilled in all parts of the Christian Doctrine and fitted with great eloquence and elocution to declare and publish it enriched with many miraculous gifts and powers and a spirit of courage and resolution to encounter the most potent opposition He preached and pleaded the cause of Christianity with a firm and undaunted mind and that nothing might be wanting to render it effectual he confirmed his doctrine by many publick and unquestionable miracles plain evidences and demonstrations of the truth and
of them by the plain confession of Heathen Writers and the enemies of Christianity a Annal. l. 15. c. 44. p. 319. Tacitus tells us That the Author of this Religion was Christ who under the reign of Tiberius was put to death by Pontius Pilat the Procurator of Judaea whereby though this detestable Superstition was suppressed for the present yet did it break out again spreading it self not onely through Judaea the fountain of the mischief but in the very City of Rome it self where whatever is wicked and shameful meets together and is greedily advanced into reputation b H. Eccl. l. 2. c. 2. p. 40. vid. Oros adv Pag. l. 7. c. 4. fol. 293. Eusebius assures us that after our Lords Ascension Pilat according to custom sent an account of him to the Emperour which Tiberius brought before the Senate but they rejected it under pretence that cognizance had been taken of it before it came to them it being a fundamental Law of the Roman State that no new god could be taken in without the Decree of the Senate but that however Tiberius continued his good thoughts of Christ and kindness to the Christians For this he cites the testimony of Tertullian who in his c Apolog. c. 5. p. 6. c. 21. p. 20. Apology presented to the Roman Powers affirms that Tiberius in whose time the Christian Religion entered into the World having received an account from Pilat out of Palestin in Syria concerning the truth of that Divinity that was there brought it to the Senate with the Prerogative of his own vote but that the Senate because they had not before approved of it would not admit it however the Emperour continued of the same mind and threatned punishment to them that accused the Christians And before Tertullian Justin Martyr d Apolog. II. p. 76. speaking concerning the death and sufferings of our Saviour tells the Emperours that they might satisfie themselves in the truth of these things from the Acts written under Pontius Pilat It being customary not only at Rome to keep the Acts of the Senate and the People but for the Governors of Provinces to keep account of what memorable things happened in their Government the Acts whereof they transmitted to the Emperour And thus did Pilat during the Procuratorship of his Province How long these Acts remained in being I know not but in the controversie about Easter we find the Quartodecimans e Ap. Epiph. Haeres L. p. 182. justifying the day on which they observed it from the Acts of Pilat wherein they gloried that they had found the truth Whether these were the Acts of Pilat to which Justin appealed or rather those Acts of Pilat drawn up and published by the command of f E●seb H. Eccl. l. 9. c. 5. p. 350. Maximinus Dioclesians successor in disparagement of our Lord and his Religion is uncertain but the latter of the two far more probable However Pilats Letter to Tiberius or as he is there called Claudis at this day extant in the Anacephalaeosis g Ad calcem ● de Excid u●b Hicros p. 683. of the younger Egesippus is of no great credit though that Author challenges greater antiquity then some allow him being probably contemporary with S. Ambrose and by many from the great conformity of stile and phrase thought to be S. Ambrose himself who with some few additions compiled it out of Josephus But then it is to be considered whether that Anacephalaeosis be done by the same or which is most probable by a much later hand Some other particular passages concerning our Saviour are taken notice of by Gentile Writers the appearance of the Star by Calcidius the murder of the Infants by Macrobius the Eclips at our Saviours Passion by Phlegon Trallianus not to speak of his miracles frequently acknowledged by Celsus Julian and Porphyry which I shall not insist upon VI. IMMEDIATELY after our Lords Ascension from whence we date the next period of the Church the Apostles began to execute the Powers intrusted with them They presently filled up Judas his vacancy by the election of a new Apostle the lot falling upon Matthias and he was numbred with the eleven Apostles Being next endued with power from on high as our Lord had promised them furnished with the miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost they set themselves to preach in places of the greatest concourse and to the faces of their greatest enemies They who but a while before fled at the first approach of danger now boldly plead the cause of their crucified Master with the immediate hazard of their lives And that nothing might interrupt them in this imployment they instituted the Office of Deacons who might attend the inferiour Services of the Church while they devoted themselves to what was more immediately necessary to the good of souls By which prudent course Religion got ground apace and innumerable Converts were daily added to the Faith till a Persecution arising upon S. Stephen's Martyrdom banished the Church out of Jerusalem though this also proved its advantage in the event and issue Christianity being by this means the sooner spread up and down the neighbour Countries The Apostles notwithstanding the rage of the Persecution remained still at Jerusalem onely now and then dispatching some few of their number to confirm and setle the Plantations and to propagate the Faith as the necessities of the Church required And thus they continued for near twelve years together our Lord himself having commanded them not to depart Jerusalem and the parts thereabouts till twelve years after his Ascension as the ancient Tradition mentioned both by a Ap. Euseb H. Eccl. l. 5. c. 18. p. 186. Apollonius and b Stromat l. 6. p. 636. vid. Life of S. Peter Sect. 11. num 5. Clemens Alexandrinus informs us And now they thought it high time to apply themselves to the full execution of that Commission which Christ had given them to go teach and baptize all Nations Accordingly having setled the general affairs and concernments of the Church they betook themselves to the several Provinces of the Gentile World preaching the Gospel to every Nation under Heaven so that even in a literal sense their sound went into all the earth and their words unto the ends of the World Infinite multitudes of people in all Cities and Countries says c Lib. 2. c. 3. p. 4● Eusebius like Corn into a well-filled Granary being brought in by that grace of God that brings salvation And they whose minds were heretofore distempered and over-run with the errour and idolatry of their Ancestors were cured by the Sermons and Miracles of our Lords Disciples and shaking off those chains of Darkness and Slavery which the merciless Daemons had put upon them freely embraced and entertained the knowledge and service of the onely true God the great Creator of the World whom they worshiped according to the holy Rites and Rules of that divine and wisely contrived
The issue was that Gallienus his Party prevailed to let in Theodotus and his Army who seized the Tyrant and sent him to the Emperour who caused him to be strangled in Prison XIII HOW stormy and tempestuous is the Region of this Lower World one Wave perpetually pressing upon the neck of another The Persecution was seconded by a Civil War and a cruel Famine and that no sooner over but a terrible Plague followed close at the heels of it one of the most dreadful and amazing Judgments which God sends upon mankind It over-ran City and Country sweeping away what the fury of the late Wars had left there not having been known saith the Historian a Zosim Histo● l. 1. p. 347. in any Age so great a destruction of mankind This Pestilence which some say b Pomp. L●t in vit Galli p.m. 1235. ●utrop H. Rom. l 9. p. 1924. came first out of Aethiopia began in the reign of Gallus and Volusian and ever since more or less straggled over most parts of the Roman Empire and now kept its fatal residence at Alexandria where by an impartial severity it mowed down both Gentiles and Christians and turned the Paschal solemnity it being then the time c Dionys ib. c. 22. p. 268. of Easter into days of weeping and mourning all places were filled with dying groans and sorrows either for friends already dead or those that were ready to depart it being now as formerly under that great Egyptian Plague and something worse there was a great cry in Egypt for there was not an house where there was not only one but many dead In this sad and miserable time how vastly different was the carriage of the Christians and the Heathens The Christians out of the superabundance of their kindness and charity without any regard to their own health and life boldly ventured into the thickest dangers dayly visiting assisting and ministring to their sick and infected brethren chearfully taking their pains and distempers upon them and themselves expiring with them And when many of those whom they thus attended recovered and lived they died themselves as if by a prodigious and unheard of charity they had willingly taken their diseases upon them and died to save them from death And these the most considerable both of Clergy and People chearfully embracing a death that deserved a title little less then that of Martyrdom They embraced the bodies of the dead closed their eyes laid them out washed and dressed them up in their funeral weeds took them upon their shoulders and carried them to their Graves it not being long before others did the same offices for them The Gentiles on the contrary put off all sense of humanity when any began to fall sick they presently cast them out ran from their dearest friends and relations and either left them half dead in the high-ways or threw them out as soon as they were dead dreading to fall under the same infection which yet with all their care and diligence they could not avoid XIV NOR were these the onely troubles the good man was exercised with he had contests of another nature that swallowed up his time and care Sabellius a Libyan born at Ptolemais a City of Pentapolis had lately started d Dion Epist ad Sex ib. c. 6. p. 252. Ni●●pb l. 6. c. 26. p 419. dangerous notions and opinions about the doctrin of the holy Trinity affirming the Father Son and Holy Ghost to be but one subsistence one person under three several names which in the time of the Old Testament gave the Law under the notion of the Father in the New was made man in the capacity of the Son and descended afterwards upon the Apostles in the quality of the Holy Ghost Dionysius as became a vigilant Pastor of his Flock presently undertakes the man and while he managed the cause with too much eagerness and fervency of disputation he bent the stick too much the other way asserting not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 e Basil ad M●g● Phi●●● Epist XLI p 60. a distinction of Persons but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a difference of Essence and an inequality of Power and Glory For which he is severely censured by S. Basil and some of the Ancients as one of those that mainly opened the gap to those Arrian impieties that after broke in upon the World Though S. Ubi s●pr Basil could not but so far do him right as to say that it was not any ill meaning but onely an over-vehement desire to oppose his adversary that betrayed him into those unwary and inconsiderate assertions Some Bishops of Pentapolis immediately took hold of this and going over to Rome represented his dangerous errours where the case was discussed in a Synod and Letters written to Dionysius about it who in a set Apology answered for himself and declared his sense more explicitly in this controversie as may be seen at large in a De Sentent Dionys Tom. 1. p. 548. c. vid Phot. Cod. CCXXXII col 901. Athanasius who has with infinite pains vindicated our Dionysius his Predecessor as a man sound and orthodox and who was never condemned by the Governours of the Church for impious opinions or that he held those abominable tenets which Arrius broached afterwards And certainly S. Basil might and would have passed a milder censure had he either perused all Dionysius his Writings or remembred how much he concerned himself to clear S. Gregory of Neocaesarea Dionysius his contemporary from the very same charge for which he could not but confess he had given too just occasion XV. NO sooner was this controversie a little over but he was engaged in another b Euseb ibid. c. 24. p. 270. Nepos an Egyptian Bishop lately dead a man eminent for his constancy in the Faith his industry and skill in the holy Scriptures the many Psalms and Hymns he had composed which the Brethren sung in their public Meetings had not long since fallen into the errour of the Millenaries and had published Books to shew that the promises made in the Scriptures to good men were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the sense and opinion of the Jews to be literally understood and that there was to be a thousand years State upon Earth wherein they were to enjoy sensual pleasures and delights Endeavouring to make good his assertions from some passages in S. John's Revelation stiling his Book 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Confutation of Allegorical Expositors This Book was greedily caught up and read by many and advanced into that esteem and reputation that Law and Prophets and the Writings of the Evangelists and Apostles were neglected and thrown aside and the doctrine of this Book cried up as containing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some great and extraordinary mystery concealed before from the World the more Simple and Unwary being taught to disband all sublime and magnificent thoughts of our Lords glorious coming the Resurrection and final
and fellow-Pupil with St. Paul who proved afterwards his mortal enemy but I must confess I find not in all that Epistle the least shadow of probability to countenance that conjecture Antiquity * Epiph. Haer●● XX. p. 27. Doroth Synops de Vit. App. in Bibl. PP Tom. 3. p. makes him probably enough to have been one of the LXX Disciples chosen by our Lord as Co-adjutors to the Apostles in the Ministry of the Gospel and indeed his admirable knowledge in the Christian Doctrine his singular ability to defend the cause of Christs Messiaship against its most acute opposers plainly argue him to have been some considerable time trained up under our Saviours immediate institutions Certain it is that he was a man of great zeal and piety endowed with extraordinary measures of that divine Spirit that was lately shed upon the Church and incomparably furnished with miraculous powers which peculiarly qualified him for a place of honour and usefulness in the Church whereto he was advanced upon this occasion III. THE Primitive Church among the many instances of Religion for which it was famous and venerable was for none more remarkable then their Charity they lived and loved as Brethren were of one heart and one soul and continued together with one accord Love and Charity were the common soul that animated the whole body of Believers and conveyed heat and vital spirits to every part They prayed and worshipped God in the same place and fed together at the same table None could want for they had all in common The rich sold their estates to minister to the necessi●ies of the poor and deposited the money into one common Treasury the care whereof was committed to the Apostles to see distribution made as every ones case and exigency did require But in the exactest harmony there will be some jars and discord heaven onely is free from quarrels and the occasions of offence The Church increasing every day by vast numbers of Converts to the Faith the Apostles could not exactly superintend the disposure of the Churches stock and the making provision for every part and were therefore probably forced to take in the help of others sometimes more and sometimes less to assist in this affair By which means a due equality and proportion was not observed but either through favour and partiality or the oversight of those that managed the matter some had larger portions others less relief then their just necessities called for This begat some present heats and animosities in the first and purest Church that ever was Act. 6.1 the Grecians murmuring against the Hebrews because their Widows were neglected in the daily ministration IV. WHO these Grecians or Hellenists were opposed here to the Hebrews however a matter of some difficulty and dispute it may not be unuseful to enquire The opinion that has most generally obtained is that they were originally Jews born and bred in Grecian or Heathen Countries Joh. 7.35 of the dispersed among the Gentiles the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the stile of the New Testament as also in the Writings of the Fathers being commonly used for the Gentile World who accommodated themselves to their manner of living spake the Greek Language but altogether mixed with Hebraisms and Jewish forms of speech and this called Lingua Hellenistica and used no other Bible but the Greek Translation of the Septuagint Comment de Hellenist Qu. 1 2 3 4 5. praecipue pag. 232. c. vid. etiam inter alios Bez. Camer in loc A notion which Salmasius has taken a great deal of pains to confute by shewing that never any People went under that notion and character that the Jews in what parts of the World soever they were were not a distinct Nation from those that lived in Palestine that there never was any such peculiar distinct Hellenistic Dialect nor any such ever mentioned by any ancient Writer that the Phrase is very improper to express such a mixt Language yea rather that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies one that expresseth himself in better Greek then ordinary as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes one that studies to speak pure Attic Greek Probable therefore it is that they were not of the Hebrew race but Greek or Gentile Proselytes who had either themselves or in their Ancestors deserted the Pagan Superstitions and imbodied themselves into the Jewish Church taking upon them Circumcision and the observation of the Rites of the Mosaic Laws which kind the Jews call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Proselytes of Justice and were now converted to Christianity That there were at this time great numbers of these Proselytes at Jerusalem is evident and strange it were if when at other times they were desirous to have the Gospel preached to them none of them should have been brought over to the Faith Even among the seven made choice of to be Deacons most if not all of whom we may reasonably conclude to have been taken out of these Grecians we find one expresly said to have been a Proselyte of Antioch as in all likelihood some if not all the other might be Proselytes of Jerusalem And thus where ever we meet with the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Grecians in the History of the Apostolic Acts as 't is to be met with in two places more we may Act. 9.29.11.20 and in reason are to understand it So that these Hellenists who spake Greek and used the Translation of the LXX were Jews by Religion and Gentiles by descent with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Gentiles they had the same common Original with the Jews the same common Profession and therefore are not here opposed to Jews which all those might be stiled who embrace Judaism and the Rites of Moses though they were not born of Jewish Ancestors but to the Hebrews who were Jews both by their Religion and their Nation And this may give us some probable account why the Widows of these Hellenists had not so much care taken of them as those of the Hebrews the persons with whom the Apostles in a great measure intrusted the ministration being kinder to those of their own Nation their Neighbours and it may be Kindred then to those who onely agreed with them in the profession of the same Religion and who indeed were not generally so capable of contributing to the Churches Stock as the native Jews who had Lands and Possessions which they sold and laid at the Apostles feet V. THE peace and quiet of the Church being by this means a little ruffled and discomposed the Apostles who well understood how much Order and Unity conduced to the ends of Religion presently called the Church together and told them that the disposing of the Common Stock and the daily providing for the necessities of the Poor however convenient and necessary was yet a matter of too much trouble and distraction to consist with a faithful discharge of the other