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Pantænus
Head of the Catechetical School of Alexandria about 180 (Eusebius,
Hist. eccl.
, V, x), still alive in 193 (Eusebius, Chron.
Abr., 2210). As he
was succeeded by Clement who left Alexandria about 203, the probable date of his
death would be about 200. He was trained in the Stoic philosophy; as a Christian
missionary, he reached India (probably South Arabia), and found there Christians
possessing the Gospel of St. Matthew in Hebrew, which they had received from St.
Bartholomew. All this is given by Eusebius as what was said
(Hist. eccl., V,
xi). Eusebius continues: In his 'Hypotyposes' he [Clement] speaks of Pantænus
by name as his teacher. It seems to me that he alludes to the same person also
in his 'Stromata'.
In the passage of the Stromata
(I, i), which Eusebius
proceeds to quote, Clement enumerates his principal teachers, giving their
nationality but not their names. The last, with whom Eusebius would identify
Pantænus, was a Hebrew of Palestine, greater than all the others [in ability],
whom having hunted out in his concealment in Egypt, I found rest.
These
teachers preserving the true tradition of the blessed doctrine from the Holy
Apostles Peter and James, John and Paul … came, by God's will, even to us
etc.
Against Eusebius's conjecture it may be suggested that a Hebrew of Palestine was
not likely to be trained in Stoic philosophy. In its favour are the facts that
the teacher was met in Egypt, and that Pantænus endeavoured to press the Greek
philosophers into the service of Christianity. It may well be that a mind like
Clement's found rest
in this feature of his teaching.
Eusebius (VI, xiii) says again that Clement in his Hypotyposes
mentioned
Pantænus, and further adds that he gave his opinions and traditions
. The
inference commonly drawn from this statement is that, in the extant fragments of
the Hypotyposes
where he quotes the elders
, Clement had Pantænus in mind;
and one opinion or tradition in particular, assigned to the blessed elder
(Eusebius, Hist. eccl.
, VI, xiv), is unhesitatingly ascribed to Pantænus. But
this is incautious, for we cannot be sure that Clement would have reckoned
Pantænus among the elders; and if he did so, there were other elders whom he had
known (Hist. eccl., VI, xiii). Origen, defending his use of Greek philosophers,
appeals to the example of Pantænus, who benefited many before our time by his
thorough preparation in such things
(Hist. eccl., VI, xix). That Pantænus
anticipated Clement and Origen in the study of Greek philosophy, as an aid to
theology, is the most important fact we know concerning him. Photius (cod. 118)
states, in his account of the Apology for Origen
by Pamphilus and Eusebius
(see PAMPHILUS OF CÆSAREA, SAINT), that they said Pantænus had been a hearer of
men who had seen the Apostles, nay, even had heard them himself. The second
statement may have been a conjecture based upon the identification of Pantænus
with one of the teachers described in Stromata
, I, i, and a too literal
interpretation of what is said about these teachers deriving their doctrine
direct from the Apostles. The first statement may well have been made by Clement;
it explains why he should mention Pantænus in his Hypotyposes
, a book
apparently made up of traditions received from the elders. Pantænus is quoted;
• (a) in the Eclogæ ex Prophetis
(Migne, Clem. Alex.
, II, 723) and
• (b) in the Scholia in Greg. Theolog.
of St. Maximus Confessor.
But these quotations may have been taken from the Hypotyposes
.
The last named in his prologue to Dionys. Areop.
(ed. Corder, p. 36) speaks
casually of his writings, but he merely seems to assume he must have written. A
conjecture has been hazarded by Lightfoot (Apost. Fathers, 488), and followed up
by Batiffol (L'glise naissante
, 3rd ed., 213 sqq.), that Pantænus was the
writer of the concluding chapters of the Epistle to Diognetus
. The chief,
though not the only ground for this suggestion, is that Anastasius Sinaita in
two passages (ed. Migne, pp. 860, 892) singles out Pantænus with two or three
other early Fathers as interpreting the six days of Creation and the Garden of
Eden as figuring Christ and the Church a line of thought pursued in the
fragment.
BARDENHEWER, Gesch. der altkirch. Lit., II, 13 sqq.; HARNACK, Altchrist. Lit., 291 sqq.; TILLEMONT, Hist. ecclés., III, 170 sqq.; CEILLIER, Hist. des aut., II, 237 sqq.; ROUTH, Relig. sac., I, 237 sqq.
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