
Gregory, a Cappadocian nobleman surnamed the
Theologian on account of his extraordinary learning in the
sacred sciences, was born at Nazianzum in Cappadocia. Together
together with Saint Basil, Gregory went through a complete course of
studies at Athens after which he applied himself to the study of the
Sacred Scriptures. The two friends retired to a monastery where they
spent several years over the Scripture, interpreting it not according
to their own views, but by the sense and authority of the earlier
Fathers. Owing to their reputation for learning and virtue, they were
called to the ministry of preaching the Gospel and became the
spiritual Fathers of many souls. After Gregory had returned home he
was made Bishop of Sasima and afterwards administered the Church of
Nazianzum. Being called later on to govern the Church of
Constantinople which was infected with heresy, he converted it to the
Catholic Faith. This success, far from gaining him everyone’s
love, excited the envy of a great many. This caused a great division
among the bishops which led the Saint to resign his See. He said to
them those words of the Prophet: “If this tempest be stirred up on
my account, cast me into the sea that you may cease to be tossed.”
He then returned to Nazianzum and, having got
Eulalius made Bishop of that Church, he devoted his whole time to the
contemplation of divine things and to the writing treatises upon
them. Gregory wrote much, both in prose and verse, and in all there
is admirable piety and eloquence. In the opinion of learned and holy
men, there is nothing to be found in his writings which is not
conformable to true piety and Catholic truth, or which anyone could
reasonably call in question. He was a most vigorous defender of the
Consubstantiality of the Son of God. No-one ever led a more saintly
life than he. No-one was to be compared to him for eloquence. He led
the life of a monk, spending his whole time in solitude, occupied in
writing and reading. Having reached a venerable old age, he died
during the reign of the emperor Theodosius, and entered into the
blessed life of Heaven.
Dom Prosper Guéranger:
Side-by-side with Athanasius, a
second Doctor of the Church comes forward at this glad Season,
offering to the Risen Jesus the tribute of his learning and
eloquence. It is Gregory of Nazianzam — the friend of Basil, the
great Orator, the admirable Poet, whose style combines energy of
thought with a remarkable richness and ease of expression, the one
among all the Gregories who has merited and received the glorious
name of Theologian on account of the soundness of his teachings, the
sublimity of his ideas and the magnificence of his diction. Holy
Church exults at being able to offer us so grand a Saint during
Easter Time, for no one has spoken more eloquently than he on the
Mystery of the Pasch. Let us listen to the commencement of his second
Sermon for Easter, and then judge for ourselves:
“‘I will stand upon my
watch,’ says the
admirable Prophet Habacuc (Habacuc ii. 1). I, also, on this day, will
imitate him. I will stand on the power and knowledge granted me by
the favour of the Holy Ghost, that I may consider and know what is to
be seen, and what will be told to me. And I stood and I watched, and
lo! a man ascending to the clouds. And he was of exceeding high
stature, and his face was the face of an Angel, and his garment was
dazzling as a flash of lightning. And he lifted up his hand towards
the East and cried out with a loud voice. His voice was as the voice
of a trumpet, and around him stood, as it were, a multitude of the
heavenly host, and he said: ‘Today
is salvation given to both the visible and the invisible world.
Christ has risen from the dead: do ye also rise. Christ has returned
to himself: do ye also return. Christ has freed Himself from the
tomb: be ye set free from the bonds of sin. The gates of Hell are
opened and death is crushed. The old Adam is laid aside and the new
one is created. Oh if there be a new creature formed in Christ, be ye
made new!’
Thus did he speak. Then did the
other Angels repeat the hymn they first sang when Christ was born on
this Earth and appeared to us men: ‘Glory
be to God in the highest, and peace on earth, in men of good will!’
I join my voice with them, and speak these things to you —oh that I
could have an Angel’s
voice to make myself heard throughout the whole Earth! It is the
Pasch of the Lord! The Pasch! — in honour of the Trinity, I say it
a third time: the Pasch! This is our Feast of Feasts, our Solemnity
of Solemnities. It is as far above all the rest — not only of those
which are human and earthly, but of those even which belong to Christ
and are celebrated on His account — yes, it as far surpasses them
all as the sun surpasses the stars. Commencing with yesterday, how
grand was the Day with its torches and lights!... But how grander and
brighter is all on this morning! Yesterday’s
light was but the harbinger of the great Light that was to rise. It
was but as foretaste of the joy that was to be given to us. But today
we are celebrating the Resurrection itself, not merely in hope, but
as actually risen, and drawing the whole Earth to itself.”
This is a sample of the fervid
eloquence with which our Saint preached the Mysteries of Faith. He
was a man of retirement and contemplation. The troubles of the world
in which he had been compelled to live damped his spirits. The
duplicity and wickedness of men fretted his noble heart. And leaving
to another the perilous honour of the See of Constantinople which he
had reluctantly accepted a very short time previously, he flew back
to his dear solitude, there to enjoy his God and the study of holy
things. And yet, during the short period of his episcopal government,
notwithstanding all the obstacles that stood in his way, he confirmed
the Faith that had been shaken and left behind him a track of light,
which continued even to the time when Saint John Chrysostom was
chosen to fill the troubled Chair of Byzantium.
* * * * *
We salute you,
glorious Doctor of the Church, on whom both East and West have
conferred the title of Theologian! Illumined by the rays of the
glorious Trinity, you gave us to share in the light thus imparted to
you, and a brighter was never granted to mortal eye. In you was
verified that saying of our Saviour: “Blessed are the clean of
heart, for they will see God” (Matthew v. 8). The purity of your
soul prepared you to receive the divine light, and your inspired pen
has transmitted to your fellow-men something of your own soul’s
enraptured knowledge. Obtain for us the gift of Faith which puts the
creature in communication with its God. Obtain for us the gift of
Understanding, which makes the creature relish what it believes. The
object of all your labours was to guard the Faithful against the
seductive wiles of heresy by putting before them the magnificence of
the divine dogmas. Oh pray for us that we may avoid the snares of
false doctrines and have our eye ever fixed on the ineffable light of
the Mysteries of Faith, for, as Saint Peter tells us, it is as a
lamp in a dark place, that shines until the day dawn, and until the
Day-Star arises in our hearts (2 Peter i. 19).
Both East and West
honour you as one of the sublimest preachers of divine Truth. Obtain,
by your powerful intercession, that East and West may be once more
united in the one Fold and under the one Shepherd, before our Risen
Jesus returns to our Earth to separate the cockle from the good seed,
and lead back to Heaven the Church, His Spouse and our Mother, out of
whose pale there is no salvation.
Help us, during
this Season, to contemplate the glories of our dearest Resuscitated.
Oh for something of the holy enthusiasm for this Pasch which
inebriated you with its joys and inspired you with such glowing
eloquence! Jesus, the Conqueror of Death, was the object of your
fervent affections even from your childhood. And when old age came,
your heart beat with love for Him. Pray for us that we too may
persevere in His service, that His divine Mysteries may ever be our
grandest joy, that this year’s
Pasch may ever abide in our souls, that the renovation it has brought
us may be visible in the rest of our lives, and that it may, in each
successive year of its return, find us attentive and eager to receive
its graces until the eternal Easter comes with its endless joy.
Also on this day according to the ROMAN
MARTYROLOGY:
At
Rome, St. Hermas, mentioned by the blessed Apostle St. Paul in his
Epistle to the Romans. Generously sacrificing himself, he became an
offering acceptable to God and adorned with virtues took his
departure for the heavenly kingdom.
In
Persia, three hundred and ten holy martyrs.
At
Caglio, on the Via Flaminia, the passion of St. Gerontius, bishop of
Cervia.
In
the castle of Windisch, the decease of St. Beatus, confessor.
At
Constantinople, the translation of the Apostle St. Andrew and the
Evangelist St. Luke, out of Achaia, and of Timothy, a disciple of the
blessed Apostle St. Paul, from Ephesus. The body of St. Andrew, long
after, was conveyed to Amalfi where it is honoured by the pious
concourse of the faithful. From his tomb continually issues a liquid
which heals diseases.
At
Rome, also the translation of St. Jerome, priest and doctor of the
Church, from Bethlehem of Judaea to the Basilica of St. Mary of the
Manger.
At
Bari in Apulia, the translation likewise of the holy bishop Nicholas,
from Myra, a town of Lycia.
And in other places, many other holy martyrs,
confessors and virgins.
Thanks
be to God.