The most prominent Christian theologian and exegete of the third century, Origen was also an influential teacher. In the famed Thanksgiving Address, one of his students—traditionally thought to be Gregory Thaumaturgus, later bishop of Cappadocia—delivered an emotionally charged account of his tutelage under Origen in Roman Palestine. Although it is one of the few personal narratives by a Christian author to have survived from the period, the Address is more often cited than read closely. But as David Satran demonstrates, this short work has much to teach us today. At its center stands the question of moral formation, anchored by the image of Origen himself, and Satran’s careful analysis of the text sheds new light on higher education in the early church as well as the intimate relationship between master and disciple.
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David Satran is the Leeds Senior Lecturer in the Department of Comparative Religion at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
"This book is the first that I know of to do proper justice to the Address of Thanksgiving to Origen by Gregory Thaumaturgus, a work easy to ignore or underestimate because of its elaborate rhetorical format. Satran gives it a proper in-depth treatment. The result is an admirable study of this neglected work, drawing out all its varied riches in a very readable mode."—John Dillon, Regius Professor Emeritus of Greek, Trinity College, Dublin
Acknowledgments,
Introduction,
1. Providence, Eros, and Constraint,
2. Dialectic and the Training of the Mind,
3. Moral Formation and the Path to Scripture,
4. Paradise and the Cave,
5. Paideia, Loss, and Prospect,
Notes,
Bibliography,
Index,
Providence, Eros, and Constraint
Tu m'hai di servo tratto a libertate per tutte quelle vie, per tutt' i modi che di ciò fare avei la potestate.
You drew me out from slavery to freedom, by all those paths, by all those means, that were within your power.
The opening pages of the Address are so highly stylized, so unmistakably the product of an author trained in the mechanics of the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition, that the reader might despair of any possible encounter with the living relationship between teacher and student. This conclusion would be natural and yet mistaken. Gregory's text, while deeply inflected by the training he had received and so successfully assimilated, is at the same time one of our very rare, documented points of entry to the intimacy of ancient educational practice. Nowhere is this more tangible or poignant than in his evocation of the earliest stages of the relationship with Origen: the unpredictable path that led him from his home in northern Asia Minor to the coast of Palestine, the unlikely nature of their initial encounters, the unforeseen emotional depth of Gregory's attachment. Indeed, there is an opportunity to turn what might be perceived as a textual cul-desac, the highly rhetorical framing of his initial encounter with Origen, into a privileged means of access. Behind Gregory's language, traditional and formulaic in its basic features, lies invaluable testimony to intimacy and its cultural expression.
PROVIDENCE
Having weighed the constraints of silence (1.1–2.20) against the offense of ingratitude (3.21–30), Gregory reluctantly embarks on his "thanksgiving address" (logos charisterios [3.31]), and from the outset issues of agency and freedom come to the fore. Deeply conscious of the need to offer hymns and praises of gratitude toward the Deity, yet overwhelmed by the concomitant impossibility of doing so in a fitting manner, Gregory describes God as the "leader and cause of all things" (3.32). Turning to a more accessible and appropriate object of thanksgiving, the Savior and the "first-begotten Word," Gregory assigns the corresponding title of "creator and pilot of all things" (4.35). These functions and concomitant titles would appear to be neither accidentally nor loosely attributed; rather they have been chosen to emphasize the guidance and control that the Deity, in its different aspects, exercises over both the natural world and human affairs.
Descending the scale of divine hierarchy, Gregory ultimately focuses on his very own angelic escort. Here, the theme of divine oversight is both strengthened and personalized: "appointed by some great judgment to manage and to raise and to guide me from childhood" (4.40), this guardian figure served as Gregory's own "personal pedagogue" (4.43). In a proleptic summary of the circumstances that were to bring him ultimately to Caesarea Maritima and to Origen, Gregory acknowledges the unfailing intervention of this angelic guide:
Aside from his being good in every respect altogether, he was my tutor and guardian. ... Both then and still today he rears and trains and leads [me] by the hand; and above all else he arranged to introduce me to this man [Origen]. ... With truly divine and wise foresight he [the angelic guide] brought us together and contrived this meeting as my salvation. I can only suppose that he foresaw this earlier, from my first birth and upbringing. (4.44–46)
Gregory's experience is, of course, deeply rooted in a broader cultural ambience: the acute sense of the presence of an invisible guide, the confidence in an unseen but no less real companion, were staples of widely variant forms of late ancient spirituality. Gregory's angel is repeatedly described in terms drawn from the realm of training and education: "personal pedagogue," "nourisher and protector," "divine pedagogue and true guardian," "good guide and protector."
No less significant, however, is the emphasis on the elements of "foresight" and "management" (oikonomia), which lend a providential atmosphere to the passage. This theme represents in many respects the infrastructure of the entire opening movement of Gregory's narrative. As his personal story unfolds (5.48–72), relating the unlikely chain of events that brought him into the sphere of Origen in Caesarea, Gregory also deepens his reflection on the guiding hand of divine providence. This alone could make sense of the series of personal circumstances that were to lead him from birth and childhood in a distant land plagued by "misguided ancestral customs" (5.48) to an unforeseen and unintended destination, bathed in the light of the "true sun" (6.73). Following a prolonged description (5.50–54) of his youthful awakening to the power of reason (logos), human and divine — which scholars continue to find perplexingly ambiguous — Gregory offers a very few, but enticing details of his early education. Following the elementary stages of study, and through the concerns and efforts of his mother, he had been sent to study rhetoric in order that eventually he might too acquire that profession. In this manner, the chain of events had been set in progress. At this stage, Gregory's "divine pedagogue and true protector, ever wakeful" (5.57), takes matters under control: the rhetorician (and teacher of the Latin language) to whom Gregory has been entrusted suddenly finds himself moved, "by a more divine inspiration" (5.61), to employ his estimable powers of persuasion in order to encourage his charge to study Roman law (5.58–61). In this manner, Gregory's teacher too had become an unwitting agent of the divine plan concerning the student's ultimate destination.
A tone of forcefulness and purpose pulses throughout this account of divinely inspired progression from rhetoric to the study of Roman law: "When I became a student of these very laws, whether of my own will or not, somehow bonds already had been forged" (5.62). While the ultimate consequence couldn't have been appreciated by Gregory or those around him, the geographical effect was immediate: transfer to the city of Berytus, present-day Beirut, on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean —"most Roman in character and with a highly regarded school for the study of the law." This was quickly to prove a further and essential component of the divine scheme. For only several years earlier (233/4?) a very differently motivated journey had transpired further south along the Mediterranean coast: under circumstances not completely transparent to the modern historian, though certainly far from irenic, Origen had departed his native city of Alexandria in order to take up duties as teacher and presbyter in the city of Caesarea on the coast of Roman Palestine. While these relocations, to Berytus and Caesarea respectively, had closed the distance between the unknowing student and his divinely appointed teacher, the two men would have remained, nevertheless, at a significant remove from each other. One further strategem was required, or in Gregory's words, "How then was this too contrived?" (5.65).
If concern regarding Gregory's education and professional career, on the one hand, and the bitter ecclesiastical strife surrounding Origen over questions of episcopal authority, on the other, had sufficed to this point, providence now had set the wheels of the imperial administration in motion: the governor of Roman Palestine abruptly summoned Gregory's brother-in-law, an expert in legal affairs himself, to report to his service in Caesarea. As soon as he had settled there, he sent for his wife, Gregory's sister, and the military consort who escorted her to the administrative capital in order to rejoin her husband also served as a traveling companion for her brother (5.65–67). To the vicarious agencies of Gregory's legal career and the ecclesiastical politics of Alexandria had been added the designs of the Roman governor of Palestine. (Historians might have wished that Gregory had been just a bit more generous at this stage of his narrative in sharing the names of the actors involved and a few other precious details — yet here too, as previously observed, we encounter a characteristic reticence, ordained perhaps by the restraints of the literary genre or by the influence of the man who was to become Gregory's spiritual master.)
However unknowing Gregory may have been at the time, none of this occurred accidentally or by chance; indeed, the purposiveness of all these events and the necessity of all those involved would become starkly apparent in retrospect: "Everything, then, was moving us: good will toward our sister, our studies, and even the soldier, since he too should be mentioned" (5.69). And while the actual events may have been "manifest," the underlying mechanism and its salvific implications remained "hidden" (5.70) to Gregory. Ultimately, however, Gregory was to recognize both the higher purpose and the true agent behind this remarkable concatenation of decisions and determinations:
It was not the soldier, then, but some divine fellow-traveler, a good guide and guardian. ... He was the maker and mover of all things until by every contrivance he would bind [us] with this cause of so many good things for us. ... And when, having come through so much, he entrusted the management to this man, the divine messenger perhaps rested here as well, not from weariness or fatigue, for the race of divine servants is untiring, but because he had entrusted [this] to a person who would satisfy as far as possible all providence and care. (5.71–72)
"This man," the unnamed Origen, is more than simply the destination to which the angelic consort safely had delivered his charge — he was to become the next (and final) stage of stewardship. The "divine fellow-traveler" and "good guide and guardian" now transferred to "this man" the very management (oikonomia) with which he had been charged, entrusting him with the providence (pronoia) and care (epimeleia) for his charge. Gregory had, at long last and by means of every possible divine mechanism, been united with Origen. For Gregory, the outcome was to be as beneficent as it had been unforeseen and yet inevitable: "truly the first, the most precious of all days for me, if it need be said, when the true sun first began to rise on me" (6.73) — the beginning of his new life.
Within this extended narrative of angelic guidance and providential care, questions arise concerning the element of choice and Gregory's own measure of freedom: his expressions of unlimited gratitude to the Deity and his attendant angel have necessary implications for our understanding of the degree of autonomy exercised by the human agent himself. Gregory's account heightens this concern through the use of decidedly determinative language: the protective spirit "rears and trains and leads [me] by the hand" (4.44); his own acts followed "more under constraint than willingly" (5.50); the decision to study in Berytus was truly "willing and unwilling" (hekon kai akon) and the result of "bonds [that] had already been forged" (5.62); by means of the closely coordinated train of events "everything was moving us" (5.69), though we remained "blind and unknowing" (5.70); finally, under the guidance of that angelic consort who had been the "the maker and mover of all things" (5.71), Gregory was "entrusted" (5.72) to Origen.
We might well expect the preeminent motif of divine providence to recede, once Gregory has arrived in Caesarea and entered the gravitational field of Origen. (Having heard him preach? Actively recruited by another student or, perhaps, by Origen himself? Once again, our composition is frustratingly taciturn.) And so it does, as Origen takes center stage, and the presence of both divine and angelic actors is reduced and modulated in the central portion of Gregory's text. Yet the closely attendant concern over the limitations of human agency and the underlying question of Gregory's exercise of free will had not been resolved by his arrival in Caesarea and entrance into the circle of Origen. Quite the opposite, in fact: it could be argued that it was there, under the influence and tutelage of Origen, that Gregory was to experience the most acute and significant curtailment of his freedom. To appreciate this is to enter into the very special nature of the relationship between the student and his master.
PRESENCE
The initial encounter with Origen — the first real day of Gregory's life — was far from idyllic. Though retrospectively enshrined as "the most precious of all days ... when the true sun first began to rise," Gregory records the beginning of the relationship as both emotionally charged and filled with misgiving. Indeed, his tersely vivid description of those early days with Origen suggest extreme uneasiness: "At first, like wild animals or fish or birds that have fallen into the nets of hunters or fishermen, we attempted to slip away and to escape, desiring to withdraw from him either to Berytus or to our fatherland" (6.73). While this may have been the aftereffect of the long journey to Palestine or simply the shock of Caesarea and the young man's consequent disorientation, Gregory is quite explicit about the desire to flee his new teacher: we can safely assume that the encounter with Origen must have been, alternately, one of deep fascination and equally profound discomfort. But escaping Origen was no easy matter: "He contrived by every stratagem to bind us to [him], he employed every manner of argument, leaving no stone unturned, as the saying goes, and exercised all his powers" (6.74). The image of the student as a trapped bird, fish, or beast is striking, though not peculiar to our text, and in a rather distinct homiletic context Origen himself was to exploit the motif in order to describe the conditions under which the soul of the catechumen "changes and transforms itself and becomes better and more godly than it was formerly." Gregory's acute initial sense of being "trapped" or "bound" is arresting, nonetheless, and will become both more prominent and significant in the course of his account.
The full implications of Origen's forceful tutelage continue to emerge in the subsequent account of his introductory exhortation to his students. The subject would seem to have been a highly traditional call to take up the life of philosophical inquiry: "The only ones to live the life that truly is proper to rational beings are those who strive to live uprightly, and who know first themselves for who they are and next the really good things, which a person ought to pursue, and the truly bad things, which one must flee" (6.75). Ignorant of the unique endowment of reason (logos), the majority of men wander like "brute beasts" (alogoi); seeking material goods, fame, and physical well-being above all else, they develop only the skills and pursue only the professions likely to bring them such rewards. Indeed, Origen continues, the attainment of true piety (eusebeia), piety toward the "ruler of all things," is impossible for anyone who does not choose to lead a philosophical life (6.76–77, 79). The exhortation was unrelenting: "I cannot recount now how many such words he offered urging us (protrepon) to practice philosophy, not one day alone but for most of those first days that we remained with him" (6.78), Gregory concludes.
But it was neither the torrent of words nor the arguments themselves that left the deepest impression; for while the message itself may have been somewhat commonplace, this new teacher certainly was not. Indeed, the effect of Origen's protreptic discourse on the superiority of reason (logos) was hardly limited to the realm of strictly rational demonstration. Speaking forcefully and with unusual artistry, Origen's address "shook" the new students, and the peculiar power of his words ultimately proved well-nigh irresistible: "We were struck by his discourse from the outset, as if by a dart, for it was a mixture of a seductive grace with persuasion and a certain constraint (ananke)" (6.78). Gregory proceeds to intensify the sense of vacillation and uncertainty that underlies his powerlessness as he falls under Origen's control: "On the one hand, we resisted devoting ourselves to the life of philosophy, still not entirely persuaded; and, on the other hand, for some unknown reason we were unable to depart, but were constantly drawn to him by his words, as if under certain still greater constraints" (6.78). Whatever lingering doubts or unwillingness remained, however, the students ultimately could not withstand the sheer force of Origen's presence, as he continues to press them to accept the life of philosophy, explaining that only in that way could they attain true piety. Gregory can no longer resist:
Until, as he poured out more and more arguments like these one after another, he finally rendered us completely immobile through his arts, like those who have been bewitched (gegoeteumenous), supported in his words, I know not how, by some divine power. (6.80)
Excerpted from In the Image of Origen by David Satran. Copyright © 2018 The Regents of the University of California. Excerpted by permission of UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS.
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Condition: New. The most prominent Christian theologian and exegete of the third century, Origen was also an influential teacher. In the famed Thanksgiving Address, one of his students delivered an emotionally charged account of his tutelage in Roman Palestine. This analysis of the text sheds new light on higher education in the early Church. Series: Transformation of the Classical Heritage. Num Pages: 224 pages. BIC Classification: HRCC1. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 229 x 152. . . 2018. Hardcover. . . . . Seller Inventory # V9780520291232
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Hardback. Condition: New. The most prominent Christian theologian and exegete of the third century, Origen was also an influential teacher. In the famed Thanksgiving Address, one of his students-often thought to be Gregory Thaumaturgus, later bishop of Cappadocia-delivered an emotionally charged account of his tutelage in Roman Palestine. Although it is one of the few "personal" accounts by a Christian author to have survived from the period, the Address is more often cited than read closely. But as David Satran demonstrates, this short work has much to teach us today. At its center stands the question of moral character, anchored by the image of Origen himself, and David Satran's careful analysis of the text sheds new light on higher education in the early Church as well as the intimate relationship between master and disciple. Seller Inventory # LU-9780520291232
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