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Clement of Alexandria
(Properly TITUS FLAVIUS CLEMENS, but known in church history by the former designation to distinguish him from Clement of Rome).
Date of birth unknown; died about the year 215. St. Clement was an early
Greek theologian and head of the catechetical school of Alexandria. Athens is
given as the starting-point of his journeyings, and was probably his birthplace.
He became a convert to the Faith and travelled from place to place in search of
higher instruction, attaching himself successively to different masters: to a
Greek of Ionia, to another of Magna Graecia, to a third of Coele-Syria, after
all of whom he addressed himself in turn to an Egyptian, an Assyrian, and a
converted Palestinian Jew. At last he met Pantaenus in Alexandria, and in his
teaching found rest
.
The place itself was well chosen. It was natural that Christian speculation
should have a home at Alexandria. This great city was at the time a centre of
culture as well as of trade. A great university had grown up under the
long-continued patronage of the State. The intellectual temper was broad and
tolerant, as became a city where so many races mingled. The philosophers were
critics or eclectics, and Plato was the most favoured of the old masters.
Neo-Platonism, the philosophy of the new pagan renaissance, had a prophet at
Alexandria in the person of Ammonius Saccas. The Jews, too, who were there in
very large numbers breathed its liberal atmosphere, and had assimilated secular
culture. They there formed the most enlightened colony of the Dispersion. Having
lost the use of Hebrew, they found it necessary to translate the Scriptures into
the more familiar Greek. Philo, their foremost thinker, became a sort of Jewish
Plato. Alexandria was, in addition, one of the chief seats of that peculiar
mixed pagan and Christian speculation known as Gnosticism. Basilides and
Valentinus taught there. It is no matter of surprise, therefore, to find some of
the Christians affected in turn by the scientific spirit. At an uncertain date,
in the latter half of the second century, a school of oral instruction
was
founded. Lectures were given to which pagan hearers were admitted, and advanced
teaching to Christians separately. It was an official institution of the Church.
Pantaenus is the earliest teacher whose name has been preserved. Clement first
assisted and then succeeded Pantaenus in the direction of the school, about A.D.
190. He was already known as a Christian writer before the days of Pope Victor
(188-199).
About this time he may have composed the Hortatory Discourse to the Greeks
(Protreptikos pros Ellenas) It is a persuasive appeal for the Faith, written in
a lofty strain. The discourse opens with passages which fall on the ear with the
effect of sweet music. Amphion and Arion by their minstrelsy drew after them
savage monsters and moved the very stones; Christ is the noblest minstrel. His
harp and Iyre are men. He draws music from their hearts by the Holy Spirit: nay,
Christ is Himself the New Canticle, whose melody subdues the fiercest and
hardest natures. Clement then proceeds to show the transcendence of the
Christian religion. He constrasts Christianity with the vileness of pagan rites
and with the faint hope of pagan poetry and philosophers. Man is born for God.
The Word calls men to Himself. The full truth is found in Christ alone. The work
ends with a description of the God-fearing Christian. He answers those who urge
that it is wrong to desert one's ancestral religion.
The work entitled Outlines
(Hypotyposeis) is likewise believed to be a
production of the early activity of Clement. It was translated into Latin by
Rufinus under the title Dispositiones
. It was in eight books, but is no longer
extant, though numerous fragments have been preserved in Greek by Eusebius,
Oecumenius, Maximus Confessor, John Moschos, and Photius. According to Zahn, a
Latin fragment, Adumbrationes Clementis Alexandrini in epistolas canonicas
,
translated by Cassiodorus and purged of objectionable passages, represents in
part the text of Clement. Eusebius represents the Outlines
as an abridged
commentary, with doctrinal and historical remarks on the entire Bible and on the
non-canonical Epistle of Barnabas
and Apocalypse of Peter
. Photius, who had
also read it describes it as a series of explanations of Biblical texts
especially of Genesis, Exodus, the Psalms, Ecclesiastes and the Pauline and
Catholic Epistles. He declares the work sound on some points, but adds that it
contains impieties and fables
, such as the eternity of matter, the
creatureship of the Word, plurality of words (Logoi), Docetism, metempsychosis,
etc. Conservative scholars are inclined to believe that Photius has thrown the
mistakes of Clement, whatever they may have been, into undue relief. Clement's
style is difficult, his works are full of borrowed excerpts, and his teaching is
with difficulty reduced to a coherent body of doctrine. And this early work,
being a scattered commentary on Holy Writ, must have been peculiarly liable to
misconstruction. It is certain that several of the more serious charges can rest
upon nothing but mistakes. At any rate, his extant writings show Clement in a
better light.
Other works of his are the Miscellanies
(Stromateis) and The Tutor
(Paidagogos). The Miscellanies
comprise seven entire books, of which the first
four are earlier than The Tutor
. When he had finished this latter work he
returned to the Miscellanies
, which he was never able to finish. The first
pages of the work are now missing. What has been known as the eighth book since
the time of Eusebius is nothing more than a collection of extracts drawn from
pagan philosophers. It is likely, as von Annin has suggested, that Clement had
intended to make use of these materials together with the abridgement of
Theodotus (Excerpts from Theodotus and the Eastern School of Valentinus) and the
Eclogae Propheticae
. Extracts from the Prophets (not extracts, but notes at
random on texts or Scriptural topics) for the continuation of the Miscellanies
.
In the Miscellanies
Clement disclaims order and plan. He compares the work to
a meadow where all kinds of flowers grow at random and, again, to a shady hill
or mountain planted with trees of every sort. In fact, it is a loosely related
series of remaks, possibly notes of his lectures in the school. It is the
fullest of Clement's works. He starts with the importance of philosophy for the
pursuit of Christian knowledge. Here he is perhaps defending his own scientific
labours from local criticism of conservative brethren. He shows how faith is
related to knowledge, and emphasizes the superiority of revelation to philosophy.
God's truth is to be found in revelation, another portion of it in philosophy.
It is the duty of the Christian to neglect neither. Religious science, drawn
from his twofold source, is even an element of perfection, the instructed
Christian - the true Gnostic
is the perfect Christian. He who has risen to
this height is far from the disturbance of passion; he is united to God, and in
a mysterious sense is one with Him. Such is the line of thought indicated in the
work, which is full of digressions.
The Tutor
is a practical treatise in three books. Its purpose is to fit the
ordinary Christian by a disciplined life to become an instructed Christian. In
ancient times the paedagogus was the slave who had constant charge of a boy, his
companion at all times. On him depended the formation of the boy's character,
such is the office of the Word Incarnate towards men. He first summons them to
be HIS, then He trains them in His ways. His ways are temperate, orderly, calm,
and simple. Nothing is too common or trivial for the Tutor's care. His influence
tells on the minute details of life, on one's manner of eating, drinking,
sleeping, dressing, taking recreation, etc. The moral tone of this work is
kindly; very beautiful is the ideal of a transfigured life described at the
close. In the editions of Clement The Tutor
is followed by two short poems,
the second of which, addressed to the Tutor, is from some pious reader of the
work; the first, entitled A Hymn of the Saviour Christ
(Hymnos tou Soteros
Christou), is, in the manuscripts which contain it, attributed to Clement. The
hymn may be the work of Clement (Bardenhewer). or it may be of as early a date
as the Gloria in Excesis (Westcott).
Some scholars see in the chief writings of Clement, the Exhortation
, The
Tutor
, the Miscellanies
, a great trilogy representing a graduated initiation
into the Christian life - belief, discipline, knowledge - three states
corresponding to the three degrees of the neo-Platonic mysteries - purification,
initiation, and vision. Some such underlying conception was doubtless before the
mind of Clement, but it can hardly be said to have been realized. He was too
unsystematic. Besides these more irnportant works, he wrote the beautiful tract,
Who is the rich man who shall be saved? (tis ho sozomenos plousios). It is an
exposition of St. Mark, x, 17-31, wherein Clement shows that wealth is not
condemned by the Gospel as intrinsically evil; its morality depends on the good
or ill use made of it. The work concludes with the narrative of the young man
who was baptized, lost, and again rewon by the Apostle St. John. The date of the
composition cannot be fixed. We have the work almost in its entirety. Clement
wrote HomilieEine Homilie (von griech.„ὁμιλεῖν”, „vertraut miteinander reden”) ist eine Art von Predigt. Während eine Predigt die Großtaten Gottes preist (lat. „praedicare”, „preisen”) und Menschen für den Glauben begeistern will, hat die Homilie lehrhaften Charakter. s on fasting and on evil speaking, and he also used his pen in the
controversy on the Paschal question.
Duchesne (Hist. ancienne de l'Eglise, I, 334 sqq.) thus summarizes the
remaining years of Clement's life. He did not end his life at Alexandria. The
persecution fell upon Egypt in the year 202, and catechumens were pursued with
special intent of law. The catechetical school suffered accordingly. In the
first two books of the Miscellanies
, written at this time, we find more than
one allusion to the crisis. At length Clement felt obliged to withdraw. We find
him shortly after at Caesarea in Cappadocia beside his friend and former pupil
bishop Alexander. The persecution is active there also, and Clement is
fulfilling a ministry of love. Alexander is in prison for Christ's sake, Clement
takes charge of the Church in his stead, strengthens the faithful, and is even
able to draw in additional converts. We learn this from a letter written in 211
or 212 by Alexander to congratulate the Church of Antioch on the election
Asclepiades to the bishopric. Clement himself undertook to deliver the letter in
person, being known to the faithful of Antioch. In another letter written about
215 to Origen Alexander speaks of Clement as of one then dead.
Clement has had no notable influence on the course of theology beyond his
personal influence on the young Origen. His writings were occasionally copied,
as by Hippolytus in his Chronicon
, by Arnobius, and by Theodoret of Cyrus. St.
Jerome admired his learning. Pope Gelasius in the catalogue attributed to him
mentions Clement's works, but adds, they are in no case to be received amongst
us
. Photius in the Bibliotheca
censures a list of errors drawn from his
writings, but shows a kindly feeling towards Clement, assuming that the original
text had been tampered with. Clement has in fact been dwarfed in history by the
towering grandeur of the great Origen, who succeeded him at Alexandria. Down to
the seventeenth century he was venerated as a saint. His name was to be found in
the martyrologies, and his feast fell on the fourth of December. But when the
Roman Martyrology was revised by Pope Clement VIII his name was dropped from the
calendar on the advice of Cardinal Baronius. Benedict XIV maintained this
decision of his predecessor on the grounds that Clement's life was little known
that he had never obtained public cultus in the Church, and that some of his
doctrines were, if not erroneous, at least suspect. In more recent times Clement
has grown in favour for his charming literary temper, his attractive candour,
the brave spirit which made him a pioneer in theology, and his leaning to the
claims of philosophy. He is modern in spirit. He was exceptionally well-read. He
had a thorough knowledge of the whole range of Biblical and Christian literature,
of orthodox and heretical works. He was fond of letters also, and had a fine
knowledge of the pagan poets and philosophers; he loved to quote them, too, and
has thus preserved a number of fragments of lost works. The mass of facts and
citations collected by him and pieced together in his writings is in fact
unexampled in antiquity, though it is not unlikely that he drew at times upon
the florilegia, or anthologies, exhibiting choice passages of literature.
Scholars have found it no easy task to sum up the chief points of Clement's
teaching. As has already been intimated, he lacks technical precision and makes
no pretense to orderly exposition. It is easy, therefore, to misjudge him. We
accept the discriminating judgment of Tixeront. Clement's rule of faith was
sound. He admitted the authority of the Church's tradition. He would be, first
of all, a Christian, accepting the ecclesiastical rule
, but he would also
strive to remain a philosopher, and bring his reason to bear in matters of
religion. Few are they
, he said, who have taken the spoils of the Egyptians,
and made of them the furniture of the Tabernacle.
He set himself, therefore,
with philosophy as an instrument, to transform faith into science, and
revelation into theology. The Gnostics had already pretended to possess the
science of faith, but they were, in fact, mere rationalists, or rather dreamers
of fantastic dreams. Clement would have nothing but faith for the basis of his
speculations. He cannot, therefore, be accused of disloyalty in will. But he was
a pioneer in a diffficult undertaking, and it must be admitted that he failed at
times in his high endeavour. He was careful to go to Holy Scripture for his
doctrine; but he misused the text by his faulty exegesis. He had read all the
Books of the New Testament except the Second Epistle of St. Peter and the Third
Epistle of St. John. In fact
, Tixeront says, his evidence as to the primitive
form of the Apostolic writings is of the highest value.
Unfortunately, he
interpreted the Scripture after the manner of Philo. He was ready to find
allegory everywhere. The facts of the Old Testament became mere symbols to him.
He did not, howerer, permit himself so much freedom with the New Testament.
The special field which Clement cultivated led him to insist on the
difference between the faith of the ordinary Christian and the science of the
perfect, and his teaching on this point is most characteristic of him. The
perfect Christian has an insight into the great mysteries
of man, of nature,
of virtue - which the ordinary Christian accepts without clear insight. Clement
has seemed to some to exaggerate the moral worth of religious knowledge; it must
however be remembered that he praises not mere sterile knowledge, but knowledge
which turns to love. It is Christian perfection that he extols. The perfect
Christian - the true Gnostic whom Clement loves to describe - leads a life of
unalterable calm. And here Clement's teaching is undoubtedly colored by Stoicism.
He is really describing not so much the Christian with his sensitive feelings
and desires under due control, but the ideal Stoic who has deadened his feelings
altogether. The perfect Christian leads a life of utter devotion the love in his
heart prompts him to live always in closest union with God by prayer, to labour
for the conversion of souls, to love his enemies, and even to endure martyrdom
itself.
Clement preceded the days of the Trinitarian controveries. He taught in the Godhead three Terms. Some critics doubt whether he distinguished them as Persons, but a careful reading of him proves that he did. The Second Term of the Trinity is the Word. Photius believed that Clement taught a plurality of Words, whereas in reality Clement merely drew a distinction between the Father's Divine immanent attribute of intelligence and the Personal Word Who is the Son. The Son is eternally begotten, and has the very attributes of the Father. They are but one God. So far, in fact, does Clement push this notion of unity as to seem to approach Modalism. And yet, so loose a writer is he that elsewhere are found disquieting traces of the very opposite error of Subordinationism. These, however, may be explained away. In fact, he needs to be judged, more than writers generally, not by a chance phrase here or there, but by the general drift of his teaching. Of the Holy Ghost he says little, and when he does refer to the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity he adheres closely to the language of Scripture. He acknowledges two natures in Christ. Christ is the Man-God, who profits us both as God and as man. Clement evidently regards Christ as one Person - the Word. Instances of the interchange of idioms are frequent in his writings. Photius has accused Clement of Docetism. Clement, however, clearly admits in Christ a real body, but he thought this body exempt from the common needs of life, as eating and drinking, and the soul of Christ exempt from the movement of the passions, of joy, and of sadness.
EDITIONS
The works of Clement of Alexandria were first edited by P. Victorius
(Florence, 1550). The most complete edition is that of J. Potter, Clementis
Alexandrini opera quae extant omnia
(Oxford, 1715; Venice, 1757), reproduced in
Migne, P.G. VIII, IX. The edition of G. Dindort (Oxford, 1869) is declared
unsatisfactory by competent judges. A new complete edition by O. Stahlin is
appearing in the Berlin Griechisehen christlichen Schriftsteller
, etc. So far
(1908) two volumes have been published: the Protrepticus
and the Paedagogus
(Leipzig, 1905), and the Stromata
(Bks. I -VI, ibid., 1906). The preface to
the first volume (pp. 1-83) contains the best account of the manuscripts and
editions of Clement. Among the separate editions of his works the following are
noteworthy: Hort and Mayor, Miscellanies
, Bk. VII, with English translation
(London, 1902); Zahn, Adumbrationes
in Forschungen zur Geschiehte des
Neutestamentlichen Kanons
, III, and Supplementum Clementinum
(Erlangen, 1884);
Köster, Quis dives salvetur?
(Freiburg, 1893). The last-mentioned work was
also edited by P.M. Barnard in Cambridge Texts and Studies
by W. Wilson (1897),
and translated by him in Early Church Classics
for the S.P.C.K. (London, 1901).
For an English translation of all the writings of Clement see Ante-Nicene
Christian Library (New York).
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