Sainted Gregory (Nazianzus) the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople
Commemorated on January 25
Sainted Gregory (Nazianzus) the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople, an ecumenical father and teacher of the Church, was born into a Christian family of eminent lineage in the year 329, at Arianzos (not far from the city of Cappadocian Nazianzos). His father, likewise a Sainted Gregory, was Bishop of Nazianzos (Comm. 1 January); but of these two father and son, the son is the Saint Gregory Nazianzus encountered in Patristic theology. His mother, Saint Nonna (+ 374, Comm. 5 August), prayed God for a son, having given a vow to dedicate him to the Lord. As was revealed to her in a dream, she accordingly named her first-born Gregory. When the son learned to read, his mother presented him with the Holy Scripture. Saint Gregory received a quite complete and extensive education: after working at home with his uncle Saint Amphylokhios, an experienced teacher of rhetoric, he then studied in the schools of Nazianzos, Caesarea Cappadocia and Alexandria. Then for the finishing touches to his education, the saint set off to Athens. On the way from Alexandria to Hellas [Greek name for Greece] (352), during the time of a terrible storm of many days, he was apprehensive only that "the murderous waters would deprive him of the waters of cleansing". "For twenty days and nights, – relates Saint Gregory, – I lay at the ship's stern, beseeching the merciful God for salvation, and at this perilous time I gave a vow to dedicate myself to God, being saved through this vow".
The saint spent six
years at Athens, and there studied rhetorics, poetics, geometry and astronomy.
His teachers were the reknown pagan rhetoricians Gymorias and Proeresias.
Together with Saint Gregory, there also studied there Saint Basil, the future
Archbishop of Caesarea Cappadocia (+ 379, Comm. 1 January). Their friendship,
formed while still back in school in Caesarea, flourished in a deep spiritual
closeness. But their acquaintance with Julian, the future emperor (361-363) –
and apostate from the Christian faith, soon turned into implacable enmity.
Upon completing his
education, Saint Gregory remained for a certain while at Athens and taught the
rhetoric eloquence of speech. He knew well the pre-Christian pagan philosophy
and literature.
In the year 358 Saint
Gregory quietly quit Athens and returned to his parents at Nazianzos. And here
he at almost 30 years of age received Baptism from his father. Since now it was
for him "become more significant to be a follower of God, than foremost
with the emperor", he vacillated only on which way was to be "the
preference: contemplative or practical".
At the suggestion of
Saint Basil he withdrew into the wilderness, so as to asceticise alongside him.
But at the demand of
his father, Saint Gregory returned to Nazianzos in 361 and received the dignity
of presbyter. Sensing however, that solitude and silent prayer were
immeasurably closer to his liking than pastoral activity, Saint Gregory again
hastened into the wilderness to Saint Basil. There in the wilderness he
strengthened in spirit, found the wherewithal to return to his flock and
properly do his duty. And there soon befell Saint Gregory the hard task of
reconciling the bishop with his flock, which condemned their pastor for signing
an ambiguous interpretation of the dogmas of the faith. Saint Gregory gave the
flock time for expression of feelings first, and then he convinced his father
to openly acknowledge his mistake. After this, and uttering a sermon on the
need for reconciliation, Saint Gregory accomplished his intent. Sainted Basil
the Great made Saint Gregory bishop of the city of Sasima, but in order to
assist his dying father, Saint Gregory remained at Nazianzos, and for a certain
while after the death of his father he guided the flock of this city.
Upon the death of the
Constantinople patriarch Valentus in the year 378, the Antioch Council invited
Saint Gregory to help the Constantinople Church, which at this time moreso than
at others was ravaged by heretics. Having received the consent of Saint Basil
the Great, Saint Gregory came to Constantinople upon the Patriarchal throne. In
the year 379 he began to serve and preach in a not-large house church of his
kinsmen. He named this church "Anastasis" ("Voskresenie" or
"Resurrection"), believing that in this small church he would begin
to resurrect Orthodoxy. Heretics ruled everywhere – whether they be Arians or
Appolinarians. And the more loudly resounded his preaching, the more fully
increased the gathering in church, and by this more bitterly grew the
opposition of the heretics. On the night of Pascha 21 April 379, when Saint
Gregory was making Baptism of the newly-illumined, a mob of armed heretics
burst into the church and showered an hail of rocks upon the Orthodox, killing
one bishop and wounding Saint Gregory. But the fortitude and mildness of the
saint were his best armour, and his words regathered the Orthodox.
The compiled works of
Saint Gregory – discourses, letters, verses – all show, that he strove to be
a worthy preacher of the truth of Christ. A gift of words was bestown him, and
the saint sought to offer it in gift to God – the Word: ""This gift
offer I up to my God, this gift I do dedicate to Him: – this alone, is what I
have remaining as my riches; I gave up all else at the command of the Spirit;
everything that I had, I gave in exchange for the pearl of great price. Only in
words do I master it, as a servant of the Word; never intentionally would I
wish to disdain this wealth, I esteem it, I set value by it, I am comforted by
it more, than others are comforted by all the treasures of the world. It – is
the companion of all my life, a good counselor and converser; a guide on the
way to Heaven and a fervent co-ascetic". In order to worthily preach the
Word of God, the saint assiduously prepared and revised his works.
In five Sermons –
"Discourses on Theology", dealing with those inclined towards the
verbose reasonings of Eunomios, Saint Gregory first of all gives a precise
definition, who it is from whom and when that they can theologise. Only those
who are experienced can properly reason about God, those successful at
contemplation and, foremost of all, pure in soul and body, or in utmost measure
cleansed of self. To reason about God properly is possible only for one who
enters into it with fervour and reverence. Explaining, that God has concealed
His Essence from mankind, Saint Gregory demonstrates, that "by means of
flesh it is impossible to view mental objects without admixture of the
corporeal". To theologise talking about God in a positive sense is
possible only when we become free from the external impressions of things and
from their affects, when our guide – the mind, does not adhere to impure
transitory images. Answering the Eunomians, who would presuppose by means of
logical speculation to grasp at the Essence of God, the saint declared that man
perceives God, when he is commensurate in form with the Divine Principle, i.e.
when the mind co-unites with the commensurate Essence. Furthermore, the example
of the Old Testament patriarchs and prophets and also the Apostles has
demonstrated, that for earthly man the Essence of God is incomprehensible.
Saint Gregory cited by way of example the futile sophistry of Eunomios: "God
begat the Son either through His will, or contrary to will. If He begat
contrary to will, then He underwent constraint. If by His will, then the Son is
the Son of His intent".
Confuting suchlike
reasoning, Saint Gregory points out the harm done by it to man: "Thou
thyself, who speaketh so thoughtlessly, hast thou issued forth by intent or not
by the intent of thy father? If not by intent, then also thy father underwent
compulsion in it. From whom? To demonstrate this in nature thou cannot: it
would favour chasteness. And if by intent, then on account of a few syllables
thou dost deprive thyself of thy father; wherein thou dost make thyself a son
by self intent, rather than of thy father". Saint Gregory then turns
himself to Holy Scripture, with particular attention examining a place, where
it points out the Divine Nature of the Son of God. The repetitive
interpretations of Saint Gregory on Holy Scripture are devoted to revealing the
thought, that the Divine power of the Saviour was actualised even when on
account of the Salvation of mankind He took upon Himself an impaired human
nature. But another place in these Sermons of Saint Gregory is occupied by
polemics against the Eunomians for their blaspheming of the Holy Spirit.
Closely examining
everything that is said in the Gospel about the Third Person of the Most Holy
Trinity, the saint refutes the heresy of Eunomios, which rejected the Divinity
of the Holy Spirit. He comes to two fundamentally posited results. First, in
reading Holy Scripture, it is necessary to reject blind literalism and to study
so as to perceive its spiritual sense. Second, in the Old Testament the Holy
Spirit operated hiddenly. In the New Testament "the Holy Spirit doth
reside with us and in most evident form doth disclose Itself before us. As long
as they did not acknowledge God the Father, they could not properly preach
about the Son, and as long as they did not accept the Son, they could not,
expressing it somewhat boldly, additionally burden us with the Holy Spirit. The
Divinity of the Holy Spirit – is a sublime subject. Here before us is a mass
of testimony. Christ is born – the Holy Spirit precedes this; Christ is
baptised – the Spirit witnesses to this; Christ works miracles – the Spirit
collaborates; Christ ascends – the Spirit comes in place of Him. And what
indeed is great and Divine, that He is not capable of? What Name, appertaining
to Divinity, does not apply to Him, except for UnBegotten and Begotten?...I am
amazed, when I see such a richness of titles, – I tremble when I consider,
which Name it is they do blaspheme, they who do so revolt against the
Spirit!"
The content of the
Sermons of Saint Gregory does not consist in this alone. He wrote also: five
laudatory tracts, ten interpretations of feastdays, two discourses of reproach
against Julian the Apostate – "two pillars, on which is indelibly written
the impiety of Julian for posterity", and preachings on other themes. In
all, 45 sermons of Saint Gregory have been preserved. The letters of the saint
compare with his best theological works. All of them are masterfully elaborated
while yet brief, for the most part. In his hymns as in everything, Saint
Gregory lived for Christ. "If the lengthy tracts of the heretics, – be
indeed new psalters, at variance with David, and – the pretty verses they
honour be as a third testament: then we also shalt sing psalms, and begin to
write much and compose poetic metres", – said the saint. About his poetic
gift the saint wrote thus: "I – am an organ of the Lord and sweetly by intricacy
of song of the MostHigh I do glorify the King: all atremble before Him".
The fame of the
Orthodox preacher spread through East and West. But the saint lived in the very
capital just as though he lived still in the wilderness – "his food was
food of the wilderness; his clothing – whatever necessary; his making of
rounds was without pretense, and being in proximity of the court – he sought
nothing from the court". During a time of sickness the saint was given a
shock. One whom he reckoned as his friend, the philosopher Maximos, was
consecrated in place of Saint Gregory at Constantinople. Struck by the
ingratitude of Maximos, the saint decided to resign the cathedra, but his
faithful flock restrained him from it. The people threw the usurper out of the
city. On 24 November 380 the holy emperor Theodosius arrived in the capital
and, in enforcing his decree against the heretics, the chief church was
returned to the Orthodox, with Saint Gregory solemnly making entrance. Soon an
attempt on the life of Saint Gregory was in the offing, but the one who was to
be the assassin instead appeared before the saint with tears of repentance.
In the year 381 at
the Second OEcumenical Council, Saint Gregory was confirmed in the dignity of
Constantinople Patriarch. Upon the death of the Antioch Patriarch Meletios,
Saint Gregory presided at the Council. Hoping to reconcile the West with the
East, he offered to recognise Paulinos as Antioch Patriarch. But with the
arrival of those who earlier had acted against Saint Gregory on the side of
Maximos – particularly Egyptian and Macedonian bishops, they did not want to
acknowledge the saint as Patriarch of Constantinople. Saint Gregory decided to
sacrifice himself for the peace of the Church: "Let me be as the Prophet
Jonah! I was guilty for the storm, but I would sacrifice myself for the
salvation of the ship. Grab hold and throw me... I was not happy when I
ascended the throne, and gladly would I descend it". Having explained to
the emperor about his wish to quit the capital, Saint Gregory appeared again at
the Council, in a farewell address asking it to let him depart in peace.
Upon his return to
his native region, Saint Gregory concerned himself about the incursion of
Appolinarian heretics into the Nazianzos flock, and he established there as
bishop the pious Eulalios, while he himself withdrew into the solitude of
Arianzos so dear to his heart. Not forsaking the wilderness, the saint with
zeal for the truth of Christ continued to affirm Orthodoxy through his letters
and verses. In the year 389 he died, on 25 January, being honoured by the
Church with the title "Theologian" bestown also on that beloved
disciple of Christ – the holy Evangelist and Apostle John.
"I want to speak
boldly and forcefully, so that ye may be made the best, so that ye may turn
from flesh to spirit, so that in right manner ye progress in spirit", –
said Saint Gregory the Theologian.
In his works Saint
Gregory, just like that other Theologian Saint John, directs everything towards
the Praeternal Word. The Monk John Damascene (Comm. 4 December), in the
first part of his book "Exposition on the Faith", followed the lead
of Saint Gregory the Theologian.
The body of Saint
Gregory was buried at Nazianzos. In the year 950 the holy relics were
transferred to Constantinople into the church of the Holy Apostles. Later on
part of the relics were transferred to Rome. Tradition has preserved the
features of the saint as: "a face humble, pale, eyebrows standing up
thick, a meek glance, beard not long, but thick and broad". His
contemporaries already called the archpastor a saint. The Orthodox Church,
terming Saint Gregory a second Theologian and mystery-insightful luminous
writer of the Holy Trinity, recourses thus to him in the songs of
Divine-services: "By the theology of thy tongue rhetoric wrangling is
undone, O glorious one, thou hast adorned the Church with the fabric of
Orthodoxy woven from on high: rejoice, O father, thou utmost mind
Theological". [from Kondak].
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.