1
January 379 A.D. Basil
the Great Dies
Saint Basil the Great, Latin Basilius (born ad 329, Caesarea Mazaca, Cappadocia—died January 1, 379, Caesarea;
Western feast day January 2; Eastern feast day January 1), early Church Father who defended the orthodox faith
against the heretical Arians. As bishop of Caesarea he
wrote several works on monasticism, theology, and canon
law. He was declared a saint soon after his death.
Early life and ecclesiastical
career.
Basil was born of a
distinguished family of Caesarea, the capital of Cappadocia, which was a
province of Asia Minor of special importance in the 4th century due to its
position on the military road between Constantinople and Antioch. The family had
been Christian since the days of the persecutions of Christians, which ended
early in the 4th century. One of Basil’s uncles was a bishop, as later were two
of his brothers (Gregory and Peter of Sebaste). He received a literary education, however, which would have fitted him to follow in his
father’s footsteps as lawyer and orator. He studied at Caesarea and
Constantinople and, finally (c.
351–356), at Athens, where he developed his friendship with Gregory of Nazianzus. On returning
home he began a secular career, but the influence of his pious sister Macrina,
later a nun and abbess, confirmed his earlier inclination to the
ascetic life. With a group of friends, he established a monastic settlement on
the family estate at Annesi in Pontus. In 357 he made an extensive tour of the monasteries of Egypt, and in 360
he assisted the Cappadocian bishops at a synod at Constantinople. He had been
distressed by the general acceptance of the Arian Creed of the Council of
Ariminum the previous year and especially by the fact that his own bishop, Dianius of Caesarea, had supported it. Shortly before the
death of Dianius (362), Basil was reconciled to him and later was ordained presbyter (priest) to assist Dianius’ successor, the new convert Eusebius. Basil’s abilities and prestige, as well as
Eusebius’ dislike of asceticism, led to tension between them, and Basil
withdrew to Annesi. In 365 he was called back to Caesarea, when the church was
threatened by the Arian emperor Valens. His
theological and ecclesiastical policy thereafter aimed to unite against Arianism the former semi-Arians and the supporters of Nicaea under the formula “three persons (hypostases)
in one substance (ousia),”
thus preserving both unity and the necessary distinctions in the theological
concept of the godhead. On Eusebius’ death in 370, Basil became his successor,
although he was opposed by some of the other bishops in the province.
Anti-Arian activities.
As bishop of
Caesarea, Basil was metropolitan (ecclesiastical primate of a
province) of Cappadocia, and his own diocese covered the great estates of eastern Cappadocia, where he was assisted by
a number of “country bishops” (chorepiscopi).
He also founded charitable institutions to aid the poor, the ill, and
travellers. When Valens passed through Caesarea in 371, Basil dramatically defied his demand for
submission. But in 372 Valens divided the province, and Basil considered this a
personal attack, since Anthimus of Tyana thus became metropolitan for the
cities of western Cappadocia. Basil countered by installing supporters in some
of the border towns—Gregory of Nazianzus at Sasima and his own brother Gregory
at Nyssa. This tactic was only partially successful, but Basil escaped the
attacks that Valens launched on orthodox bishops elsewhere. Meanwhile, Basil
tried to secure general support for the former semi-Arian Meletius as bishop of
Antioch (one of the five major patriarchates of the early church), against Paulinus,
the leader of the strict Nicene
minority, since he feared that the extreme Nicenes at this point were lapsing
into Sabellianism, a heresy exaggerating the oneness of God. During Basil’s lifetime, however, this
was prevented by the recognition of Paulinus by the bishops of Alexandria and—in spite of a series
Basil’s numerous
and influential writings stemmed from his practical concerns as monk, pastor, and church leader. The Longer Rules and Shorter
Rules (for monasteries) and other ascetic
writings distill the experience that began at Annesi and continued in his
supervision of the monasteries of Cappadocia: they were to exert strong
influence on the monastic life of Eastern Christianity. A notable feature is Basil’s strong
preference for the monastic life, in which brotherly love can be practiced, as
opposed to that of the hermit. Basil’s preserved sermons deal mainly with
ethical and social problems. One of the best known, the Address to Young Men, defends
the study of pagan literature by Christians (Basil himself made
considerable critical use of Greek philosophical thought). In the Hexaëmeron (“Six
Days”), nine Lenten sermons on the days of creation, Basil speaks of the varied
beauty of the world as reflecting the splendour of God. Against Eunomius defends the
deity of the Son against an extreme Arian thinker, and On
the Holy Spirit expounds the deity of the spirit implied in the
church’s tradition, though not previously formally defined. Basil is most characteristically
revealed in his letters, of which more than 300 are preserved. Many deal with
daily activities; others are, in effect, short treatises on theology or ethics;
several of his Canonical
Epistles, decisions on points of discipline, have become part of
the canon law of the Eastern Orthodox
Church. The extent of Basil’s actual contribution to the magnificent series
of eucharistic prayers known as the Liturgy of St. Basil is
uncertain. But at least the central prayer of consecration (setting apart the
bread and wine) reflects his spirit and was probably in use at Caesarea in his
own lifetime.
Basil’s health was
poor, perhaps because of the rigours of his ascetic life. He died soon after
Valens’ death in the Battle of Adrianople had opened the way for the victory of
Basil’s cause. Vigorous and firm and sure of his own position, in his own time
he seems to have been admired rather than loved, even by his intimates. But he
was widely mourned and was soon numbered among the saints.
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