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Origen

Origen of Alexandria[a] (c. 185 – c. 253),[9] also known as Origen Adamantius,[b] was an early Christian scholar,[12] ascetic,[13] and theologian who was born and spent the first half of his career in Alexandria. He was a prolific writer who wrote roughly 2,000 treatises in multiple branches of theology, including textual criticism, biblical exegesis and hermeneutics, homiletics, and spirituality. He was one of the most influential and controversial figures in early Christian theology, apologetics, and asceticism.[13][14] He has been described as "the greatest genius the early church ever produced".[15]

Origen
Representation of Origen writing, from a manuscript of In numeros homilia XXVII, c. 1160
Bornc. 185 AD
Diedc. 253 AD (aged c. 69)
Probably Tyre, Phoenice
Alma materCatechetical School of Alexandria[1]
Notable workContra Celsum
De principiis
RelativesLeonides of Alexandria (father)
EraAncient philosophy
Hellenistic philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolNeoplatonism
Alexandrian school
Main interests
Notable ideas

Origen sought martyrdom with his father at a young age but was prevented from turning himself in to the authorities by his mother. When he was eighteen years old, Origen became a catechist at the Catechetical School of Alexandria. He devoted himself to his studies and adopted an ascetic lifestyle. He came into conflict with Demetrius, the bishop of Alexandria, in 231 after he was ordained as a presbyter by his friend, the bishop of Caesarea, while on a journey to Athens through Palestine. Demetrius condemned Origen for insubordination and accused him of having castrated himself and of having taught that even Satan would eventually attain salvation, an accusation which Origen vehemently denied.[16][17] Origen founded the Christian School of Caesarea, where he taught logic, cosmology, natural history, and theology, and became regarded by the churches of Palestine and Arabia as the ultimate authority on all matters of theology. He was tortured for his faith during the Decian persecution in 250 and died three to four years later from his injuries.

Origen was able to produce a massive quantity of writings because of the patronage of his close friend Ambrose of Alexandria, who provided him with a team of secretaries to copy his works, making him one of the most prolific writers in all of antiquity. His treatise On the First Principles systematically laid out the principles of Christian theology and became the foundation for later theological writings.[18] He also authored Contra Celsum, the most influential work of early Christian apologetics,[19] in which he defended Christianity against the pagan philosopher Celsus, one of its foremost early critics. Origen produced the Hexapla, the first critical edition of the Hebrew Bible, which contained the original Hebrew text as well as four different Greek translations of it, and one Greek transliteration of the Hebrew, all written in columns, side by side. He wrote hundreds of homilies covering almost the entire Bible, interpreting many passages as allegorical. Origen taught that, before the creation of the material universe, God had created the souls of all the intelligent beings. These souls, at first fully devoted to God, fell away from him and were given physical bodies. Origen was the first to propose the ransom theory of atonement in its fully developed form, and he also significantly contributed to the development of the concept of the Trinity. Origen hoped that all people might eventually attain salvation, but was always careful to maintain that this was only speculation. He defended free will and advocated Christian pacifism.

Origen is considered by some Christian groups to be a Church Father;[20][21][22][23] he does not have this status in Orthodox Christianity. He is widely regarded as one of the most influential Christian theologians.[24] His teachings were especially influential in the east, with Athanasius of Alexandria and the three Cappadocian Fathers being among his most devoted followers.[25] Argument over the orthodoxy of Origen's teachings spawned the First Origenist Crisis in the late fourth century, in which he was attacked by Epiphanius of Salamis and Jerome but defended by Tyrannius Rufinus and John of Jerusalem. In 543, Emperor Justinian I condemned him as a heretic and ordered all his writings to be burned. The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 may have anathematized Origen, or it may have only condemned certain heretical teachings which claimed to be derived from Origen. His teachings on the pre-existence of souls were rejected by the Church.[26]

Life

Early years

Almost all information about Origen's life comes from a lengthy biography of him in Book VI of the Ecclesiastical History written by the Christian historian Eusebius (c. 260 – c. 340).[27] Eusebius portrays Origen as the perfect Christian scholar and as a literal saint.[27] Eusebius, however, wrote this account almost fifty years after Origen's death, and had access to few reliable sources on Origen's life, especially his early years.[27] Anxious for more material about his hero, Eusebius recorded events based only on unreliable hearsay evidence, and frequently made speculative inferences about Origen based on the sources he had available.[27] Nonetheless, scholars can reconstruct a general impression of Origen's historical life by sorting out the parts of Eusebius's account that are accurate from those that are inaccurate.[28]

Origen was born in either 185 or 186 AD in Alexandria.[25][29][30] Porphyry called him "a Greek, and educated in Greek literature".[31] According to Eusebius, Origen's father was Leonides of Alexandria, a respected professor of literature and also a devout Christian who practised his religion openly (and later a martyr and saint with a feast day of April 22 in the Catholic church).[32][33] Joseph Wilson Trigg deems the details of this report unreliable, but admits that Origen's father was certainly at least "a prosperous and thoroughly Hellenized bourgeois".[33][failed verification] According to John Anthony McGuckin, Origen's mother, whose name is unknown, may have been a member of the lower class who did not have the right of citizenship.[32] It is likely that, on account of his mother's status, Origen was not a Roman citizen.[34] Origen's father taught him about literature and philosophy,[35] and also about the Bible and Christian doctrine.[35][36] Eusebius states that Origen's father made him memorize passages of scripture daily.[37] Trigg accepts this tradition as possibly genuine, given Origen's ability as an adult to recite extended passages of scripture at will.[37] Eusebius also reports that Origen became so learned about the holy scriptures at an early age that his father was unable to answer his questions.[38][39]

In 202, when Origen was "not yet seventeen", the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus ordered Roman citizens who openly practised Christianity to be executed.[32][40] Origen's father Leonides was arrested and thrown in prison.[25][32][40] Eusebius reports that Origen wanted to turn himself in to the authorities so that they would execute him as well,[25][32] but his mother hid all his clothes and he was unable to go to the authorities since he refused to leave the house naked.[25][32] According to McGuckin, even if Origen had turned himself in, it is unlikely that he would have been punished, since the emperor was only intent on executing Roman citizens.[32] Origen's father was beheaded,[25][32][40] and the state confiscated the family's entire property, leaving them impoverished.[32][40] Origen was the eldest of nine children,[32][40] and as his father's heir, it became his responsibility to provide for the whole family.[32][40]

When he was eighteen years old, Origen was appointed as a catechist at the Catechetical School of Alexandria.[38] Many scholars have assumed that Origen became the head of the school,[38] but according to McGuckin, this is highly improbable and it is more likely that he was simply given a paid teaching position, perhaps as a "relief effort" for his destitute family.[38] While employed at the school, he adopted the ascetic lifestyle of the Greek Sophists.[38][41][42] He spent the whole day teaching[38] and would stay up late at night writing treatises and commentaries.[38][41] He went barefoot and only owned one cloak.[41] He did not drink alcohol and ate a simple diet[43] and he often fasted for long periods.[43][41] Although Eusebius goes to great lengths to portray Origen as one of the Christian monastics of his own era,[38] this portrayal is now generally recognized as anachronistic.[38]

According to Eusebius, as a young man, Origen was taken in by a wealthy Gnostic woman,[44] who was also the patron of a very influential Gnostic theologian from Antioch, who frequently lectured in her home.[44] Eusebius goes to great lengths to insist that, although Origen studied while in her home,[44] he never once "prayed in common" with her or the Gnostic theologian.[44] Later, Origen succeeded in converting a wealthy man named Ambrose from Valentinian Gnosticism to orthodox Christianity.[19][44] Ambrose was so impressed by the young scholar that he gave Origen a house, a secretary, seven stenographers, a crew of copyists and calligraphers, and paid for all of his writings to be published.[19][44]

Sometime when he was in his early twenties, Origen sold the small library of Greek literary works which he had inherited from his father for a sum which netted him a daily income of four obols.[44][41][42] He used this money to continue his study of the Bible and of philosophy.[44][41] Origen studied at numerous schools throughout Alexandria,[44] including the Platonic Academy of Alexandria,[45][44] where he was a student of Ammonius Saccas.[46][19][44][47][48] Eusebius claims that Origen studied under Clement of Alexandria,[43][25][49] but according to McGuckin, this is almost certainly a retrospective assumption based on the similarity of their teachings.[43] Origen rarely mentions Clement in his own writings,[43] and when he does, it is usually to correct him.[43]

Alleged self-castration

 
 
Eusebius claims in his Ecclesiastical History that, as a young man, Origen secretly paid a physician to surgically castrate him, a claim which affected Origen's reputation for centuries,[50] as demonstrated by these fifteenth-century depictions of Origen castrating himself.

Eusebius claims that, as a young man, following a literal reading of Matthew 19:12, in which Jesus is presented as saying "there are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuch for the sake of the kingdom of heaven",[51] Origen either castrated himself or had someone else castrate him in order to ensure his reputation as a respectable tutor to young men and women.[43][41][52][53] Eusebius further alleges that Origen privately told Demetrius, the bishop of Alexandria, about the castration and that Demetrius initially praised him for his devotion to God on account of it.[43] Origen, however, never mentions anything about having castrated himself in any of his surviving writings,[43][54] and in his exegesis of this verse in his Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, written near the end of life, he strongly condemns any literal interpretation of Matthew 19:12,[43] asserting that only an idiot would interpret the passage as advocating literal castration.[43]

Since the beginning of the twentieth century, some scholars have questioned the historicity of Origen's self-castration, with many seeing it as a wholesale fabrication.[55][56] Trigg states that Eusebius's account of Origen's self-castration is certainly true, because Eusebius, who was an ardent admirer of Origen, yet clearly describes the castration as an act of pure folly, would have had no motive to pass on a piece of information that might tarnish Origen's reputation unless it was "notorious and beyond question."[41] Trigg sees Origen's condemnation of the literal interpretation of Matthew 19:12 as him "tacitly repudiating the literalistic reading he had acted on in his youth."[41]

In sharp contrast, McGuckin dismisses Eusebius's story of Origen's self-castration as "hardly credible", seeing it as a deliberate attempt by Eusebius to distract from more serious questions regarding the orthodoxy of Origen's teachings.[43] McGuckin also states, "We have no indication that the motive of castration for respectability was ever regarded as standard by a teacher of mixed-gender classes".[43] He adds that Origen's female students (whom Eusebius lists by name) would have been accompanied by attendants at all times, meaning that Origen would have had no good reason to think that anyone would suspect him of impropriety.[43] Henry Chadwick argues that, while Eusebius's story may be true, it seems unlikely, given that Origen's exposition of Matthew 19:12 "strongly deplored any literal interpretation of the words".[57] Instead, Chadwick suggests, "Perhaps Eusebius was uncritically reporting malicious gossip retailed by Origen's enemies, of whom there were many."[57] However, many noted historians, such as Peter Brown and William Placher, continue to find no reason to conclude that the story is false.[58] Placher theorizes that, if it is true, it may have followed an episode in which Origen received some raised eyebrows while privately tutoring a woman.[58]

Travels and early writings

class=notpageimage|
Map of the Mediterranean showing locations associated with Origen

In his early twenties Origen became less interested in work as a grammarian[59] and more interested in operating as a rhetor-philosopher.[59] He gave his job as a catechist to his younger colleague Heraclas.[59] Meanwhile, Origen began to style himself as a "master of philosophy".[59] Origen's new position as a self-styled Christian philosopher brought him into conflict with Demetrius, the bishop of Alexandria.[59] Demetrius, a charismatic leader who ruled the Christian congregation of Alexandria with an iron fist,[59] became the most direct promoter of the elevation in status of the bishop of Alexandria;[60] prior to Demetrius, the bishop of Alexandria had merely been a priest who was elected to represent his fellows,[61] but after Demetrius, the bishop was seen as clearly a rank higher than his fellow priests.[61] By styling himself as an independent philosopher, Origen was reviving a role that had been prominent in earlier Christianity[60] but which challenged the authority of the now-powerful bishop.[60]

Meanwhile, Origen began composing his massive theological treatise On the First Principles,[61] a landmark book which systematically laid out the foundations of Christian theology for centuries to come.[61] Origen also began travelling abroad to visit schools across the Mediterranean.[61] In 212 he travelled to Rome – a major center of philosophy at the time.[61] In Rome, Origen attended lectures by Hippolytus of Rome and was influenced by his logos theology.[61] In 213 or 214 the governor of Arabia sent a message to the prefect of Egypt requesting him to send Origen to meet with him so that he could interview him and learn more about Christianity from its leading intellectual.[61] Origen, escorted by official bodyguards,[61] spent a short time in Arabia with the governor before returning to Alexandria.[62]

In the autumn of 215 the Roman Emperor Caracalla visited Alexandria.[63] During the visit, the students at the schools there protested and made fun of him for having murdered his brother Geta[63] (died 211). Caracalla, incensed, ordered his troops to ravage the city, execute the governor, and kill all the protesters.[63] He also commanded them to expel all the teachers and intellectuals from the city.[63] Origen fled Alexandria and traveled to the city of Caesarea Maritima in the Roman province of Palestine,[63] where the bishops Theoctistus of Caesarea and Alexander of Jerusalem became his devoted admirers[63] and asked him to deliver discourses on the scriptures in their respective churches.[63] This effectively amounted to letting Origen deliver homilies, even though he was not formally ordained.[63] While this was an unexpected phenomenon, especially given Origen's international fame as a teacher and philosopher,[63] it infuriated Demetrius, who saw it as a direct undermining of his authority.[63] Demetrius sent deacons from Alexandria to demand that the Palestinian hierarchs immediately return "his" catechist to Alexandria.[63] He also issued a decree chastising the Palestinians for allowing a person who was not ordained to preach.[64] The Palestinian bishops, in turn, issued their own condemnation, accusing Demetrius of being jealous of Origen's fame and prestige.[65]

 
While in Jericho, Origen bought an ancient manuscript of the Hebrew Bible which had been discovered "in a jar",[65] a discovery which prefigures the later discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the twentieth century.[65] Shown here: a section of the Isaiah scroll from Qumran.

Origen obeyed Demetrius's order and returned to Alexandria,[65] bringing with him an antique scroll he had purchased at Jericho containing the full text of the Hebrew Bible.[65] The manuscript, which had purportedly been found "in a jar",[65] became the source text for one of the two Hebrew columns in Origen's Hexapla.[65] Origen studied the Old Testament in great depth;[65] Eusebius even claims that Origen learned Hebrew.[66][67] Most modern scholars regard this claim as implausible,[66][68] but they disagree over how much Origen actually knew about the language.[67] H. Lietzmann concludes that Origen probably only knew the Hebrew alphabet and not much else,[67] whereas R. P. C. Hanson and G. Bardy argue that Origen had a superficial understanding of the language but not enough to have composed the entire Hexapla.[67] A note in Origen's On the First Principles mentions an unknown "Hebrew master",[66] but this was probably a consultant, not a teacher.[66]

 
Dutch illustration by Jan Luyken (1700), showing Origen teaching his students

Origen also studied the entire New Testament,[65] but especially the epistles of the apostle Paul and the Gospel of John,[65] the writings which Origen regarded as the most important and authoritative.[65] At Ambrose's request, Origen composed the first five books of his exhaustive Commentary on the Gospel of John,[69] He also wrote the first eight books of his Commentary on Genesis, his Commentary on Psalms 1–25, and his Commentary on Lamentations.[69] In addition to these commentaries, Origen also wrote two books on the resurrection of Jesus and ten books of Stromata (miscellanies).[69] It is likely that these works contained much theological speculation,[70] which brought Origen into even greater conflict with Demetrius.[71]

Conflict with Demetrius and removal to Caesarea

Origen repeatedly asked Demetrius to ordain him as a priest, but Demetrius continually refused.[72][73][19] In around 231, Demetrius sent Origen on a mission to Athens.[70][74] Along the way, Origen stopped in Caesarea,[70][74] where he was warmly greeted by the bishops Theoctistus of Caesarea and Alexander of Jerusalem, who had become his close friends during his previous stay.[70][74] While he was visiting Caesarea, Origen asked Theoctistus to ordain him as a priest.[19][70] Theoctistus gladly complied.[75][73][74] Upon learning of Origen's ordination, Demetrius was outraged and issued a condemnation declaring that Origen's ordination by a foreign bishop was an act of insubordination.[73][76][74]

Eusebius reports that as a result of Demetrius's condemnations, Origen decided not to return to Alexandria and instead to take up permanent residence in Caesarea.[76] John Anthony McGuckin, however, argues that Origen had probably already been planning to stay in Caesarea.[77] The Palestinian bishops declared Origen the chief theologian of Caesarea.[16] Firmilian, the bishop of Caesarea Mazaca in Cappadocia, was such a devoted disciple of Origen that he begged him to come to Cappadocia and teach there.[78]

Demetrius raised a storm of protests against the bishops of Palestine and the church synod in Rome.[77] According to Eusebius, Demetrius published the allegation that Origen had secretly castrated himself,[77] a capital offense under Roman law at the time[77] and one which would have made Origen's ordination invalid, since eunuchs were forbidden from becoming priests.[77] Demetrius also alleged that Origen had taught an extreme form of apokatastasis, which held that all beings, including even Satan himself, would eventually attain salvation.[16] This allegation probably arose from a misunderstanding of Origen's argument during a debate with the Valentinian Gnostic teacher Candidus.[16] Candidus had argued in favor of predestination by declaring that the Devil was beyond salvation.[16] Origen had responded by arguing that, if the Devil is destined for eternal damnation, it was on account of his actions, which were the result of his own free will.[79] Therefore, Origen had declared that Satan was only morally reprobate, not absolutely reprobate.[79]

Demetrius died in 232, less than a year after Origen's departure from Alexandria.[77] The accusations against Origen faded with the death of Demetrius,[80] but they did not disappear entirely[81] and they continued to haunt him for the rest of his career.[81] Origen defended himself in his Letter to Friends in Alexandria,[16] in which he vehemently denied that he had ever taught that the Devil would attain salvation[16][17][82] and insisted that the very notion of the Devil attaining salvation was simply ludicrous.[16]

Work and teaching in Caesarea

It was like a spark falling in our deepest soul, setting it on fire, making it burst into flame within us. It was, at the same time, a love for the Holy Word, the most beautiful object of all that, by its ineffable beauty attracts all things to itself with irresistible force, and it was also love for this man, the friend and advocate of the Holy Word. I was thus persuaded to give up all other goals ... I had only one remaining object that I valued and longed for – philosophy, and that divine man who was my master of philosophy.

— Theodore, Panegyric, a first-hand account of what listening to one of Origen's lectures in Caesarea was like[83]

During his early years in Caesarea, Origen's primary task was the establishment of a Christian School;[84][85] Caesarea had long been seen as a center of learning for Jews and Hellenistic philosophers,[84] but until Origen's arrival, it had lacked a Christian center of higher education.[84] According to Eusebius, the school Origen founded was primarily targeted towards young pagans who had expressed interest in Christianity[18][85] but were not yet ready to ask for baptism.[18][85] The school therefore sought to explain Christian teachings through Middle Platonism.[18][86] Origen started his curriculum by teaching his students classical Socratic reasoning.[83] After they had mastered this, he taught them cosmology and natural history.[83] Finally, once they had mastered all of these subjects, he taught them theology, which was the highest of all philosophies, the accumulation of everything they had previously learned.[83]

With the establishment of the Caesarean school, Origen's reputation as a scholar and theologian reached its zenith[84] and he became known throughout the Mediterranean world as a brilliant intellectual.[84] The hierarchs of the Palestinian and Arabian church synods regarded Origen as the ultimate expert on all matters dealing with theology.[80] While teaching in Caesarea, Origen resumed work on his Commentary on John, composing at least books six through ten.[87] In the first of these books, Origen compares himself to "an Israelite who has escaped the perverse persecution of the Egyptians."[84] Origen also wrote the treatise On Prayer at the request of his friend Ambrose and Tatiana (referred to as the "sister" of Ambrose), in which he analyzes the different types of prayers described in the Bible and offers a detailed exegesis on the Lord's Prayer.[88]

 
Julia Avita Mamaea, the mother of the Roman emperor Severus Alexander, summoned Origen to Antioch to teach her philosophy.[19]

Pagans also took a fascination with Origen.[83] The Neoplatonist philosopher Porphyry heard of Origen's fame[83] and traveled to Caesarea to listen to his lectures.[83] Porphyry recounts that Origen had extensively studied the teachings of Pythagoras, Plato, and Aristotle,[83][89] but also those of important Middle Platonists, Neopythagoreans, and Stoics, including Numenius of Apamea, Chronius, Apollophanes, Longinus, Moderatus of Gades, Nicomachus, Chaeremon, and Cornutus.[83][89] Nonetheless, Porphyry accused Origen of having betrayed true philosophy by subjugating its insights to the exegesis of the Christian scriptures.[83][90] Eusebius reports that Origen was summoned from Caesarea to Antioch at the behest of Julia Avita Mamaea, the mother of Roman Emperor Severus Alexander, "to discuss Christian philosophy and doctrine with her."[91]

In 235, approximately three years after Origen began teaching in Caesarea, Alexander Severus, who had been tolerant towards Christians, was murdered[92] and Emperor Maximinus Thrax instigated a purge of all those who had supported his predecessor.[92] His pogroms targeted Christian leaders[92] and, in Rome, Pope Pontianus and Hippolytus of Rome were both sent into exile.[92] Origen knew that he was in danger and went into hiding in the home of a faithful Christian woman named Juliana the Virgin,[92] who had been a student of the Ebionite leader Symmachus.[92] Origen's close friend and longtime patron Ambrose was arrested in Nicomedia, and Protoctetes, the leading priest in Caesarea, was also arrested.[92] In their honor, Origen composed his treatise Exhortation to Martyrdom,[92][93] which is now regarded as one of the greatest classics of Christian resistance literature.[92] After coming out of hiding following Maximinus's death, Origen founded a school of which Gregory Thaumaturgus, later bishop of Pontus, was one of the pupils. He preached regularly on Wednesdays and Fridays, and later daily.[80][94]

Later life

Sometime between 238 and 244, Origen visited Athens, where he completed his Commentary on the Book of Ezekiel and began writing his Commentary on the Song of Songs.[95] After visiting Athens, he visited Ambrose in Nicomedia.[95] According to Porphyry, Origen also travelled to Rome or Antioch, where he met Plotinus, the founder of Neoplatonism.[96] The Christians of the eastern Mediterranean continued to revere Origen as the most orthodox of all theologians,[97] and when the Palestinian hierarchs learned that Beryllus, the bishop of Bostra and one of the most energetic Christian leaders of the time, had been preaching adoptionism (the belief that Jesus was born human and only became divine after his baptism),[97] they sent Origen to convert him to orthodoxy.[97] Origen engaged Beryllus in a public disputation, which went so successfully that Beryllus promised only to teach Origen's theology from then on.[97] On another occasion, a Christian leader in Arabia named Heracleides began teaching that the soul was mortal and that it perished with the body.[98] Origen refuted these teachings, arguing that the soul is immortal and can never die.[98]

In c. 249, the Plague of Cyprian broke out.[99] In 250, Emperor Decius, believing that the plague was caused by Christians' failure to recognise him as divine,[99] issued a decree for Christians to be persecuted.[99][18][98] This time Origen did not escape.[18][98] Eusebius recounts how Origen suffered "bodily tortures and torments under the iron collar and in the dungeon; and how for many days with his feet stretched four spaces in the stocks".[100][101][98] The governor of Caesarea gave very specific orders that Origen was not to be killed until he had publicly renounced his faith in Christ.[98] Origen endured two years of imprisonment and torture,[98] but obstinately refused to renounce his faith.[18][102] In June 251, Decius was killed fighting the Goths in the Battle of Abritus, and Origen was released from prison.[98] Nonetheless, Origen's health was broken by the physical tortures enacted on him,[18][103] and he died less than a year later at the age of sixty-nine.[18][103] A later legend, recounted by Jerome and numerous itineraries, places his death and burial at Tyre, but little value can be attached to this.[104]

Works

 
Imaginative portrayal of Origen from "Les Vrais Portraits Et Vies Des Hommes Illustres" by André Thévet

Exegetical writings

Origen was an extremely prolific writer.[105][106][107][108] According to Epiphanius, he wrote a grand total of roughly 6,000 works over the course of his lifetime.[109][110] Most scholars agree that this estimate is probably somewhat exaggerated.[109] According to Jerome, Eusebius listed the titles of just under 2,000 treatises written by Origen in his lost Life of Pamphilus.[109][111][112] Jerome compiled an abbreviated list of Origen's major treatises, itemizing 800 different titles.[109]

By far the most important work of Origen on textual criticism was the Hexapla ("Sixfold"), a massive comparative study of various translations of the Old Testament in six columns:[113] Hebrew, Hebrew in Greek characters, the Septuagint, and the Greek translations of Theodotion (a Jewish scholar from c. 180 AD), Aquila of Sinope (another Jewish scholar from c. 117–138), and Symmachus (an Ebionite scholar from c. 193–211).[113][114] Origen was the first Christian scholar to introduce critical markers to a Biblical text.[115] He marked the Septuagint column of the Hexapla using signs adapted from those used by the textual critics of the Great Library of Alexandria:[115] a passage found in the Septuagint that was not found in the Hebrew text would be marked with an asterisk (*)[115] and a passage that was found in other Greek translations, but not in the Septuagint, would be marked with an obelus (÷).[115]

 
Diagram showing the inter-relationship between various significant ancient versions and recensions of the Old Testament (some identified by their siglum). LXX here denotes the original septuagint.

The Hexapla was the cornerstone of the Great Library of Caesarea, which Origen founded.[115] It was still the centerpiece of the library's collection by the time of Jerome,[115] who records having used it in his letters on multiple occasions.[115] When Emperor Constantine the Great ordered fifty complete copies of the Bible to be transcribed and disseminated across the empire, Eusebius used the Hexapla as the master copy for the Old Testament.[115] Although the original Hexapla has been lost,[116] the text of it has survived in numerous fragments[115] and a more-or-less complete Syriac translation of the Greek column, made by the seventh-century bishop Paul of Tella, has also survived.[116] For some sections of the Hexapla, Origen included additional columns containing other Greek translations;[115] for the Book of Psalms, he included no less than eight Greek translations, making this section known as Enneapla ("Ninefold").[115] Origen also produced the Tetrapla ("Fourfold"), a smaller, abridged version of the Hexapla containing only the four Greek translations and not the original Hebrew text.[115]

According to Jerome's Epistle 33, Origen wrote extensive scholia on the books of Exodus, Leviticus, Isaiah, Psalms 1–15, Ecclesiastes, and the Gospel of John.[109] None of these scholia have survived intact,[109] but parts of them were incorporated into the Catenaea, a collection of excerpts from major works of Biblical commentary written by the Church Fathers.[109] Other fragments of the scholia are preserved in Origen's Philocalia and in Pamphilus of Caesarea's apology for Origen.[109] The Stromateis were of a similar character, and the margin of Codex Athous Laura, 184, contains citations from this work on Romans 9:23; I Corinthians 6:14, 7:31, 34, 9:20–21, 10:9, besides a few other fragments. Origen composed homilies covering almost the entire Bible. There are 205, and possibly 279, homilies of Origen that are extant either in Greek or in Latin translations.[c]

 
Two sides of the Papyrus Bodmer VIII, an early New Testament fragment from the third or fourth century AD containing the Epistle of Jude, 1 Peter, and 2 Peter. Origen accepted the two former as authentic without question,[117] but noted that the latter was suspected to be a forgery.[118]

The homilies preserved are on Genesis (16), Exodus (13), Leviticus (16), Numbers (28), Joshua (26), Judges (9), I Sam. (2), Psalms 36–38 (9),[d] Canticles (2), Isaiah (9), Jeremiah (7 Greek, 2 Latin, 12 Greek and Latin), Ezekiel (14), and Luke (39). The homilies were preached in the church at Caesarea, with the exception of the two on 1 Samuel which were delivered in Jerusalem. Nautin has argued that they were all preached in a three-year liturgical cycle some time between 238 and 244, preceding the Commentary on the Song of Songs, where Origen refers to homilies on Judges, Exodus, Numbers, and a work on Leviticus.[119] On June 11, 2012, the Bavarian State Library announced that the Italian philologist Marina Molin Pradel had discovered twenty-nine previously unknown homilies by Origen in a twelfth-century Byzantine manuscript from their collection.[120][121] Prof. Lorenzo Perrone of Bologna University and other experts confirmed the authenticity of the homilies.[122] The texts of these manuscripts can be found online.[123]

Origen is the main source of information on the use of the texts that were later officially canonized as the New Testament.[124][125] The information used to create the late-fourth-century Easter Letter, which declared accepted Christian writings, was probably based on the lists given in Eusebius's Ecclesiastical History HE 3:25 and 6:25, which were both primarily based on information provided by Origen.[125] Origen accepted the authenticity of the epistles of 1 John, 1 Peter, and Jude without question[124] and accepted the Epistle of James as authentic with only slight hesitation.[126] He also refers to 2 John, 3 John, and 2 Peter[117] but notes that all three were suspected to be forgeries.[117] Origen may have also considered other writings to be "inspired" that were rejected by later authors, including the Epistle of Barnabas, Shepherd of Hermas, and 1 Clement.[127] "Origen is not the originator of the idea of biblical canon, but he certainly gives the philosophical and literary–interpretative underpinnings for the whole notion."[127]

Extant commentaries

 
Books containing Latin translations of some of Origen's extant writings

Origen's commentaries written on specific books of scripture are much more focused on systematic exegesis than his homilies.[128] In these writings, Origen applies the precise critical methodology that had been developed by the scholars of the Mouseion in Alexandria to the Christian scriptures.[128] The commentaries also display Origen's impressive encyclopedic knowledge of various subjects[128] and his ability to cross-reference specific words, listing every place in which a word appears in the scriptures along with all the word's known meanings,[128] a feat made all the more impressive by the fact that he did this in a time when Bible concordances had not yet been compiled.[128] Origen's massive Commentary on the Gospel of John, which spanned more than thirty-two volumes once it was completed,[129] was written with the specific intention not only to expound the correct interpretation of the scriptures, but also to refute the interpretations of the Valentinian Gnostic teacher Heracleon,[128][130] who had used the Gospel of John to support his argument that there were really two gods, not one.[128] Of the original thirty-two books in the Commentary on John, only nine have been preserved: Books I, II, VI, X, XIII, XX, XXVIII, XXXII, and a fragment of XIX.[131]

Of the original twenty-five books in Origen's Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, only eight have survived in the original Greek (Books 10–17), covering Matthew 13.36–22.33.[131] An anonymous Latin translation beginning at the point corresponding to Book 12, Chapter 9 of the Greek text and covering Matthew 16.13–27.66 has also survived.[131][132] The translation contains parts that are not found in the original Greek and is missing parts that are found in it.[131] Origen's Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew was universally regarded as a classic, even after his condemnation,[131] and it ultimately became the work which established the Gospel of Matthew as the primary gospel.[131] Origen's Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans was originally fifteen books long, but only tiny fragments of it have survived in the original Greek.[131] An abbreviated Latin translation in ten books was produced by the monk Tyrannius Rufinus at the end of the fourth century.[133][e] The historian Socrates Scholasticus records that Origen had included an extensive discussion of the application of the title theotokos to the Virgin Mary in his commentary,[133] but this discussion is not found in Rufinus's translation,[133] probably because Rufinus did not approve of Origen's position on the matter, whatever that might have been.[133]

Origen also composed a Commentary on the Song of Songs,[133] in which he took explicit care to explain why the Song of Songs was relevant to a Christian audience.[133] The Commentary on the Song of Songs was Origen's most celebrated commentary[133] and Jerome famously writes in his preface to his translation of two of Origen's homilies over the Song of Songs that "In his other works, Origen habitually excels others. In this commentary, he excelled himself."[133] Origen expanded on the exegesis of the Jewish Rabbi Akiva,[133] interpreting the Song of Songs as a mystical allegory in which the bridegroom represents the Logos and the bride represents the soul of the believer.[133] This was the first Christian commentary to expound such an interpretation[133] and it became extremely influential on later interpretations of the Song of Songs.[133] Despite this, the commentary now only survives in part through a Latin translation of it made by Tyrannius Rufinus in 410.[133][f] Fragments of some other commentaries survive. Citations in Origen's Philokalia include fragments of the third book of the commentary on Genesis. There is also Ps. i, iv.1, the small commentary on Canticles, and the second book of the large commentary on the same, the twentieth book of the commentary on Ezekiel,[g] and the commentary on Hosea. Of the non-extant commentaries, there is limited evidence of their arrangement.[h]

On the First Principles

Origen's On the First Principles was the first ever systematic exposition of Christian theology.[134][48] He composed it as a young man between 220 and 230 while he was still living in Alexandria.[134] Fragments from Books 3.1 and 4.1–3 of Origen's Greek original are preserved in Origen's Philokalia.[134] A few smaller quotations of the original Greek are preserved in Justinian's Letter to Mennas.[134] The vast majority of the text has only survived in a heavily abridged Latin translation produced by Tyrannius Rufinus in 397.[134] On the First Principles begins with an essay explaining the nature of theology.[134] Book One describes the heavenly world[134][48] and includes descriptions of the oneness of God, the relationship between the three persons of the Trinity, the nature of the divine spirit, reason, and angels.[135] Book Two describes the world of man, including the incarnation of the Logos, the soul, free will, and eschatology.[136][48] Book Three deals with cosmology, sin, and redemption.[136][48] Book Four deals with teleology and the interpretation of the scriptures.[136][48]

Against Celsus

 
Greek text of Origen's apologetic treatise Contra Celsum, which is considered to be the most important work of early Christian apologetics[137][138]

Against Celsus (Greek: Κατὰ Κέλσου; Latin: Contra Celsum), preserved entirely in Greek, was Origen's last treatise, written about 248. It is an apologetic work defending orthodox Christianity against the attacks of the pagan philosopher Celsus, who was seen in the ancient world as early Christianity's foremost opponent.[19][139] In 178, Celsus had written a polemic entitled On the True Word, in which he had made numerous arguments against Christianity.[139] The church had responded by ignoring Celsus's attacks,[139] but Origen's patron Ambrose brought the matter to his attention.[139] Origen initially wanted to ignore Celsus and let his attacks fade,[139] but one of Celsus's major claims, which held that no self-respecting philosopher of the Platonic tradition would ever be so stupid as to become a Christian, provoked him to write a rebuttal.[139]

In the book, Origen systematically refutes each of Celsus' arguments point-by-point[19][138] and argues for a rational basis of Christian faith.[140][141][89] Origen draws heavily on the teachings of Plato[142] and argues that Christianity and Greek philosophy are not incompatible,[142] and that philosophy contains much that is true and admirable,[142] but that the Bible contains far greater wisdom than anything Greek philosophers could ever grasp.[142] Origen responds to Celsus's accusation that Jesus had performed his miracles using magic rather than divine powers by asserting that, unlike magicians, Jesus had not performed his miracles for show, but rather to reform his audiences.[140] Contra Celsum became the most influential of all early Christian apologetics works;[19][138] before it was written, Christianity was seen by many as merely a folk religion for the illiterate and uneducated,[140][138] but Origen raised it to a level of academic respectability.[137][138] Eusebius admired Against Celsus so much that, in his Against Hierocles 1, he declared that Against Celsus provided an adequate rebuttal to all criticisms the church would ever face.[143]

Other writings

Between 232 and 235, while in Caesarea in Palestine, Origen wrote On Prayer, of which the full text has been preserved in the original Greek.[80] After an introduction on the object, necessity, and advantage of prayer, he ends with an exegesis of the Lord's Prayer, concluding with remarks on the position, place, and attitude to be assumed during prayer, as well as on the classes of prayer.[80] On Martyrdom, or the Exhortation to Martyrdom, also preserved entire in Greek,[92] was written some time after the beginning of the persecution of Maximinus in the first half of 235.[92] In it, Origen warns against any trifling with idolatry and emphasises the duty of suffering martyrdom manfully, while in the second part he explains the meaning of martyrdom.[92]

The papyri discovered at Tura in 1941 contained the Greek texts of two previously unknown works of Origen.[141] Neither work can be dated precisely, though both were probably written after the persecution of Maximinus in 235.[141] One is On the Pascha.[141] The other is Dialogue with Heracleides, a record written by one of Origen's stenographers of a debate between Origen and the Arabian bishop Heracleides, a quasi-Monarchianist who taught that the Father and the Son were the same.[144][141][145][146] In the dialogue, Origen uses Socratic questioning to persuade Heracleides to believe in the "Logos theology",[144][147] in which the Son or Logos is a separate entity from God the Father.[148] The debate between Origen and Heracleides, and Origen's responses in particular, has been noted for its unusually cordial and respectful nature in comparison to the much fiercer polemics of Tertullian or the fourth-century debates between Trinitarians and Arians.[147]

Lost works include two books on the Resurrection, written before On First Principles, and also two dialogues on the same theme dedicated to Ambrose. Eusebius had a collection of more than one hundred letters of Origen,[149] and the list of Jerome speaks of several books of his epistles. Except for a few fragments, only three letters have been preserved.[150] The first, partly preserved in the Latin translation of Rufinus, is addressed to friends in Alexandria.[150][16] The second is a short letter to Gregory Thaumaturgus, preserved in the Philocalia.[150] The third is an epistle to Sextus Julius Africanus, extant in Greek, replying to a letter from Africanus (also extant), and defending the authenticity of the Greek additions to the book of Daniel.[150][95] Forgeries of the writings of Origen made in his lifetime are discussed by Rufinus in De adulteratione librorum Origenis. The Dialogus de recta in Deum fide, the Philosophumena attributed to Hippolytus of Rome, and the Commentary on Job by Julian the Arian have also been ascribed to him.[151][152][153]

Views

Christology

Origen writes that Jesus was "the firstborn of all creation [who] assumed a body and a human soul."[154] He firmly believed that Jesus had a human soul[154] and abhorred docetism (the teaching which held that Jesus had come to Earth in spirit form rather than a physical human body).[154] Origen envisioned Jesus' human nature as the one soul that stayed closest to God and remained perfectly faithful to Him, even when all other souls fell away.[154][155] At Jesus's incarnation, his soul became fused with the Logos and they "intermingled" to become one.[156][155] Thus, according to Origen, Christ was both human and divine,[156][155] but like all human souls, Christ's human nature was existent from the beginning.[157][155]

Origen was the first to propose the ransom theory of atonement in its fully developed form,[158] although Irenaeus had previously proposed a prototypical form of it.[158] According to this theory, Christ's death on the cross was a ransom to Satan in exchange for humanity's liberation.[158] This theory holds that Satan was tricked by God[158][159] because Christ was not only free of sin, but also the incarnate Deity, whom Satan lacked the ability to enslave.[159] The theory was later expanded by theologians such as Gregory of Nyssa and Rufinus of Aquileia.[158] In the eleventh century, Anselm of Canterbury criticized the ransom theory, along with the associated Christus Victor theory,[158] resulting in the theory's decline in western Europe.[158] The theory has nonetheless retained some of its popularity in the Eastern Orthodox Church.[158]

Cosmology and Eschatology

 
The Garden of Eden with the Fall of Man (c. 1617) by Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder. Origen based his teaching of the preexistence of souls on an allegorical interpretation of the creation story in the Book of Genesis.[160]

One of Origen's main teachings was the doctrine of the preexistence of souls,[161][162][160][155] which held that before God created the material world he created a vast number of incorporeal "spiritual intelligences" (ψυχαί).[162][160][163][155] All of these souls were at first devoted to the contemplation and love of their Creator,[162][163][155] but as the fervor of the divine fire cooled, almost all of these intelligences eventually grew bored of contemplating God, and their love for him "cooled off" (ψύχεσθαι).[162][160][163][155] When God created the world, the souls which had previously existed without bodies became incarnate.[162][160] Those whose love for God diminished the most became demons.[163][155] Those whose love diminished moderately became human souls, eventually to be incarnated in fleshly bodies.[163][155] Those whose love diminished the least became angels.[163][155] One soul, however, who remained perfectly devoted to God became, through love, one with the Word (Logos) of God.[154][155] The Logos eventually took flesh and was born of the Virgin Mary, becoming the God-man Jesus Christ.[154][163][155] In recent years it has been questioned whether Origen believed this, being in reality a belief of his disciples and a misrepresentation of Justinian, Epiphanius and others.[164]

Origen may or may not have believed in the Platonic teaching of metempsychosis ("the transmigration of souls"; i.e. reincarnation).[165] He explicitly rejects "the false doctrine of the transmigration of souls into bodies",[166][25] but this may refer only to a specific kind of transmigration.[166] Geddes MacGregor has argued that Origen must have believed in metempsychosis because it makes sense within his eschatology[167] and is never explicitly denied in the Bible.[167] Roger E. Olson, however, dismisses the view that Origen believed in reincarnation as a New Age misunderstanding of Origen's teachings.[168] It is certain that Origen rejected the Stoic doctrine of eternal return,[166] although he did posit the existence of a series of non-identical worlds.[169]

Origen believed that, eventually, the whole world would be converted to Christianity,[170] "since the world is continually gaining possession of more souls."[171] He believed that the Kingdom of Heaven was not yet come,[172] but that it was the duty of every Christian to make the eschatological reality of the kingdom present in their lives.[172] Origen is often believed to be a Universalist,[173] who suggested that all people might eventually attain salvation,[174][25][173] but only after being purged of their sins through "divine fire".[175] This, of course, in line of Origen's allegorical interpretation, was not literal fire, but rather the inner anguish of knowing one's own sins.[174][175] Origen was also careful to maintain that universal salvation was merely a possibility and not a definitive doctrine.[174] Jerome quotes Origen as having allegedly written that "after aeons and the one restoration of all things, the state of Gabriel will be the same as that of the Devil, Paul's as that of Caiaphas, that of virgins as that of prostitutes."[173] However, Origen expressly states in his Letter to Friends in Alexandria that Satan and "those who are cast out of the kingdom of God" would be not included in the final salvation.[174][82]

Ethics

 
The Birth of Esau and Jacob (c. 1360–1370) by Master of Jean de Mandeville. Origen used the Biblical story of Esau and Jacob to support his theory that a soul's free will actions committed before incarnation determine the conditions of the person's birth.[176]

Origen was an ardent believer in free will,[177] and he adamantly rejected the Valentinian idea of election.[178] Instead, Origen believed that even disembodied souls have the power to make their own decisions.[178] Furthermore, in his interpretation of the story of Jacob and Esau, Origen argues that the condition into which a person is born is actually dependent upon what their souls did in this pre-existent state.[176] According to Origen, the superficial unfairness of a person's condition at birth—with some humans being poor, others rich, some being sick, and others healthy—is actually a by-product of what the person's soul had done in the pre-existent state.[176] Origen defends free will in his interpretations of instances of divine foreknowledge in the scriptures,[179] arguing that Jesus's knowledge of Judas's future betrayal in the gospels and God's knowledge of Israel's future disobedience in the Deuteronomistic history only show that God knew these events would happen in advance.[179] Origen therefore concludes that the individuals involved in these incidents still made their decisions out of their own free will.[179] Like Plato, Plotinus[180] and Gregory of Nyssa, Origen understands that only the agent who chooses the Good is free; choosing evil is never free but slavery.[181]

Origen was an ardent pacifist,[182][183][171][184] and in his Against Celsus, he argued that Christianity's inherent pacifism was one of the most outwardly noticeable aspects of the religion.[182] While Origen did admit that some Christians served in the Roman army,[185][186][171] he pointed out that most did not[185][171] and insisted that engaging in earthly wars was against the way of Christ.[185][183][171][184] Origen accepted that it was sometimes necessary for a non-Christian state to wage wars[187] but insisted that it was impossible for a Christian to fight in such a war without compromising his or her faith, since Christ had absolutely forbidden violence of any kind.[187][184] Origen explained the violence found in certain passages of the Old Testament as allegorical[170] and pointed out Old Testament passages which he interpreted as supporting nonviolence, such as Psalm 7:4–6[188] and Lamentations 3:27–29.[189][170] Origen maintained that, if everyone were peaceful and loving like Christians, then there would be no wars and the Empire would not need a military.[190]

Hermeneutics

For who that has understanding will suppose that the first, and second, and third day, and the evening and the morning, existed without a sun, and moon, and stars? And that the first day was, as it were, also without a sky? And who is so foolish as to suppose that God, after the manner of a husbandman, planted a paradise in Eden, towards the east, and placed in it a tree of life, visible and palpable, so that one tasting of the fruit by the bodily teeth obtained life? And again, that one was a partaker of good and evil by masticating what was taken from the tree? And if God is said to walk in the paradise in the evening, and Adam to hide himself under a tree, I do not suppose that anyone doubts that these things figuratively indicate certain mysteries, the history having taken place in appearance, and not literally.

— Origen, On the First Principles IV.16

Origen bases his theology on the Christian scriptures[162][191][165][155] and does not appeal to Platonic teachings without having first supported his argument with a scriptural basis.[162][192] He saw the scriptures as divinely inspired[162][191][165][193] and was cautious never to contradict his own interpretation of what was written in them.[165] Nonetheless, Origen did have a penchant for speculating beyond what was explicitly stated in the Bible,[168][194] and this habit frequently placed him in the hazy realm between strict orthodoxy and heresy.[168][194]

According to Origen, there are two kinds of Biblical literature which are found in both the Old and New Testaments: historia ("history, or narrative") and nomothesia ("legislation or ethical prescription").[193] Origen expressly states that the Old and New Testaments should be read together and according to the same rules.[195] Origen further taught that there were three different ways in which passages of scripture could be interpreted.[195][48] The "flesh" was the literal, historical interpretation of the passage;[195][48] the "soul" was the moral message behind the passage;[195][48] and the "spirit" was the eternal, incorporeal reality that the passage conveyed.[195][48] In Origen's exegesis, the Book of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs represent perfect examples of the bodily, soulful, and spiritual components of scripture respectively.[196]

Origen saw the "spiritual" interpretation as the deepest and most important meaning of the text[196] and taught that some passages held no literal meaning at all and that their meanings were purely allegorical.[196] Nonetheless, he stressed that "the passages which are historically true are far more numerous than those which are composed with purely spiritual meanings"[196] and often used examples from corporeal realities.[197] Origen noticed that the accounts of Jesus's life in the four canonical gospels contain irreconcilable contradictions,[198][199][200] but he argued that these contradictions did not undermine the spiritual meanings of the passages in question.[199][200] Origen's idea of a twofold creation was based on an allegorical interpretation of the creation story found in the first two chapters of the Book of Genesis.[160] The first creation, described in Genesis 1:26,[201] was the creation of the primeval spirits,[202] who are made "in the image of God" and are therefore incorporeal like Him;[202] the second creation described in Genesis 2:7[203] is when the human souls are given ethereal, spiritual bodies[204] and the description in Genesis 3:21[205] of God clothing Adam and Eve in "tunics of skin" refers to the transformation of these spiritual bodies into corporeal ones.[202] Thus, each phase represents a degradation from the original state of incorporeal holiness.[202]

Theology

 
Origen significantly contributed to the development of the concept of the Trinity[206][207][208] and was among the first to name the Holy Spirit as a member of the Godhead,[209] but he was also a subordinationist,[210][209][211][212] who taught that the Father was superior to the Son and the Son was superior to the Holy Spirit.[210][209][212]

Origen's conception of God the Father is apophatic—a perfect unity, invisible and incorporeal, transcending all things material, and therefore inconceivable and incomprehensible. He is likewise unchangeable and transcends space and time. But his power is limited by his goodness, justice, and wisdom; and, though entirely free from necessity, his goodness and omnipotence constrained him to reveal himself. This revelation, the external self-emanation of God, is expressed by Origen in various ways, the Logos being only one of many. The revelation was the first creation of God (cf. Proverbs 8:22), in order to afford creative mediation between God and the world, such mediation being necessary, because God, as changeless unity, could not be the source of a multitudinous creation.

The Logos is the rational creative principle that permeates the universe.[213] The Logos acts on all human beings through their capacity for logic and rational thought,[214] guiding them to the truth of God's revelation.[214] As they progress in their rational thinking, all humans become more like Christ.[213] Nonetheless, they retain their individuality and do not become subsumed into Christ.[215] Creation came into existence only through the Logos, and God's nearest approach to the world is the command to create. While the Logos is substantially a unity, he comprehends a multiplicity of concepts, so that Origen terms him, in Platonic fashion, "essence of essences" and "idea of ideas".

Origen significantly contributed to the development of the idea of the Trinity.[206][207][208] He declared the Holy Spirit to be a part of the Godhead[209] and interpreted the Parable of the Lost Coin to mean that the Holy Spirit dwells within each and every person[216] and that the inspiration of the Holy Spirit was necessary for any kind of speech dealing with God.[217] Origen taught that the activity of all three parts of the Trinity was necessary for a person to attain salvation.[212]

In one fragment preserved by Rufinus in his Latin translation of Pamphilus's Defense of Origen, Origen seems to apply the phrase homooúsios (ὁμοούσιος; "of the same substance") to the relationship between the Father and the Son.[210][218] But Williams states that it is impossible to verify whether the quote that uses the word homoousios really comes from Pamphilus at all, let alone Origen.[218]

In other passages, Origen rejected the belief that the Son and the Father were one hypostasis as heretical.[218] According to Rowan Williams, because the words ousia and hypostasis were used synonymously in Origen's time,[218] Origen almost certainly would have rejected homoousios, as a description for the relationship between the Father and the Son, as heretical.[218]

Nonetheless, Origen was a subordinationist,[210][209][211][212] meaning he believed that the Father was superior to the Son and the Son was superior to the Holy Spirit,[210][209][212] a model based on Platonic proportions.[209] Jerome records that Origen had written that God the Father is invisible to all beings, including even the Son and the Holy Spirit,[219] and that the Son is invisible to the Holy Spirit as well.[219] At one point Origen suggests that the Son was created by the Father and that the Holy Spirit was created by the Son,[220] but, at another point, he writes that "Up to the present I have been able to find no passage in the Scriptures that the Holy Spirit is a created being."[209][221] At the time when Origen was alive, orthodox views on the Trinity had not yet been formulated[219][222] and subordinationism was not yet considered heretical.[219][222] In fact, virtually all orthodox theologians prior to the Arian controversy in the latter half of the fourth century were subordinationists to some extent.[222] Origen's subordinationism may have developed out of his efforts to defend the unity of God against the Gnostics.[211]

Influence on the Later Church

 
Athanasius of Alexandria, shown standing in this 1876 oil painting by Vasily Surikov, was deeply influenced by Origen's teachings.[223][25][163]

Before the Crises

Origen is often seen as the first major Christian theologian.[224] Though his orthodoxy had been questioned in Alexandria while he was alive,[194][163] after Origen's death Pope Dionysius of Alexandria became one of the foremost proponents of Origen's theology.[225][226][227] Every Christian theologian who came after him was influenced by his theology, whether directly or indirectly.[109] Origen's contributions to theology were so vast and complex, however, that his followers frequently emphasized drastically different parts of his teachings to the expense of other parts.[225][228] Dionysius emphasized Origen's subordinationist views,[225][226] which led Dionysius to deny the unity of the Trinity, causing controversy throughout North Africa.[225][226] At the same time, Origen's other disciple Theognostus of Alexandria taught that the Father and the Son were "of one substance".[229]

For centuries after his death, Origen was regarded as the bastion of orthodoxy,[24][230] and his philosophy practically defined Eastern Christianity.[168] Origen was revered as one of the greatest of all Christian teachers;[15] he was especially beloved by monks, who saw themselves as continuing in Origen's ascetic legacy.[15] As time progressed, however, Origen became criticized under the standard of orthodoxy in later eras, rather than the standards of his own lifetime.[231] In the early fourth century, the Christian writer Methodius of Olympus criticized some of Origen's more speculative arguments[232][163][233][234] but otherwise agreed with Origen on all other points of theology.[235] Peter of Antioch and Eustathius of Antioch criticized Origen as heretical.[233]

Both orthodox and heterodox theologians claimed to be following in the tradition Origen had established.[168] Athanasius of Alexandria, the most prominent supporter of the Holy Trinity at the First Council of Nicaea, was deeply influenced by Origen,[223][25][163] and so were Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Nazianzus (the so-called "Cappadocian Fathers").[236][25][163] At the same time, Origen deeply influenced Arius of Alexandria and later followers of Arianism.[237][223][238][239] Although the extent of the relationship between the two is debated,[240] in antiquity, many orthodox Christians believed that Origen was the true and ultimate source of the Arian heresy.[240][241]

First Origenist Crisis

 
St. Jerome in His Study (1480), by Domenico Ghirlandaio. Although initially a student of Origen's teachings, Jerome turned against him during the First Origenist Crisis.[242][243] He nonetheless remained influenced by Origen's teachings for his entire life.[242][244]

The First Origenist Crisis began in the late fourth century, coinciding with the beginning of monasticism in Palestine.[233] The first stirring of the controversy came from the Cyprian bishop Epiphanius of Salamis, who was determined to root out all heresies and refute them.[233] Epiphanius attacked Origen in his anti-heretical treatises Ancoratus (375) and Panarion (376), compiling a list of teachings Origen had espoused that Epiphanius regarded as heretical.[245][246][223][163] Epiphanius's treatises portray Origen as an originally orthodox Christian who had been corrupted and turned into a heretic by the evils of "Greek education".[246] Epiphanius particularly objected to Origen's subordinationism, his "excessive" use of allegorical hermeneutic, and his habit of proposing ideas about the Bible "speculatively, as exercises" rather than "dogmatically".[245]

Epiphanius asked John, the bishop of Jerusalem, to condemn Origen as a heretic. John refused on the grounds that a person could not be retroactively condemned as a heretic after that person had already died.[242] In 393, a monk named Atarbius advanced a petition to have Origen and his writings censured.[242] Tyrannius Rufinus, a priest at the monastery on the Mount of Olives who had been ordained by John of Jerusalem and was a longtime admirer of Origen, rejected the petition outright.[242][247] Rufinus's close friend and associate Jerome, who had also studied Origen, however, came to agree with the petition.[242][247] Around the same time, John Cassian, an Eastern monk, introduced Origen's teachings to the West.[248][163]

In 394, Epiphanius wrote to John of Jerusalem, again asking for Origen to be condemned, insisting that Origen's writings denigrated human sexual reproduction and accusing him of having been an Encratite.[242] John once again denied this request.[242] By 395, Jerome had allied himself with the anti-Origenists and begged John of Jerusalem to condemn Origen, a plea which John once again refused.[242] Epiphanius launched a campaign against John, openly preaching that John was an Origenist deviant.[242] He successfully persuaded Jerome to break communion with John and ordained Jerome's brother Paulinianus as a priest in defiance of John's authority.[242]

In 397, Rufinus published a Latin translation of Origen's On First Principles.[242][249][243][134] Rufinus was convinced that Origen's original treatise had been interpolated by heretics and that these interpolations were the source of the heterodox teachings found in it.[249] He therefore heavily modified Origen's text, omitting and altering any parts which disagreed with contemporary Christian orthodoxy.[134][249] In the introduction to this translation, Rufinus mentioned that Jerome had studied under Origen's disciple Didymus the Blind, implying that Jerome was a follower of Origen.[242][247] Jerome was so incensed by this that he resolved to produce his own Latin translation of On the First Principles, in which he promised to translate every word exactly as it was written and lay bare Origen's heresies to the whole world.[134][242][243] Jerome's translation has been lost in its entirety.[134]

In 399, the Origenist crisis reached Egypt.[242] Pope Theophilus I of Alexandria was sympathetic to the supporters of Origen[242] and the church historian, Sozomen, records that he had openly preached the Origenist teaching that God was incorporeal.[250] In his Festal Letter of 399, he denounced those who believed that God had a literal, human-like body, calling them illiterate "simple ones".[250][251][244] A large mob of Alexandrian monks who regarded God as anthropomorphic rioted in the streets.[252] According to the church historian Socrates Scholasticus, in order to prevent a riot, Theophilus made a sudden about-face and began denouncing Origen.[252][244] In 400, Theophilus summoned a council in Alexandria, which condemned Origen and all his followers as heretics for having taught that God was incorporeal, which they decreed contradicted the only true and orthodox position, which was that God had a literal, physical body resembling that of a human.[252][253][254][i]

Theophilus labeled Origen as the "hydra of all heresies"[253] and persuaded Pope Anastasius I to sign the letter of the council, which primarily denounced the teachings of the Nitrian monks associated with Evagrius Ponticus.[252] In 402, Theophilus expelled Origenist monks from Egyptian monasteries and banished the four monks known as the "Tall Brothers", who were leaders of the Nitrian community.[252][244] John Chrysostom, the patriarch of Constantinople, granted the Tall Brothers asylum, a fact which Theophilus used to orchestrate John's condemnation and removal from his position at the Synod of the Oak in July 403.[252][244] Once John Chrysostom had been deposed, Theophilus restored normal relations with the Origenist monks in Egypt and the first Origenist crisis came to an end.[252]

Second Origenist Crisis

 
Emperor Justinian I, shown here in a contemporary mosaic portrait from Ravenna, denounced Origen as a heretic[105][163] and ordered all of his writings to be burned.[105][163]

The Second Origenist Crisis occurred in the sixth century, during the height of Byzantine monasticism.[252] Although the Second Origenist Crisis is not nearly as well documented as the first,[252] it seems to have primarily concerned the teachings of Origen's later followers, rather than what Origen had written.[252] Origen's disciple Evagrius Ponticus had advocated contemplative, noetic prayer,[252] but other monastic communities prioritized asceticism in prayer, emphasizing fasting, labors, and vigils.[252] Some Origenist monks in Palestine, referred to by their enemies as "Isochristoi" (meaning "those who would assume equality with Christ"), emphasized Origen's teaching of the pre-existence of souls and held that all souls were originally equal to Christ's and would become equal again at the end of time.[252] Another faction of Origenists in the same region instead insisted that Christ was the "leader of many brethren", as the first-created being.[255] This faction was more moderate, and they were referred to by their opponents as "Protoktistoi" ("first createds").[255] Both factions accused the other of heresy, and other Christians accused both of them of heresy.[256]

The Protoktistoi appealed to the Emperor Justinian I to condemn the Isochristoi of heresy through Pelagius, the papal apocrisarius.[256] In 543, Pelagius presented Justinian with documents, including a letter denouncing Origen written by Patriarch Mennas of Constantinople,[56][257][258][256] along with excerpts from Origen's On First Principles and several anathemata against Origen.[256] A domestic synod convened to address the issue concluded that the Isochristoi's teachings were heretical and, seeing Origen as the ultimate culprit behind the heresy, denounced Origen as a heretic as well.[256][105][163] Emperor Justinian ordered for all of Origen's writings to be burned.[105][163] In the west, the Decretum Gelasianum, which was written sometime between 519 and 553, listed Origen as an author whose writings were to be categorically banned.[109]

In 553, during the early days of the Second Council of Constantinople (the Fifth Ecumenical Council), when Pope Vigilius was still refusing to take part in it despite Justinian holding him hostage, the bishops at the council ratified an open letter which condemned Origen as the leader of the Isochristoi.[256] The letter was not part of the official acts of the council, and it more or less repeated the edict issued by the Synod of Constantinople in 543.[256] It cites objectionable writings attributed to Origen, but all the writings referred to in it were actually written by Evagrius Ponticus.[256] After the council officially opened, but while Pope Vigillius was still refusing to take part, Justinian presented the bishops with the problem of a text known as The Three Chapters, which attacked the Antiochene Christology.[256]

The bishops drew up a list of anathemata against the heretical teachings contained within The Three Chapters and those associated with them.[256] In the official text of the eleventh anathema, Origen is condemned as a Christological heretic,[256][109] but Origen's name does not appear at all in the Homonoia, the first draft of the anathemata issued by the imperial chancery,[256] nor does it appear in the version of the conciliar proceedings that was eventually signed by Pope Vigillius, a long time afterwards.[256] Norman P. Tanner's edition of the Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils (Georgetown University Press, 1990) says: "Our edition does not include the text of the anathemas against Origen since recent studies have shown that these anathemas cannot be attributed to this council." These discrepancies may indicate that Origen's name was retrospectively inserted into the text after the council.[256] Some authorities believe these anathemata belong to an earlier local synod.[259] Even if Origen's name did appear in the original text of the anathema, the teachings attributed to Origen that are condemned in the anathema were actually the ideas of later Origenists, which had very little grounding in anything Origen had actually written.[256][56][253] In fact, Popes Vigilius, Pelagius I, Pelagius II, and Gregory the Great were only aware that the Fifth Council specifically dealt with The Three Chapters and make no mention of Origenism or universalism, nor spoke as if they knew of its condemnation—even though Gregory the Great was opposed to universalism.[56]

After the Anathemas

If orthodoxy were a matter of intention, no theologian could be more orthodox than Origen, none more devoted to the cause of the Christian faith.

— Henry Chadwick, scholar of early Christianity, in the Encyclopædia Britannica[163]

As a direct result of the numerous condemnations of his work, only a tiny fraction of Origen's voluminous writings have survived.[105][230] Nonetheless, these writings still amount to a massive number of Greek and Latin texts, very few of which have yet been translated into English.[15] Many more writings have survived in fragments through quotations from later Church Fathers.[109] Even in the late 14th Century, Francesc Eiximenis in his Llibre de les dones, produced otherwise unknown quotations from Origen, which may be evidence of other works surviving into the Late Medieval period.[260][261] It is likely that the writings containing Origen's most unusual and speculative ideas have been lost to time,[173] making it nearly impossible to determine whether Origen actually held the heretical views which the anathemas against him ascribed to him.[173] Nonetheless, in spite of the decrees against Origen, the church remained enamored of him[109] and he remained a central figure of Christian theology throughout the first millennium.[109] He continued to be revered as the founder of Biblical exegesis,[109] and anyone in the first millennium who took the interpretation of the scriptures seriously would have had knowledge of Origen's teachings.[109]

Saint Origen the Scholar
 
portrait by Guillaume Chaudière (1584)
Teacher and theologian
Bornc. 185
Alexandria
Diedc. 253
Tyre
Venerated inEvangelical Church in Germany, Anglican Communion, Reformed Tradition, Oriental Orthodox Churches
FeastApril 27[262]
Attributesself-castration, monastic habit
ControversyLack of formal canonization, accusations of heresy

Jerome's Latin translations of Origen's homilies were widely read in western Europe throughout the Middle Ages,[163] and Origen's teachings greatly influenced those of the Byzantine monk Maximus the Confessor and the Irish theologian John Scotus Eriugena.[163] Since the Renaissance, the debate over Origen's orthodoxy has continued to rage.[163] Basilios Bessarion, a Greek refugee who fled to Italy after the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, produced a Latin translation of Origen's Contra Celsum, which was printed in 1481.[263] Major controversy erupted in 1487, after the Italian humanist scholar Giovanni Pico della Mirandola issued a thesis arguing that "it is more reasonable to believe that Origen was saved than he was damned."[263] A papal commission condemned Pico's position on account of the anathemas against Origen, but not until after the debate had received considerable attention.[263]

The most prominent advocate of Origen during the Renaissance was the Dutch humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus, who regarded Origen as the greatest of all Christian authors[263] and wrote in a letter to John Eck that he learned more about Christian philosophy from a single page of Origen than from ten pages of Augustine.[263] Erasmus especially admired Origen for his lack of rhetorical flourishes, which were so common in the writings of other Patristic authors.[263] Erasmus borrowed heavily from Origen's defense of free will in On First Principles in his 1524 treatise On Free Will, now considered his most important theological work.[263] In 1527, Erasmus translated and published the portion of Origen's Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew that survived only in Greek[264] and in 1536, he published the most complete edition of Origen's writings that had ever been published at that time.[263] While Origen's emphasis on the human effort in attaining salvation appealed to the Renaissance humanists, it made him far less appealing to the proponents of the Reformation.[264] Martin Luther deplored Origen's understanding of salvation as irredeemably defective[264] and declared "in all of Origen there is not one word about Christ."[264] Consequently, he ordered for Origen's writings to be banned.[264] Nonetheless, the earlier Czech reformer Jan Hus had taken inspiration from Origen for his view that the church is a spiritual reality rather than an official hierarchy,[264] and Luther's contemporary, the Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli, took inspiration from Origen for his interpretation of the Eucharist as symbolic.[264]

In the seventeenth century, the English Cambridge Platonist Henry More was a devoted Origenist,[265] and although he did reject the notion of universal salvation,[265] he accepted most of Origen's other teachings.[265] Pope Benedict XVI expressed admiration for Origen,[22] describing him in a sermon as part of a series on the Church Fathers as "a figure crucial to the whole development of Christian thought", "a true 'maestro'", and "not only a brilliant theologian but also an exemplary witness of the doctrine he passed on".[266] He concludes the sermon by inviting his audience to "welcome into your hearts the teaching of this great master of the faith".[267] Modern Protestant evangelicals admire Origen for his passionate devotion to the scriptures[268] but are frequently baffled or even appalled by his allegorical interpretation of them, which many believe ignores the literal, historical truth behind them.[268]

Origen is often noted for being one of the few Church Fathers who is not generally regarded as a saint.[269] Nevertheless, there are notable individuals who referred to Origen as St. Origen. This includes Anglicans such as Edward Welchman,[270] John Howson[271] and Sir Winston Churchill;[272] Calvinists such as Pierre Bayle,[273] Georges-Louis Liomin[274] and Heinrich Bullinger;[275] American scholar and Orthodox Christian David Bentley Hart;[276] Oriental Orthodox such as Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria,[277] Fr. Tadros Yakoup Malaty[278] and the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States.[279] Origen's father, Saint Leonides of Alexandria, has a feast day on April 22 in the Catholic tradition, and the Evangelical Church in Germany celebrates April 27 as Origen's feast day.[262]

Translations

  • The Commentary of Origen On S. John's Gospel, the text revised and with a critical introduction and indices, A. E. Brooke (2 volumes, Cambridge University Press, 1896): Volume 1, Volume 2
  • Contra Celsum, trans Henry Chadwick, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965)
  • On First Principles, trans GW Butterworth, (Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith, 1973) also trans John Behr (Oxford University Press, 2019) from the Rufinus trans.
  • Origen: An Exhortation to Martyrdom; Prayer; First Principles, book IV; Prologue to the Commentary on the Song of Songs; Homily XXVII on Numbers, trans R Greer, Classics of Western Spirituality, (1979)
  • Origen: Homilies on Genesis and Exodus, trans RE Heine, FC 71, (1982)
  • Origen: Commentary on the Gospel according to John, Books 1–10, trans RE Heine, FC 80, (1989)
  • Treatise on the Passover and Dialogue of Origen with Heraclides and his Fellow Bishops On the Father, the Son and the Soul, trans Robert Daly, ACW 54 (New York: Paulist Press, 1992)
  • Origen: Commentary on the Gospel according to John, Books 13–32, trans RE Heine, FC 89, (1993)
  • The Commentaries on Origen and Jerome on St Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians, RE Heine, OECS, (Oxford: OUP, 2002)
  • The Commentary of Origen on the Gospel of St Matthew, 2 vols., trans RE Heine, OECS, (Oxford: OUP, 2018)
  • Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 1–5, 2001, Thomas P. Scheck, trans., The Fathers of the Church series, Volume 103, Catholic University of America Press, ISBN 0-8132-0103-9 ISBN 9780813201030 [280]
  • Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 6–10 (Fathers of the Church), 2002, The Fathers of the Church, Thomas P. Scheck, trans., Volume 104, Catholic University of America Press, ISBN 0-8132-0104-7 ISBN 9780813201047 [281]
  • On Prayer in Tertullian, Cyprian and Origen, "On the Lord's Prayer", trans and annotated by Alistair Stewart-Sykes, (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir's Seminary Press, 2004), pp. 111–214
Translations available online
  • Translations of some of Origen's writings can be found in Ante-Nicene Fathers or in The Fathers of the Church. ("Church Fathers: Home". Newadvent.org. Retrieved 2014-04-24.) Material not in those collections includes:
    • Dialogue with Heracleides ("Origen – Dialog with Heracleides – Christian History". Retrieved 2014-04-24.)
    • On Prayer (William A Curtis. "Origen, On Prayer (Unknown date). Translation". Tertullian.org. Retrieved 2014-04-24.)
    • Philocalia (Origen. "The Philocalia of Origen (1911) pp. 1–237. English translation". Tertullian.org. Retrieved 2014-04-24.)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ /ˈɒrɪən/; Greek: Ὠριγένης, Ōrigénēs; Origen's Greek name Ōrigénēs (Ὠριγένης) probably means "child of Horus" (from Ὧρος, "Horus", and γένος, "born").[8]
  2. ^ Ὠριγένης Ἀδαμάντιος, Ōrigénēs Adamántios. The nickname or cognomen Adamantios (Ἀδαμάντιος) derives from Greek adámas (ἀδάμας), which means "adamant", "unalterable", "unbreakable", "unconquerable", "diamond".[10][11]
  3. ^ The discrepancy concerns the 74 homilies on the Psalms attributed to Jerome, but which V Peri has argued Jerome translated from Origen with only minor changes. (Both 205 and 279 exclude the 2012 discoveries) Heine 2004, p. 124
  4. ^ And possibly the extra 74 homilies on the Psalms. Heine 2004, p. 124
  5. ^ When Rufinus translated the commentary in the early fifth century he noted in his preface that some of the books were lost, and doubted his ability to 'supply' what was missing and to 'restore' the work's continuity. He also noted his intention to 'abbreviate' the work. Rufinus's abbreviated Latin version in ten books is extant. The Greek fragments were found in papyri at Tura in 1941, and contain Greek excerpts from books 5–6 of the commentary. Comparison of these fragments with Rufinus's translation led to a generally positive evaluation of Rufinus's work. Heine 2004, p. 124
  6. ^ Books 1–3, and the beginning of the Book 4, survive, covering Song of Songs 1.1–2.15. Besides not including the later books of the commentary, Rufinus also omitted all of Origen's more technical discussions of the text. Heine 2004, p. 123
  7. ^ Codex Vaticanus 1215 gives the division of the twenty-five books of the commentary on Ezekiel, and part of the arrangement of the commentary on Isaiah (beginnings of books VI, VIII, XVI; book X extends from Isa. viii.1 to ix.7; XI from ix.8, to x.11; XII, from x.12 to x.23; XIII from x.24 to xi.9; XIV from xi.10 to xii.6; XV from xiii.1 to xiii.16; XXI from xix.1 to xix.17; XXII from xix.18 to xx.6; XXIII from xxi.1 to xxi.17; XXIV from xxii.1 to xxii.25; XXV from xxiii.1 to xxiii.18; XXVI from xxiv.1 to xxv.12; XXVII from xxvi.1 to xxvi.15; XXVIII from xxvi.16 to xxvii.11a; XXIX from xxvii.11b to xxviii.29; and XXX treats of xxix.1 sqq.).
  8. ^ Codex Athous Laura 184 gives the division of the fifteen books of the commentary on Romans (except XI and XII) and of the five books on Galatians, as well as the extent of the commentaries on Philippians and Corinthians (Romans I from 1:1 to 1:7; II from 1:8 to 1:25; III from 1:26 to 2:11; IV from 2:12 to 3:15; V from 3:16 to 3:31; VI from 4:1 to 5:7; VII from 5:8 to 5:16; VIII from 5:17 to 6:15; IX from 6:16 to 8:8; X from 8:9 to 8:39; XIII from 11:13 to 12:15; XIV from 12:16 to 14:10; XV from 14:11 to the end; Galatians I from 1:1 to 2:2; II from 2:3 to 3:4; III from 3:5 to 4:5; IV from 4:6 to 5:5; and V from 5:6 to 6:18; the commentary on Philippians extended to 4:1; and on Ephesians to 4:13).
  9. ^ Socrates Scholasticus describes this condemnation as a deception to gain the confidence of the Alexandrian monastic community, which vehemently upheld the teaching of an anthropomorphic Deity.[250]

References

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  146. ^ An English translation of the Dialogue is in Oulton and Chadwick, eds, Alexandrian Christianity, pp. 430–455.
  147. ^ a b Somos 2015, pp. 145–149.
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Further reading

  • Bigg, Charles. The Christian Platonists of Alexandria. 1886, revised 1913.
  • Edwards, Mark (2009). Catholicity and Heresy in the Early Church. Ashgate. ISBN 9780754662914.
  • Martens, Peter. Origen and Scripture: The Contours of the Exegetical Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
  • Morgan, Brandon (August 15, 2014). (PDF). American Theological Inquiry. 7 (2): 13–19. Archived from the original on September 3, 2014.
  • Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition: 100–600. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1977.
  • Scheck, Thomas P. (2016). Origen and the History of Justification: The Legacy of Origen's Commentary on Romans. University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 978-0-268-09302-0.
  • von Balthasar, Hans Urs. Origen, Spirit and Fire: A Thematic Anthology of His Writings. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1984.
  • Westcott, B. F. "Origenes", Dictionary of Christian Biography.
  • Williams, Rowan. "Origen: Between Orthodoxy and Heresy", in W. A. Bienert and U. Kuhneweg, eds., Origeniana Septima, 1999, pp. 3–14.

External links

  • Analysis and criticism
    • Modern
      • Coptic Church on Origen 2015-07-13 at the Wayback Machine
      • The two-part Roman Catholic meditation on Origen by Pope Benedict XVI: April 25, 2007 and May 2, 2007.
    • Ancient
      • The Anathemas Against Origen
  • Derivative summaries
  • Bibliography
    • EarlyChurch.org.uk Extensive bibliography and on-line articles.
  • Original texts
    • Greek and Latin Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Graeca, with Analytical Indexes and Concordances (Lexicon Proprium)
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origen, this, article, about, third, century, christian, scholar, pagan, philosopher, with, same, name, pagan, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, orogen, alexandria, also, known, adamantius, early, christian, scholar, ascetic, theologian, born, spent. This article is about the third century Christian scholar For the pagan philosopher with the same name see Origen the Pagan For other uses see Origen disambiguation Not to be confused with Orogen Origen of Alexandria a c 185 c 253 9 also known as Origen Adamantius b was an early Christian scholar 12 ascetic 13 and theologian who was born and spent the first half of his career in Alexandria He was a prolific writer who wrote roughly 2 000 treatises in multiple branches of theology including textual criticism biblical exegesis and hermeneutics homiletics and spirituality He was one of the most influential and controversial figures in early Christian theology apologetics and asceticism 13 14 He has been described as the greatest genius the early church ever produced 15 OrigenRepresentation of Origen writing from a manuscript of In numeros homilia XXVII c 1160Bornc 185 ADAlexandria EgyptDiedc 253 AD aged c 69 Probably Tyre PhoeniceAlma materCatechetical School of Alexandria 1 Notable workContra CelsumDe principiisRelativesLeonides of Alexandria father EraAncient philosophyHellenistic philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolNeoplatonismAlexandrian schoolMain interestsBiblical hermeneuticsChristian apologeticsChristian theologyTextual criticismNotable ideasAllegorical interpretation of the BibleApocatastasisAsceticismChristian pacifismFree willIncorporeality of GodLogos theologyPreexistence of soulsRansom theory of atonementSubordinationismUniversalismPurgatory 2 Influences Apollophanes Aristotle Chaeremon Clement Clement of Rome 3 Cornutus Hippolytus Ignatius 4 Moderatus Musonius Rufus 5 Nicomachus Numenius Philo 6 7 Plato PythagorasInfluenced Virtually all of subsequent Christian theology including Athanasius Arius Rufinus John of Jerusalem Dionysius of Alexandria Basil Gregory of Nyssa Gregory of Nazianzus Gregory Thaumaturgus Theophilus of Alexandria Maximus John Scotus Eriugena Erasmus Henry More Karl Rahner Pope Benedict XVI Hans Urs von Balthasar Henri de LubacOrigen sought martyrdom with his father at a young age but was prevented from turning himself in to the authorities by his mother When he was eighteen years old Origen became a catechist at the Catechetical School of Alexandria He devoted himself to his studies and adopted an ascetic lifestyle He came into conflict with Demetrius the bishop of Alexandria in 231 after he was ordained as a presbyter by his friend the bishop of Caesarea while on a journey to Athens through Palestine Demetrius condemned Origen for insubordination and accused him of having castrated himself and of having taught that even Satan would eventually attain salvation an accusation which Origen vehemently denied 16 17 Origen founded the Christian School of Caesarea where he taught logic cosmology natural history and theology and became regarded by the churches of Palestine and Arabia as the ultimate authority on all matters of theology He was tortured for his faith during the Decian persecution in 250 and died three to four years later from his injuries Origen was able to produce a massive quantity of writings because of the patronage of his close friend Ambrose of Alexandria who provided him with a team of secretaries to copy his works making him one of the most prolific writers in all of antiquity His treatise On the First Principles systematically laid out the principles of Christian theology and became the foundation for later theological writings 18 He also authored Contra Celsum the most influential work of early Christian apologetics 19 in which he defended Christianity against the pagan philosopher Celsus one of its foremost early critics Origen produced the Hexapla the first critical edition of the Hebrew Bible which contained the original Hebrew text as well as four different Greek translations of it and one Greek transliteration of the Hebrew all written in columns side by side He wrote hundreds of homilies covering almost the entire Bible interpreting many passages as allegorical Origen taught that before the creation of the material universe God had created the souls of all the intelligent beings These souls at first fully devoted to God fell away from him and were given physical bodies Origen was the first to propose the ransom theory of atonement in its fully developed form and he also significantly contributed to the development of the concept of the Trinity Origen hoped that all people might eventually attain salvation but was always careful to maintain that this was only speculation He defended free will and advocated Christian pacifism Origen is considered by some Christian groups to be a Church Father 20 21 22 23 he does not have this status in Orthodox Christianity He is widely regarded as one of the most influential Christian theologians 24 His teachings were especially influential in the east with Athanasius of Alexandria and the three Cappadocian Fathers being among his most devoted followers 25 Argument over the orthodoxy of Origen s teachings spawned the First Origenist Crisis in the late fourth century in which he was attacked by Epiphanius of Salamis and Jerome but defended by Tyrannius Rufinus and John of Jerusalem In 543 Emperor Justinian I condemned him as a heretic and ordered all his writings to be burned The Second Council of Constantinople in 553 may have anathematized Origen or it may have only condemned certain heretical teachings which claimed to be derived from Origen His teachings on the pre existence of souls were rejected by the Church 26 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Alleged self castration 1 3 Travels and early writings 1 4 Conflict with Demetrius and removal to Caesarea 1 5 Work and teaching in Caesarea 1 6 Later life 2 Works 2 1 Exegetical writings 2 2 Extant commentaries 2 3 On the First Principles 2 4 Against Celsus 2 5 Other writings 3 Views 3 1 Christology 3 2 Cosmology and Eschatology 3 3 Ethics 3 4 Hermeneutics 3 5 Theology 4 Influence on the Later Church 4 1 Before the Crises 4 2 First Origenist Crisis 4 3 Second Origenist Crisis 4 4 After the Anathemas 5 Translations 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife EditEarly years Edit Almost all information about Origen s life comes from a lengthy biography of him in Book VI of the Ecclesiastical History written by the Christian historian Eusebius c 260 c 340 27 Eusebius portrays Origen as the perfect Christian scholar and as a literal saint 27 Eusebius however wrote this account almost fifty years after Origen s death and had access to few reliable sources on Origen s life especially his early years 27 Anxious for more material about his hero Eusebius recorded events based only on unreliable hearsay evidence and frequently made speculative inferences about Origen based on the sources he had available 27 Nonetheless scholars can reconstruct a general impression of Origen s historical life by sorting out the parts of Eusebius s account that are accurate from those that are inaccurate 28 Origen was born in either 185 or 186 AD in Alexandria 25 29 30 Porphyry called him a Greek and educated in Greek literature 31 According to Eusebius Origen s father was Leonides of Alexandria a respected professor of literature and also a devout Christian who practised his religion openly and later a martyr and saint with a feast day of April 22 in the Catholic church 32 33 Joseph Wilson Trigg deems the details of this report unreliable but admits that Origen s father was certainly at least a prosperous and thoroughly Hellenized bourgeois 33 failed verification According to John Anthony McGuckin Origen s mother whose name is unknown may have been a member of the lower class who did not have the right of citizenship 32 It is likely that on account of his mother s status Origen was not a Roman citizen 34 Origen s father taught him about literature and philosophy 35 and also about the Bible and Christian doctrine 35 36 Eusebius states that Origen s father made him memorize passages of scripture daily 37 Trigg accepts this tradition as possibly genuine given Origen s ability as an adult to recite extended passages of scripture at will 37 Eusebius also reports that Origen became so learned about the holy scriptures at an early age that his father was unable to answer his questions 38 39 In 202 when Origen was not yet seventeen the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus ordered Roman citizens who openly practised Christianity to be executed 32 40 Origen s father Leonides was arrested and thrown in prison 25 32 40 Eusebius reports that Origen wanted to turn himself in to the authorities so that they would execute him as well 25 32 but his mother hid all his clothes and he was unable to go to the authorities since he refused to leave the house naked 25 32 According to McGuckin even if Origen had turned himself in it is unlikely that he would have been punished since the emperor was only intent on executing Roman citizens 32 Origen s father was beheaded 25 32 40 and the state confiscated the family s entire property leaving them impoverished 32 40 Origen was the eldest of nine children 32 40 and as his father s heir it became his responsibility to provide for the whole family 32 40 When he was eighteen years old Origen was appointed as a catechist at the Catechetical School of Alexandria 38 Many scholars have assumed that Origen became the head of the school 38 but according to McGuckin this is highly improbable and it is more likely that he was simply given a paid teaching position perhaps as a relief effort for his destitute family 38 While employed at the school he adopted the ascetic lifestyle of the Greek Sophists 38 41 42 He spent the whole day teaching 38 and would stay up late at night writing treatises and commentaries 38 41 He went barefoot and only owned one cloak 41 He did not drink alcohol and ate a simple diet 43 and he often fasted for long periods 43 41 Although Eusebius goes to great lengths to portray Origen as one of the Christian monastics of his own era 38 this portrayal is now generally recognized as anachronistic 38 According to Eusebius as a young man Origen was taken in by a wealthy Gnostic woman 44 who was also the patron of a very influential Gnostic theologian from Antioch who frequently lectured in her home 44 Eusebius goes to great lengths to insist that although Origen studied while in her home 44 he never once prayed in common with her or the Gnostic theologian 44 Later Origen succeeded in converting a wealthy man named Ambrose from Valentinian Gnosticism to orthodox Christianity 19 44 Ambrose was so impressed by the young scholar that he gave Origen a house a secretary seven stenographers a crew of copyists and calligraphers and paid for all of his writings to be published 19 44 Sometime when he was in his early twenties Origen sold the small library of Greek literary works which he had inherited from his father for a sum which netted him a daily income of four obols 44 41 42 He used this money to continue his study of the Bible and of philosophy 44 41 Origen studied at numerous schools throughout Alexandria 44 including the Platonic Academy of Alexandria 45 44 where he was a student of Ammonius Saccas 46 19 44 47 48 Eusebius claims that Origen studied under Clement of Alexandria 43 25 49 but according to McGuckin this is almost certainly a retrospective assumption based on the similarity of their teachings 43 Origen rarely mentions Clement in his own writings 43 and when he does it is usually to correct him 43 Alleged self castration Edit Eusebius claims in his Ecclesiastical History that as a young man Origen secretly paid a physician to surgically castrate him a claim which affected Origen s reputation for centuries 50 as demonstrated by these fifteenth century depictions of Origen castrating himself Eusebius claims that as a young man following a literal reading of Matthew 19 12 in which Jesus is presented as saying there are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuch for the sake of the kingdom of heaven 51 Origen either castrated himself or had someone else castrate him in order to ensure his reputation as a respectable tutor to young men and women 43 41 52 53 Eusebius further alleges that Origen privately told Demetrius the bishop of Alexandria about the castration and that Demetrius initially praised him for his devotion to God on account of it 43 Origen however never mentions anything about having castrated himself in any of his surviving writings 43 54 and in his exegesis of this verse in his Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew written near the end of life he strongly condemns any literal interpretation of Matthew 19 12 43 asserting that only an idiot would interpret the passage as advocating literal castration 43 Since the beginning of the twentieth century some scholars have questioned the historicity of Origen s self castration with many seeing it as a wholesale fabrication 55 56 Trigg states that Eusebius s account of Origen s self castration is certainly true because Eusebius who was an ardent admirer of Origen yet clearly describes the castration as an act of pure folly would have had no motive to pass on a piece of information that might tarnish Origen s reputation unless it was notorious and beyond question 41 Trigg sees Origen s condemnation of the literal interpretation of Matthew 19 12 as him tacitly repudiating the literalistic reading he had acted on in his youth 41 In sharp contrast McGuckin dismisses Eusebius s story of Origen s self castration as hardly credible seeing it as a deliberate attempt by Eusebius to distract from more serious questions regarding the orthodoxy of Origen s teachings 43 McGuckin also states We have no indication that the motive of castration for respectability was ever regarded as standard by a teacher of mixed gender classes 43 He adds that Origen s female students whom Eusebius lists by name would have been accompanied by attendants at all times meaning that Origen would have had no good reason to think that anyone would suspect him of impropriety 43 Henry Chadwick argues that while Eusebius s story may be true it seems unlikely given that Origen s exposition of Matthew 19 12 strongly deplored any literal interpretation of the words 57 Instead Chadwick suggests Perhaps Eusebius was uncritically reporting malicious gossip retailed by Origen s enemies of whom there were many 57 However many noted historians such as Peter Brown and William Placher continue to find no reason to conclude that the story is false 58 Placher theorizes that if it is true it may have followed an episode in which Origen received some raised eyebrows while privately tutoring a woman 58 Travels and early writings Edit Alexandria Caesarea Nicomedia Antioch Athens Caesarea Mazaca Tyre Romeclass notpageimage Map of the Mediterranean showing locations associated with Origen In his early twenties Origen became less interested in work as a grammarian 59 and more interested in operating as a rhetor philosopher 59 He gave his job as a catechist to his younger colleague Heraclas 59 Meanwhile Origen began to style himself as a master of philosophy 59 Origen s new position as a self styled Christian philosopher brought him into conflict with Demetrius the bishop of Alexandria 59 Demetrius a charismatic leader who ruled the Christian congregation of Alexandria with an iron fist 59 became the most direct promoter of the elevation in status of the bishop of Alexandria 60 prior to Demetrius the bishop of Alexandria had merely been a priest who was elected to represent his fellows 61 but after Demetrius the bishop was seen as clearly a rank higher than his fellow priests 61 By styling himself as an independent philosopher Origen was reviving a role that had been prominent in earlier Christianity 60 but which challenged the authority of the now powerful bishop 60 Meanwhile Origen began composing his massive theological treatise On the First Principles 61 a landmark book which systematically laid out the foundations of Christian theology for centuries to come 61 Origen also began travelling abroad to visit schools across the Mediterranean 61 In 212 he travelled to Rome a major center of philosophy at the time 61 In Rome Origen attended lectures by Hippolytus of Rome and was influenced by his logos theology 61 In 213 or 214 the governor of Arabia sent a message to the prefect of Egypt requesting him to send Origen to meet with him so that he could interview him and learn more about Christianity from its leading intellectual 61 Origen escorted by official bodyguards 61 spent a short time in Arabia with the governor before returning to Alexandria 62 In the autumn of 215 the Roman Emperor Caracalla visited Alexandria 63 During the visit the students at the schools there protested and made fun of him for having murdered his brother Geta 63 died 211 Caracalla incensed ordered his troops to ravage the city execute the governor and kill all the protesters 63 He also commanded them to expel all the teachers and intellectuals from the city 63 Origen fled Alexandria and traveled to the city of Caesarea Maritima in the Roman province of Palestine 63 where the bishops Theoctistus of Caesarea and Alexander of Jerusalem became his devoted admirers 63 and asked him to deliver discourses on the scriptures in their respective churches 63 This effectively amounted to letting Origen deliver homilies even though he was not formally ordained 63 While this was an unexpected phenomenon especially given Origen s international fame as a teacher and philosopher 63 it infuriated Demetrius who saw it as a direct undermining of his authority 63 Demetrius sent deacons from Alexandria to demand that the Palestinian hierarchs immediately return his catechist to Alexandria 63 He also issued a decree chastising the Palestinians for allowing a person who was not ordained to preach 64 The Palestinian bishops in turn issued their own condemnation accusing Demetrius of being jealous of Origen s fame and prestige 65 While in Jericho Origen bought an ancient manuscript of the Hebrew Bible which had been discovered in a jar 65 a discovery which prefigures the later discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in the twentieth century 65 Shown here a section of the Isaiah scroll from Qumran Origen obeyed Demetrius s order and returned to Alexandria 65 bringing with him an antique scroll he had purchased at Jericho containing the full text of the Hebrew Bible 65 The manuscript which had purportedly been found in a jar 65 became the source text for one of the two Hebrew columns in Origen s Hexapla 65 Origen studied the Old Testament in great depth 65 Eusebius even claims that Origen learned Hebrew 66 67 Most modern scholars regard this claim as implausible 66 68 but they disagree over how much Origen actually knew about the language 67 H Lietzmann concludes that Origen probably only knew the Hebrew alphabet and not much else 67 whereas R P C Hanson and G Bardy argue that Origen had a superficial understanding of the language but not enough to have composed the entire Hexapla 67 A note in Origen s On the First Principles mentions an unknown Hebrew master 66 but this was probably a consultant not a teacher 66 Dutch illustration by Jan Luyken 1700 showing Origen teaching his students Origen also studied the entire New Testament 65 but especially the epistles of the apostle Paul and the Gospel of John 65 the writings which Origen regarded as the most important and authoritative 65 At Ambrose s request Origen composed the first five books of his exhaustive Commentary on the Gospel of John 69 He also wrote the first eight books of his Commentary on Genesis his Commentary on Psalms 1 25 and his Commentary on Lamentations 69 In addition to these commentaries Origen also wrote two books on the resurrection of Jesus and ten books of Stromata miscellanies 69 It is likely that these works contained much theological speculation 70 which brought Origen into even greater conflict with Demetrius 71 Conflict with Demetrius and removal to Caesarea Edit Origen repeatedly asked Demetrius to ordain him as a priest but Demetrius continually refused 72 73 19 In around 231 Demetrius sent Origen on a mission to Athens 70 74 Along the way Origen stopped in Caesarea 70 74 where he was warmly greeted by the bishops Theoctistus of Caesarea and Alexander of Jerusalem who had become his close friends during his previous stay 70 74 While he was visiting Caesarea Origen asked Theoctistus to ordain him as a priest 19 70 Theoctistus gladly complied 75 73 74 Upon learning of Origen s ordination Demetrius was outraged and issued a condemnation declaring that Origen s ordination by a foreign bishop was an act of insubordination 73 76 74 Eusebius reports that as a result of Demetrius s condemnations Origen decided not to return to Alexandria and instead to take up permanent residence in Caesarea 76 John Anthony McGuckin however argues that Origen had probably already been planning to stay in Caesarea 77 The Palestinian bishops declared Origen the chief theologian of Caesarea 16 Firmilian the bishop of Caesarea Mazaca in Cappadocia was such a devoted disciple of Origen that he begged him to come to Cappadocia and teach there 78 Demetrius raised a storm of protests against the bishops of Palestine and the church synod in Rome 77 According to Eusebius Demetrius published the allegation that Origen had secretly castrated himself 77 a capital offense under Roman law at the time 77 and one which would have made Origen s ordination invalid since eunuchs were forbidden from becoming priests 77 Demetrius also alleged that Origen had taught an extreme form of apokatastasis which held that all beings including even Satan himself would eventually attain salvation 16 This allegation probably arose from a misunderstanding of Origen s argument during a debate with the Valentinian Gnostic teacher Candidus 16 Candidus had argued in favor of predestination by declaring that the Devil was beyond salvation 16 Origen had responded by arguing that if the Devil is destined for eternal damnation it was on account of his actions which were the result of his own free will 79 Therefore Origen had declared that Satan was only morally reprobate not absolutely reprobate 79 Demetrius died in 232 less than a year after Origen s departure from Alexandria 77 The accusations against Origen faded with the death of Demetrius 80 but they did not disappear entirely 81 and they continued to haunt him for the rest of his career 81 Origen defended himself in his Letter to Friends in Alexandria 16 in which he vehemently denied that he had ever taught that the Devil would attain salvation 16 17 82 and insisted that the very notion of the Devil attaining salvation was simply ludicrous 16 Work and teaching in Caesarea Edit It was like a spark falling in our deepest soul setting it on fire making it burst into flame within us It was at the same time a love for the Holy Word the most beautiful object of all that by its ineffable beauty attracts all things to itself with irresistible force and it was also love for this man the friend and advocate of the Holy Word I was thus persuaded to give up all other goals I had only one remaining object that I valued and longed for philosophy and that divine man who was my master of philosophy Theodore Panegyric a first hand account of what listening to one of Origen s lectures in Caesarea was like 83 During his early years in Caesarea Origen s primary task was the establishment of a Christian School 84 85 Caesarea had long been seen as a center of learning for Jews and Hellenistic philosophers 84 but until Origen s arrival it had lacked a Christian center of higher education 84 According to Eusebius the school Origen founded was primarily targeted towards young pagans who had expressed interest in Christianity 18 85 but were not yet ready to ask for baptism 18 85 The school therefore sought to explain Christian teachings through Middle Platonism 18 86 Origen started his curriculum by teaching his students classical Socratic reasoning 83 After they had mastered this he taught them cosmology and natural history 83 Finally once they had mastered all of these subjects he taught them theology which was the highest of all philosophies the accumulation of everything they had previously learned 83 With the establishment of the Caesarean school Origen s reputation as a scholar and theologian reached its zenith 84 and he became known throughout the Mediterranean world as a brilliant intellectual 84 The hierarchs of the Palestinian and Arabian church synods regarded Origen as the ultimate expert on all matters dealing with theology 80 While teaching in Caesarea Origen resumed work on his Commentary on John composing at least books six through ten 87 In the first of these books Origen compares himself to an Israelite who has escaped the perverse persecution of the Egyptians 84 Origen also wrote the treatise On Prayer at the request of his friend Ambrose and Tatiana referred to as the sister of Ambrose in which he analyzes the different types of prayers described in the Bible and offers a detailed exegesis on the Lord s Prayer 88 Julia Avita Mamaea the mother of the Roman emperor Severus Alexander summoned Origen to Antioch to teach her philosophy 19 Pagans also took a fascination with Origen 83 The Neoplatonist philosopher Porphyry heard of Origen s fame 83 and traveled to Caesarea to listen to his lectures 83 Porphyry recounts that Origen had extensively studied the teachings of Pythagoras Plato and Aristotle 83 89 but also those of important Middle Platonists Neopythagoreans and Stoics including Numenius of Apamea Chronius Apollophanes Longinus Moderatus of Gades Nicomachus Chaeremon and Cornutus 83 89 Nonetheless Porphyry accused Origen of having betrayed true philosophy by subjugating its insights to the exegesis of the Christian scriptures 83 90 Eusebius reports that Origen was summoned from Caesarea to Antioch at the behest of Julia Avita Mamaea the mother of Roman Emperor Severus Alexander to discuss Christian philosophy and doctrine with her 91 In 235 approximately three years after Origen began teaching in Caesarea Alexander Severus who had been tolerant towards Christians was murdered 92 and Emperor Maximinus Thrax instigated a purge of all those who had supported his predecessor 92 His pogroms targeted Christian leaders 92 and in Rome Pope Pontianus and Hippolytus of Rome were both sent into exile 92 Origen knew that he was in danger and went into hiding in the home of a faithful Christian woman named Juliana the Virgin 92 who had been a student of the Ebionite leader Symmachus 92 Origen s close friend and longtime patron Ambrose was arrested in Nicomedia and Protoctetes the leading priest in Caesarea was also arrested 92 In their honor Origen composed his treatise Exhortation to Martyrdom 92 93 which is now regarded as one of the greatest classics of Christian resistance literature 92 After coming out of hiding following Maximinus s death Origen founded a school of which Gregory Thaumaturgus later bishop of Pontus was one of the pupils He preached regularly on Wednesdays and Fridays and later daily 80 94 Later life Edit Sometime between 238 and 244 Origen visited Athens where he completed his Commentary on the Book of Ezekiel and began writing his Commentary on the Song of Songs 95 After visiting Athens he visited Ambrose in Nicomedia 95 According to Porphyry Origen also travelled to Rome or Antioch where he met Plotinus the founder of Neoplatonism 96 The Christians of the eastern Mediterranean continued to revere Origen as the most orthodox of all theologians 97 and when the Palestinian hierarchs learned that Beryllus the bishop of Bostra and one of the most energetic Christian leaders of the time had been preaching adoptionism the belief that Jesus was born human and only became divine after his baptism 97 they sent Origen to convert him to orthodoxy 97 Origen engaged Beryllus in a public disputation which went so successfully that Beryllus promised only to teach Origen s theology from then on 97 On another occasion a Christian leader in Arabia named Heracleides began teaching that the soul was mortal and that it perished with the body 98 Origen refuted these teachings arguing that the soul is immortal and can never die 98 In c 249 the Plague of Cyprian broke out 99 In 250 Emperor Decius believing that the plague was caused by Christians failure to recognise him as divine 99 issued a decree for Christians to be persecuted 99 18 98 This time Origen did not escape 18 98 Eusebius recounts how Origen suffered bodily tortures and torments under the iron collar and in the dungeon and how for many days with his feet stretched four spaces in the stocks 100 101 98 The governor of Caesarea gave very specific orders that Origen was not to be killed until he had publicly renounced his faith in Christ 98 Origen endured two years of imprisonment and torture 98 but obstinately refused to renounce his faith 18 102 In June 251 Decius was killed fighting the Goths in the Battle of Abritus and Origen was released from prison 98 Nonetheless Origen s health was broken by the physical tortures enacted on him 18 103 and he died less than a year later at the age of sixty nine 18 103 A later legend recounted by Jerome and numerous itineraries places his death and burial at Tyre but little value can be attached to this 104 Works Edit Imaginative portrayal of Origen from Les Vrais Portraits Et Vies Des Hommes Illustres by Andre Thevet Exegetical writings Edit Origen was an extremely prolific writer 105 106 107 108 According to Epiphanius he wrote a grand total of roughly 6 000 works over the course of his lifetime 109 110 Most scholars agree that this estimate is probably somewhat exaggerated 109 According to Jerome Eusebius listed the titles of just under 2 000 treatises written by Origen in his lost Life of Pamphilus 109 111 112 Jerome compiled an abbreviated list of Origen s major treatises itemizing 800 different titles 109 By far the most important work of Origen on textual criticism was the Hexapla Sixfold a massive comparative study of various translations of the Old Testament in six columns 113 Hebrew Hebrew in Greek characters the Septuagint and the Greek translations of Theodotion a Jewish scholar from c 180 AD Aquila of Sinope another Jewish scholar from c 117 138 and Symmachus an Ebionite scholar from c 193 211 113 114 Origen was the first Christian scholar to introduce critical markers to a Biblical text 115 He marked the Septuagint column of the Hexapla using signs adapted from those used by the textual critics of the Great Library of Alexandria 115 a passage found in the Septuagint that was not found in the Hebrew text would be marked with an asterisk 115 and a passage that was found in other Greek translations but not in the Septuagint would be marked with an obelus 115 Diagram showing the inter relationship between various significant ancient versions and recensions of the Old Testament some identified by their siglum LXX here denotes the original septuagint The Hexapla was the cornerstone of the Great Library of Caesarea which Origen founded 115 It was still the centerpiece of the library s collection by the time of Jerome 115 who records having used it in his letters on multiple occasions 115 When Emperor Constantine the Great ordered fifty complete copies of the Bible to be transcribed and disseminated across the empire Eusebius used the Hexapla as the master copy for the Old Testament 115 Although the original Hexapla has been lost 116 the text of it has survived in numerous fragments 115 and a more or less complete Syriac translation of the Greek column made by the seventh century bishop Paul of Tella has also survived 116 For some sections of the Hexapla Origen included additional columns containing other Greek translations 115 for the Book of Psalms he included no less than eight Greek translations making this section known as Enneapla Ninefold 115 Origen also produced the Tetrapla Fourfold a smaller abridged version of the Hexapla containing only the four Greek translations and not the original Hebrew text 115 According to Jerome s Epistle 33 Origen wrote extensive scholia on the books of Exodus Leviticus Isaiah Psalms 1 15 Ecclesiastes and the Gospel of John 109 None of these scholia have survived intact 109 but parts of them were incorporated into the Catenaea a collection of excerpts from major works of Biblical commentary written by the Church Fathers 109 Other fragments of the scholia are preserved in Origen s Philocalia and in Pamphilus of Caesarea s apology for Origen 109 The Stromateis were of a similar character and the margin of Codex Athous Laura 184 contains citations from this work on Romans 9 23 I Corinthians 6 14 7 31 34 9 20 21 10 9 besides a few other fragments Origen composed homilies covering almost the entire Bible There are 205 and possibly 279 homilies of Origen that are extant either in Greek or in Latin translations c Two sides of the Papyrus Bodmer VIII an early New Testament fragment from the third or fourth century AD containing the Epistle of Jude 1 Peter and 2 Peter Origen accepted the two former as authentic without question 117 but noted that the latter was suspected to be a forgery 118 The homilies preserved are on Genesis 16 Exodus 13 Leviticus 16 Numbers 28 Joshua 26 Judges 9 I Sam 2 Psalms 36 38 9 d Canticles 2 Isaiah 9 Jeremiah 7 Greek 2 Latin 12 Greek and Latin Ezekiel 14 and Luke 39 The homilies were preached in the church at Caesarea with the exception of the two on 1 Samuel which were delivered in Jerusalem Nautin has argued that they were all preached in a three year liturgical cycle some time between 238 and 244 preceding the Commentary on the Song of Songs where Origen refers to homilies on Judges Exodus Numbers and a work on Leviticus 119 On June 11 2012 the Bavarian State Library announced that the Italian philologist Marina Molin Pradel had discovered twenty nine previously unknown homilies by Origen in a twelfth century Byzantine manuscript from their collection 120 121 Prof Lorenzo Perrone of Bologna University and other experts confirmed the authenticity of the homilies 122 The texts of these manuscripts can be found online 123 Origen is the main source of information on the use of the texts that were later officially canonized as the New Testament 124 125 The information used to create the late fourth century Easter Letter which declared accepted Christian writings was probably based on the lists given in Eusebius s Ecclesiastical History HE 3 25 and 6 25 which were both primarily based on information provided by Origen 125 Origen accepted the authenticity of the epistles of 1 John 1 Peter and Jude without question 124 and accepted the Epistle of James as authentic with only slight hesitation 126 He also refers to 2 John 3 John and 2 Peter 117 but notes that all three were suspected to be forgeries 117 Origen may have also considered other writings to be inspired that were rejected by later authors including the Epistle of Barnabas Shepherd of Hermas and 1 Clement 127 Origen is not the originator of the idea of biblical canon but he certainly gives the philosophical and literary interpretative underpinnings for the whole notion 127 Extant commentaries Edit Books containing Latin translations of some of Origen s extant writings Origen s commentaries written on specific books of scripture are much more focused on systematic exegesis than his homilies 128 In these writings Origen applies the precise critical methodology that had been developed by the scholars of the Mouseion in Alexandria to the Christian scriptures 128 The commentaries also display Origen s impressive encyclopedic knowledge of various subjects 128 and his ability to cross reference specific words listing every place in which a word appears in the scriptures along with all the word s known meanings 128 a feat made all the more impressive by the fact that he did this in a time when Bible concordances had not yet been compiled 128 Origen s massive Commentary on the Gospel of John which spanned more than thirty two volumes once it was completed 129 was written with the specific intention not only to expound the correct interpretation of the scriptures but also to refute the interpretations of the Valentinian Gnostic teacher Heracleon 128 130 who had used the Gospel of John to support his argument that there were really two gods not one 128 Of the original thirty two books in the Commentary on John only nine have been preserved Books I II VI X XIII XX XXVIII XXXII and a fragment of XIX 131 Of the original twenty five books in Origen s Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew only eight have survived in the original Greek Books 10 17 covering Matthew 13 36 22 33 131 An anonymous Latin translation beginning at the point corresponding to Book 12 Chapter 9 of the Greek text and covering Matthew 16 13 27 66 has also survived 131 132 The translation contains parts that are not found in the original Greek and is missing parts that are found in it 131 Origen s Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew was universally regarded as a classic even after his condemnation 131 and it ultimately became the work which established the Gospel of Matthew as the primary gospel 131 Origen s Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans was originally fifteen books long but only tiny fragments of it have survived in the original Greek 131 An abbreviated Latin translation in ten books was produced by the monk Tyrannius Rufinus at the end of the fourth century 133 e The historian Socrates Scholasticus records that Origen had included an extensive discussion of the application of the title theotokos to the Virgin Mary in his commentary 133 but this discussion is not found in Rufinus s translation 133 probably because Rufinus did not approve of Origen s position on the matter whatever that might have been 133 Origen also composed a Commentary on the Song of Songs 133 in which he took explicit care to explain why the Song of Songs was relevant to a Christian audience 133 The Commentary on the Song of Songs was Origen s most celebrated commentary 133 and Jerome famously writes in his preface to his translation of two of Origen s homilies over the Song of Songs that In his other works Origen habitually excels others In this commentary he excelled himself 133 Origen expanded on the exegesis of the Jewish Rabbi Akiva 133 interpreting the Song of Songs as a mystical allegory in which the bridegroom represents the Logos and the bride represents the soul of the believer 133 This was the first Christian commentary to expound such an interpretation 133 and it became extremely influential on later interpretations of the Song of Songs 133 Despite this the commentary now only survives in part through a Latin translation of it made by Tyrannius Rufinus in 410 133 f Fragments of some other commentaries survive Citations in Origen s Philokalia include fragments of the third book of the commentary on Genesis There is also Ps i iv 1 the small commentary on Canticles and the second book of the large commentary on the same the twentieth book of the commentary on Ezekiel g and the commentary on Hosea Of the non extant commentaries there is limited evidence of their arrangement h On the First Principles Edit Origen s On the First Principles was the first ever systematic exposition of Christian theology 134 48 He composed it as a young man between 220 and 230 while he was still living in Alexandria 134 Fragments from Books 3 1 and 4 1 3 of Origen s Greek original are preserved in Origen s Philokalia 134 A few smaller quotations of the original Greek are preserved in Justinian s Letter to Mennas 134 The vast majority of the text has only survived in a heavily abridged Latin translation produced by Tyrannius Rufinus in 397 134 On the First Principles begins with an essay explaining the nature of theology 134 Book One describes the heavenly world 134 48 and includes descriptions of the oneness of God the relationship between the three persons of the Trinity the nature of the divine spirit reason and angels 135 Book Two describes the world of man including the incarnation of the Logos the soul free will and eschatology 136 48 Book Three deals with cosmology sin and redemption 136 48 Book Four deals with teleology and the interpretation of the scriptures 136 48 Against Celsus Edit Greek text of Origen s apologetic treatise Contra Celsum which is considered to be the most important work of early Christian apologetics 137 138 Against Celsus Greek Katὰ Kelsoy Latin Contra Celsum preserved entirely in Greek was Origen s last treatise written about 248 It is an apologetic work defending orthodox Christianity against the attacks of the pagan philosopher Celsus who was seen in the ancient world as early Christianity s foremost opponent 19 139 In 178 Celsus had written a polemic entitled On the True Word in which he had made numerous arguments against Christianity 139 The church had responded by ignoring Celsus s attacks 139 but Origen s patron Ambrose brought the matter to his attention 139 Origen initially wanted to ignore Celsus and let his attacks fade 139 but one of Celsus s major claims which held that no self respecting philosopher of the Platonic tradition would ever be so stupid as to become a Christian provoked him to write a rebuttal 139 In the book Origen systematically refutes each of Celsus arguments point by point 19 138 and argues for a rational basis of Christian faith 140 141 89 Origen draws heavily on the teachings of Plato 142 and argues that Christianity and Greek philosophy are not incompatible 142 and that philosophy contains much that is true and admirable 142 but that the Bible contains far greater wisdom than anything Greek philosophers could ever grasp 142 Origen responds to Celsus s accusation that Jesus had performed his miracles using magic rather than divine powers by asserting that unlike magicians Jesus had not performed his miracles for show but rather to reform his audiences 140 Contra Celsum became the most influential of all early Christian apologetics works 19 138 before it was written Christianity was seen by many as merely a folk religion for the illiterate and uneducated 140 138 but Origen raised it to a level of academic respectability 137 138 Eusebius admired Against Celsus so much that in his Against Hierocles 1 he declared that Against Celsus provided an adequate rebuttal to all criticisms the church would ever face 143 Other writings Edit Between 232 and 235 while in Caesarea in Palestine Origen wrote On Prayer of which the full text has been preserved in the original Greek 80 After an introduction on the object necessity and advantage of prayer he ends with an exegesis of the Lord s Prayer concluding with remarks on the position place and attitude to be assumed during prayer as well as on the classes of prayer 80 On Martyrdom or the Exhortation to Martyrdom also preserved entire in Greek 92 was written some time after the beginning of the persecution of Maximinus in the first half of 235 92 In it Origen warns against any trifling with idolatry and emphasises the duty of suffering martyrdom manfully while in the second part he explains the meaning of martyrdom 92 The papyri discovered at Tura in 1941 contained the Greek texts of two previously unknown works of Origen 141 Neither work can be dated precisely though both were probably written after the persecution of Maximinus in 235 141 One is On the Pascha 141 The other is Dialogue with Heracleides a record written by one of Origen s stenographers of a debate between Origen and the Arabian bishop Heracleides a quasi Monarchianist who taught that the Father and the Son were the same 144 141 145 146 In the dialogue Origen uses Socratic questioning to persuade Heracleides to believe in the Logos theology 144 147 in which the Son or Logos is a separate entity from God the Father 148 The debate between Origen and Heracleides and Origen s responses in particular has been noted for its unusually cordial and respectful nature in comparison to the much fiercer polemics of Tertullian or the fourth century debates between Trinitarians and Arians 147 Lost works include two books on the Resurrection written before On First Principles and also two dialogues on the same theme dedicated to Ambrose Eusebius had a collection of more than one hundred letters of Origen 149 and the list of Jerome speaks of several books of his epistles Except for a few fragments only three letters have been preserved 150 The first partly preserved in the Latin translation of Rufinus is addressed to friends in Alexandria 150 16 The second is a short letter to Gregory Thaumaturgus preserved in the Philocalia 150 The third is an epistle to Sextus Julius Africanus extant in Greek replying to a letter from Africanus also extant and defending the authenticity of the Greek additions to the book of Daniel 150 95 Forgeries of the writings of Origen made in his lifetime are discussed by Rufinus in De adulteratione librorum Origenis The Dialogus de recta in Deum fide the Philosophumena attributed to Hippolytus of Rome and the Commentary on Job by Julian the Arian have also been ascribed to him 151 152 153 Views EditChristology Edit Origen writes that Jesus was the firstborn of all creation who assumed a body and a human soul 154 He firmly believed that Jesus had a human soul 154 and abhorred docetism the teaching which held that Jesus had come to Earth in spirit form rather than a physical human body 154 Origen envisioned Jesus human nature as the one soul that stayed closest to God and remained perfectly faithful to Him even when all other souls fell away 154 155 At Jesus s incarnation his soul became fused with the Logos and they intermingled to become one 156 155 Thus according to Origen Christ was both human and divine 156 155 but like all human souls Christ s human nature was existent from the beginning 157 155 Origen was the first to propose the ransom theory of atonement in its fully developed form 158 although Irenaeus had previously proposed a prototypical form of it 158 According to this theory Christ s death on the cross was a ransom to Satan in exchange for humanity s liberation 158 This theory holds that Satan was tricked by God 158 159 because Christ was not only free of sin but also the incarnate Deity whom Satan lacked the ability to enslave 159 The theory was later expanded by theologians such as Gregory of Nyssa and Rufinus of Aquileia 158 In the eleventh century Anselm of Canterbury criticized the ransom theory along with the associated Christus Victor theory 158 resulting in the theory s decline in western Europe 158 The theory has nonetheless retained some of its popularity in the Eastern Orthodox Church 158 Cosmology and Eschatology Edit The Garden of Eden with the Fall of Man c 1617 by Peter Paul Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder Origen based his teaching of the preexistence of souls on an allegorical interpretation of the creation story in the Book of Genesis 160 One of Origen s main teachings was the doctrine of the preexistence of souls 161 162 160 155 which held that before God created the material world he created a vast number of incorporeal spiritual intelligences psyxai 162 160 163 155 All of these souls were at first devoted to the contemplation and love of their Creator 162 163 155 but as the fervor of the divine fire cooled almost all of these intelligences eventually grew bored of contemplating God and their love for him cooled off psyxes8ai 162 160 163 155 When God created the world the souls which had previously existed without bodies became incarnate 162 160 Those whose love for God diminished the most became demons 163 155 Those whose love diminished moderately became human souls eventually to be incarnated in fleshly bodies 163 155 Those whose love diminished the least became angels 163 155 One soul however who remained perfectly devoted to God became through love one with the Word Logos of God 154 155 The Logos eventually took flesh and was born of the Virgin Mary becoming the God man Jesus Christ 154 163 155 In recent years it has been questioned whether Origen believed this being in reality a belief of his disciples and a misrepresentation of Justinian Epiphanius and others 164 Origen may or may not have believed in the Platonic teaching of metempsychosis the transmigration of souls i e reincarnation 165 He explicitly rejects the false doctrine of the transmigration of souls into bodies 166 25 but this may refer only to a specific kind of transmigration 166 Geddes MacGregor has argued that Origen must have believed in metempsychosis because it makes sense within his eschatology 167 and is never explicitly denied in the Bible 167 Roger E Olson however dismisses the view that Origen believed in reincarnation as a New Age misunderstanding of Origen s teachings 168 It is certain that Origen rejected the Stoic doctrine of eternal return 166 although he did posit the existence of a series of non identical worlds 169 Origen believed that eventually the whole world would be converted to Christianity 170 since the world is continually gaining possession of more souls 171 He believed that the Kingdom of Heaven was not yet come 172 but that it was the duty of every Christian to make the eschatological reality of the kingdom present in their lives 172 Origen is often believed to be a Universalist 173 who suggested that all people might eventually attain salvation 174 25 173 but only after being purged of their sins through divine fire 175 This of course in line of Origen s allegorical interpretation was not literal fire but rather the inner anguish of knowing one s own sins 174 175 Origen was also careful to maintain that universal salvation was merely a possibility and not a definitive doctrine 174 Jerome quotes Origen as having allegedly written that after aeons and the one restoration of all things the state of Gabriel will be the same as that of the Devil Paul s as that of Caiaphas that of virgins as that of prostitutes 173 However Origen expressly states in his Letter to Friends in Alexandria that Satan and those who are cast out of the kingdom of God would be not included in the final salvation 174 82 Ethics Edit The Birth of Esau and Jacob c 1360 1370 by Master of Jean de Mandeville Origen used the Biblical story of Esau and Jacob to support his theory that a soul s free will actions committed before incarnation determine the conditions of the person s birth 176 Origen was an ardent believer in free will 177 and he adamantly rejected the Valentinian idea of election 178 Instead Origen believed that even disembodied souls have the power to make their own decisions 178 Furthermore in his interpretation of the story of Jacob and Esau Origen argues that the condition into which a person is born is actually dependent upon what their souls did in this pre existent state 176 According to Origen the superficial unfairness of a person s condition at birth with some humans being poor others rich some being sick and others healthy is actually a by product of what the person s soul had done in the pre existent state 176 Origen defends free will in his interpretations of instances of divine foreknowledge in the scriptures 179 arguing that Jesus s knowledge of Judas s future betrayal in the gospels and God s knowledge of Israel s future disobedience in the Deuteronomistic history only show that God knew these events would happen in advance 179 Origen therefore concludes that the individuals involved in these incidents still made their decisions out of their own free will 179 Like Plato Plotinus 180 and Gregory of Nyssa Origen understands that only the agent who chooses the Good is free choosing evil is never free but slavery 181 Origen was an ardent pacifist 182 183 171 184 and in his Against Celsus he argued that Christianity s inherent pacifism was one of the most outwardly noticeable aspects of the religion 182 While Origen did admit that some Christians served in the Roman army 185 186 171 he pointed out that most did not 185 171 and insisted that engaging in earthly wars was against the way of Christ 185 183 171 184 Origen accepted that it was sometimes necessary for a non Christian state to wage wars 187 but insisted that it was impossible for a Christian to fight in such a war without compromising his or her faith since Christ had absolutely forbidden violence of any kind 187 184 Origen explained the violence found in certain passages of the Old Testament as allegorical 170 and pointed out Old Testament passages which he interpreted as supporting nonviolence such as Psalm 7 4 6 188 and Lamentations 3 27 29 189 170 Origen maintained that if everyone were peaceful and loving like Christians then there would be no wars and the Empire would not need a military 190 Hermeneutics Edit For who that has understanding will suppose that the first and second and third day and the evening and the morning existed without a sun and moon and stars And that the first day was as it were also without a sky And who is so foolish as to suppose that God after the manner of a husbandman planted a paradise in Eden towards the east and placed in it a tree of life visible and palpable so that one tasting of the fruit by the bodily teeth obtained life And again that one was a partaker of good and evil by masticating what was taken from the tree And if God is said to walk in the paradise in the evening and Adam to hide himself under a tree I do not suppose that anyone doubts that these things figuratively indicate certain mysteries the history having taken place in appearance and not literally Origen On the First Principles IV 16 Origen bases his theology on the Christian scriptures 162 191 165 155 and does not appeal to Platonic teachings without having first supported his argument with a scriptural basis 162 192 He saw the scriptures as divinely inspired 162 191 165 193 and was cautious never to contradict his own interpretation of what was written in them 165 Nonetheless Origen did have a penchant for speculating beyond what was explicitly stated in the Bible 168 194 and this habit frequently placed him in the hazy realm between strict orthodoxy and heresy 168 194 According to Origen there are two kinds of Biblical literature which are found in both the Old and New Testaments historia history or narrative and nomothesia legislation or ethical prescription 193 Origen expressly states that the Old and New Testaments should be read together and according to the same rules 195 Origen further taught that there were three different ways in which passages of scripture could be interpreted 195 48 The flesh was the literal historical interpretation of the passage 195 48 the soul was the moral message behind the passage 195 48 and the spirit was the eternal incorporeal reality that the passage conveyed 195 48 In Origen s exegesis the Book of Proverbs Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs represent perfect examples of the bodily soulful and spiritual components of scripture respectively 196 Origen saw the spiritual interpretation as the deepest and most important meaning of the text 196 and taught that some passages held no literal meaning at all and that their meanings were purely allegorical 196 Nonetheless he stressed that the passages which are historically true are far more numerous than those which are composed with purely spiritual meanings 196 and often used examples from corporeal realities 197 Origen noticed that the accounts of Jesus s life in the four canonical gospels contain irreconcilable contradictions 198 199 200 but he argued that these contradictions did not undermine the spiritual meanings of the passages in question 199 200 Origen s idea of a twofold creation was based on an allegorical interpretation of the creation story found in the first two chapters of the Book of Genesis 160 The first creation described in Genesis 1 26 201 was the creation of the primeval spirits 202 who are made in the image of God and are therefore incorporeal like Him 202 the second creation described in Genesis 2 7 203 is when the human souls are given ethereal spiritual bodies 204 and the description in Genesis 3 21 205 of God clothing Adam and Eve in tunics of skin refers to the transformation of these spiritual bodies into corporeal ones 202 Thus each phase represents a degradation from the original state of incorporeal holiness 202 Theology Edit Origen significantly contributed to the development of the concept of the Trinity 206 207 208 and was among the first to name the Holy Spirit as a member of the Godhead 209 but he was also a subordinationist 210 209 211 212 who taught that the Father was superior to the Son and the Son was superior to the Holy Spirit 210 209 212 Origen s conception of God the Father is apophatic a perfect unity invisible and incorporeal transcending all things material and therefore inconceivable and incomprehensible He is likewise unchangeable and transcends space and time But his power is limited by his goodness justice and wisdom and though entirely free from necessity his goodness and omnipotence constrained him to reveal himself This revelation the external self emanation of God is expressed by Origen in various ways the Logos being only one of many The revelation was the first creation of God cf Proverbs 8 22 in order to afford creative mediation between God and the world such mediation being necessary because God as changeless unity could not be the source of a multitudinous creation The Logos is the rational creative principle that permeates the universe 213 The Logos acts on all human beings through their capacity for logic and rational thought 214 guiding them to the truth of God s revelation 214 As they progress in their rational thinking all humans become more like Christ 213 Nonetheless they retain their individuality and do not become subsumed into Christ 215 Creation came into existence only through the Logos and God s nearest approach to the world is the command to create While the Logos is substantially a unity he comprehends a multiplicity of concepts so that Origen terms him in Platonic fashion essence of essences and idea of ideas Origen significantly contributed to the development of the idea of the Trinity 206 207 208 He declared the Holy Spirit to be a part of the Godhead 209 and interpreted the Parable of the Lost Coin to mean that the Holy Spirit dwells within each and every person 216 and that the inspiration of the Holy Spirit was necessary for any kind of speech dealing with God 217 Origen taught that the activity of all three parts of the Trinity was necessary for a person to attain salvation 212 In one fragment preserved by Rufinus in his Latin translation of Pamphilus s Defense of Origen Origen seems to apply the phrase homoousios ὁmooysios of the same substance to the relationship between the Father and the Son 210 218 But Williams states that it is impossible to verify whether the quote that uses the word homoousios really comes from Pamphilus at all let alone Origen 218 In other passages Origen rejected the belief that the Son and the Father were one hypostasis as heretical 218 According to Rowan Williams because the words ousia and hypostasis were used synonymously in Origen s time 218 Origen almost certainly would have rejected homoousios as a description for the relationship between the Father and the Son as heretical 218 Nonetheless Origen was a subordinationist 210 209 211 212 meaning he believed that the Father was superior to the Son and the Son was superior to the Holy Spirit 210 209 212 a model based on Platonic proportions 209 Jerome records that Origen had written that God the Father is invisible to all beings including even the Son and the Holy Spirit 219 and that the Son is invisible to the Holy Spirit as well 219 At one point Origen suggests that the Son was created by the Father and that the Holy Spirit was created by the Son 220 but at another point he writes that Up to the present I have been able to find no passage in the Scriptures that the Holy Spirit is a created being 209 221 At the time when Origen was alive orthodox views on the Trinity had not yet been formulated 219 222 and subordinationism was not yet considered heretical 219 222 In fact virtually all orthodox theologians prior to the Arian controversy in the latter half of the fourth century were subordinationists to some extent 222 Origen s subordinationism may have developed out of his efforts to defend the unity of God against the Gnostics 211 Influence on the Later Church Edit Athanasius of Alexandria shown standing in this 1876 oil painting by Vasily Surikov was deeply influenced by Origen s teachings 223 25 163 Before the Crises Edit Origen is often seen as the first major Christian theologian 224 Though his orthodoxy had been questioned in Alexandria while he was alive 194 163 after Origen s death Pope Dionysius of Alexandria became one of the foremost proponents of Origen s theology 225 226 227 Every Christian theologian who came after him was influenced by his theology whether directly or indirectly 109 Origen s contributions to theology were so vast and complex however that his followers frequently emphasized drastically different parts of his teachings to the expense of other parts 225 228 Dionysius emphasized Origen s subordinationist views 225 226 which led Dionysius to deny the unity of the Trinity causing controversy throughout North Africa 225 226 At the same time Origen s other disciple Theognostus of Alexandria taught that the Father and the Son were of one substance 229 For centuries after his death Origen was regarded as the bastion of orthodoxy 24 230 and his philosophy practically defined Eastern Christianity 168 Origen was revered as one of the greatest of all Christian teachers 15 he was especially beloved by monks who saw themselves as continuing in Origen s ascetic legacy 15 As time progressed however Origen became criticized under the standard of orthodoxy in later eras rather than the standards of his own lifetime 231 In the early fourth century the Christian writer Methodius of Olympus criticized some of Origen s more speculative arguments 232 163 233 234 but otherwise agreed with Origen on all other points of theology 235 Peter of Antioch and Eustathius of Antioch criticized Origen as heretical 233 Both orthodox and heterodox theologians claimed to be following in the tradition Origen had established 168 Athanasius of Alexandria the most prominent supporter of the Holy Trinity at the First Council of Nicaea was deeply influenced by Origen 223 25 163 and so were Basil of Caesarea Gregory of Nyssa and Gregory of Nazianzus the so called Cappadocian Fathers 236 25 163 At the same time Origen deeply influenced Arius of Alexandria and later followers of Arianism 237 223 238 239 Although the extent of the relationship between the two is debated 240 in antiquity many orthodox Christians believed that Origen was the true and ultimate source of the Arian heresy 240 241 First Origenist Crisis Edit Main article Origenist Crises St Jerome in His Study 1480 by Domenico Ghirlandaio Although initially a student of Origen s teachings Jerome turned against him during the First Origenist Crisis 242 243 He nonetheless remained influenced by Origen s teachings for his entire life 242 244 The First Origenist Crisis began in the late fourth century coinciding with the beginning of monasticism in Palestine 233 The first stirring of the controversy came from the Cyprian bishop Epiphanius of Salamis who was determined to root out all heresies and refute them 233 Epiphanius attacked Origen in his anti heretical treatises Ancoratus 375 and Panarion 376 compiling a list of teachings Origen had espoused that Epiphanius regarded as heretical 245 246 223 163 Epiphanius s treatises portray Origen as an originally orthodox Christian who had been corrupted and turned into a heretic by the evils of Greek education 246 Epiphanius particularly objected to Origen s subordinationism his excessive use of allegorical hermeneutic and his habit of proposing ideas about the Bible speculatively as exercises rather than dogmatically 245 Epiphanius asked John the bishop of Jerusalem to condemn Origen as a heretic John refused on the grounds that a person could not be retroactively condemned as a heretic after that person had already died 242 In 393 a monk named Atarbius advanced a petition to have Origen and his writings censured 242 Tyrannius Rufinus a priest at the monastery on the Mount of Olives who had been ordained by John of Jerusalem and was a longtime admirer of Origen rejected the petition outright 242 247 Rufinus s close friend and associate Jerome who had also studied Origen however came to agree with the petition 242 247 Around the same time John Cassian an Eastern monk introduced Origen s teachings to the West 248 163 In 394 Epiphanius wrote to John of Jerusalem again asking for Origen to be condemned insisting that Origen s writings denigrated human sexual reproduction and accusing him of having been an Encratite 242 John once again denied this request 242 By 395 Jerome had allied himself with the anti Origenists and begged John of Jerusalem to condemn Origen a plea which John once again refused 242 Epiphanius launched a campaign against John openly preaching that John was an Origenist deviant 242 He successfully persuaded Jerome to break communion with John and ordained Jerome s brother Paulinianus as a priest in defiance of John s authority 242 In 397 Rufinus published a Latin translation of Origen s On First Principles 242 249 243 134 Rufinus was convinced that Origen s original treatise had been interpolated by heretics and that these interpolations were the source of the heterodox teachings found in it 249 He therefore heavily modified Origen s text omitting and altering any parts which disagreed with contemporary Christian orthodoxy 134 249 In the introduction to this translation Rufinus mentioned that Jerome had studied under Origen s disciple Didymus the Blind implying that Jerome was a follower of Origen 242 247 Jerome was so incensed by this that he resolved to produce his own Latin translation of On the First Principles in which he promised to translate every word exactly as it was written and lay bare Origen s heresies to the whole world 134 242 243 Jerome s translation has been lost in its entirety 134 In 399 the Origenist crisis reached Egypt 242 Pope Theophilus I of Alexandria was sympathetic to the supporters of Origen 242 and the church historian Sozomen records that he had openly preached the Origenist teaching that God was incorporeal 250 In his Festal Letter of 399 he denounced those who believed that God had a literal human like body calling them illiterate simple ones 250 251 244 A large mob of Alexandrian monks who regarded God as anthropomorphic rioted in the streets 252 According to the church historian Socrates Scholasticus in order to prevent a riot Theophilus made a sudden about face and began denouncing Origen 252 244 In 400 Theophilus summoned a council in Alexandria which condemned Origen and all his followers as heretics for having taught that God was incorporeal which they decreed contradicted the only true and orthodox position which was that God had a literal physical body resembling that of a human 252 253 254 i Theophilus labeled Origen as the hydra of all heresies 253 and persuaded Pope Anastasius I to sign the letter of the council which primarily denounced the teachings of the Nitrian monks associated with Evagrius Ponticus 252 In 402 Theophilus expelled Origenist monks from Egyptian monasteries and banished the four monks known as the Tall Brothers who were leaders of the Nitrian community 252 244 John Chrysostom the patriarch of Constantinople granted the Tall Brothers asylum a fact which Theophilus used to orchestrate John s condemnation and removal from his position at the Synod of the Oak in July 403 252 244 Once John Chrysostom had been deposed Theophilus restored normal relations with the Origenist monks in Egypt and the first Origenist crisis came to an end 252 Second Origenist Crisis Edit Main article Origenist Crises Emperor Justinian I shown here in a contemporary mosaic portrait from Ravenna denounced Origen as a heretic 105 163 and ordered all of his writings to be burned 105 163 The Second Origenist Crisis occurred in the sixth century during the height of Byzantine monasticism 252 Although the Second Origenist Crisis is not nearly as well documented as the first 252 it seems to have primarily concerned the teachings of Origen s later followers rather than what Origen had written 252 Origen s disciple Evagrius Ponticus had advocated contemplative noetic prayer 252 but other monastic communities prioritized asceticism in prayer emphasizing fasting labors and vigils 252 Some Origenist monks in Palestine referred to by their enemies as Isochristoi meaning those who would assume equality with Christ emphasized Origen s teaching of the pre existence of souls and held that all souls were originally equal to Christ s and would become equal again at the end of time 252 Another faction of Origenists in the same region instead insisted that Christ was the leader of many brethren as the first created being 255 This faction was more moderate and they were referred to by their opponents as Protoktistoi first createds 255 Both factions accused the other of heresy and other Christians accused both of them of heresy 256 The Protoktistoi appealed to the Emperor Justinian I to condemn the Isochristoi of heresy through Pelagius the papal apocrisarius 256 In 543 Pelagius presented Justinian with documents including a letter denouncing Origen written by Patriarch Mennas of Constantinople 56 257 258 256 along with excerpts from Origen s On First Principles and several anathemata against Origen 256 A domestic synod convened to address the issue concluded that the Isochristoi s teachings were heretical and seeing Origen as the ultimate culprit behind the heresy denounced Origen as a heretic as well 256 105 163 Emperor Justinian ordered for all of Origen s writings to be burned 105 163 In the west the Decretum Gelasianum which was written sometime between 519 and 553 listed Origen as an author whose writings were to be categorically banned 109 In 553 during the early days of the Second Council of Constantinople the Fifth Ecumenical Council when Pope Vigilius was still refusing to take part in it despite Justinian holding him hostage the bishops at the council ratified an open letter which condemned Origen as the leader of the Isochristoi 256 The letter was not part of the official acts of the council and it more or less repeated the edict issued by the Synod of Constantinople in 543 256 It cites objectionable writings attributed to Origen but all the writings referred to in it were actually written by Evagrius Ponticus 256 After the council officially opened but while Pope Vigillius was still refusing to take part Justinian presented the bishops with the problem of a text known as The Three Chapters which attacked the Antiochene Christology 256 The bishops drew up a list of anathemata against the heretical teachings contained within The Three Chapters and those associated with them 256 In the official text of the eleventh anathema Origen is condemned as a Christological heretic 256 109 but Origen s name does not appear at all in the Homonoia the first draft of the anathemata issued by the imperial chancery 256 nor does it appear in the version of the conciliar proceedings that was eventually signed by Pope Vigillius a long time afterwards 256 Norman P Tanner s edition of the Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils Georgetown University Press 1990 says Our edition does not include the text of the anathemas against Origen since recent studies have shown that these anathemas cannot be attributed to this council These discrepancies may indicate that Origen s name was retrospectively inserted into the text after the council 256 Some authorities believe these anathemata belong to an earlier local synod 259 Even if Origen s name did appear in the original text of the anathema the teachings attributed to Origen that are condemned in the anathema were actually the ideas of later Origenists which had very little grounding in anything Origen had actually written 256 56 253 In fact Popes Vigilius Pelagius I Pelagius II and Gregory the Great were only aware that the Fifth Council specifically dealt with The Three Chapters and make no mention of Origenism or universalism nor spoke as if they knew of its condemnation even though Gregory the Great was opposed to universalism 56 After the Anathemas Edit If orthodoxy were a matter of intention no theologian could be more orthodox than Origen none more devoted to the cause of the Christian faith Henry Chadwick scholar of early Christianity in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 163 As a direct result of the numerous condemnations of his work only a tiny fraction of Origen s voluminous writings have survived 105 230 Nonetheless these writings still amount to a massive number of Greek and Latin texts very few of which have yet been translated into English 15 Many more writings have survived in fragments through quotations from later Church Fathers 109 Even in the late 14th Century Francesc Eiximenis in his Llibre de les dones produced otherwise unknown quotations from Origen which may be evidence of other works surviving into the Late Medieval period 260 261 It is likely that the writings containing Origen s most unusual and speculative ideas have been lost to time 173 making it nearly impossible to determine whether Origen actually held the heretical views which the anathemas against him ascribed to him 173 Nonetheless in spite of the decrees against Origen the church remained enamored of him 109 and he remained a central figure of Christian theology throughout the first millennium 109 He continued to be revered as the founder of Biblical exegesis 109 and anyone in the first millennium who took the interpretation of the scriptures seriously would have had knowledge of Origen s teachings 109 Saint Origen the Scholar portrait by Guillaume Chaudiere 1584 Teacher and theologianBornc 185AlexandriaDiedc 253TyreVenerated inEvangelical Church in Germany Anglican Communion Reformed Tradition Oriental Orthodox ChurchesFeastApril 27 262 Attributesself castration monastic habitControversyLack of formal canonization accusations of heresyJerome s Latin translations of Origen s homilies were widely read in western Europe throughout the Middle Ages 163 and Origen s teachings greatly influenced those of the Byzantine monk Maximus the Confessor and the Irish theologian John Scotus Eriugena 163 Since the Renaissance the debate over Origen s orthodoxy has continued to rage 163 Basilios Bessarion a Greek refugee who fled to Italy after the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 produced a Latin translation of Origen s Contra Celsum which was printed in 1481 263 Major controversy erupted in 1487 after the Italian humanist scholar Giovanni Pico della Mirandola issued a thesis arguing that it is more reasonable to believe that Origen was saved than he was damned 263 A papal commission condemned Pico s position on account of the anathemas against Origen but not until after the debate had received considerable attention 263 The most prominent advocate of Origen during the Renaissance was the Dutch humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus who regarded Origen as the greatest of all Christian authors 263 and wrote in a letter to John Eck that he learned more about Christian philosophy from a single page of Origen than from ten pages of Augustine 263 Erasmus especially admired Origen for his lack of rhetorical flourishes which were so common in the writings of other Patristic authors 263 Erasmus borrowed heavily from Origen s defense of free will in On First Principles in his 1524 treatise On Free Will now considered his most important theological work 263 In 1527 Erasmus translated and published the portion of Origen s Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew that survived only in Greek 264 and in 1536 he published the most complete edition of Origen s writings that had ever been published at that time 263 While Origen s emphasis on the human effort in attaining salvation appealed to the Renaissance humanists it made him far less appealing to the proponents of the Reformation 264 Martin Luther deplored Origen s understanding of salvation as irredeemably defective 264 and declared in all of Origen there is not one word about Christ 264 Consequently he ordered for Origen s writings to be banned 264 Nonetheless the earlier Czech reformer Jan Hus had taken inspiration from Origen for his view that the church is a spiritual reality rather than an official hierarchy 264 and Luther s contemporary the Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli took inspiration from Origen for his interpretation of the Eucharist as symbolic 264 In the seventeenth century the English Cambridge Platonist Henry More was a devoted Origenist 265 and although he did reject the notion of universal salvation 265 he accepted most of Origen s other teachings 265 Pope Benedict XVI expressed admiration for Origen 22 describing him in a sermon as part of a series on the Church Fathers as a figure crucial to the whole development of Christian thought a true maestro and not only a brilliant theologian but also an exemplary witness of the doctrine he passed on 266 He concludes the sermon by inviting his audience to welcome into your hearts the teaching of this great master of the faith 267 Modern Protestant evangelicals admire Origen for his passionate devotion to the scriptures 268 but are frequently baffled or even appalled by his allegorical interpretation of them which many believe ignores the literal historical truth behind them 268 Origen is often noted for being one of the few Church Fathers who is not generally regarded as a saint 269 Nevertheless there are notable individuals who referred to Origen as St Origen This includes Anglicans such as Edward Welchman 270 John Howson 271 and Sir Winston Churchill 272 Calvinists such as Pierre Bayle 273 Georges Louis Liomin 274 and Heinrich Bullinger 275 American scholar and Orthodox Christian David Bentley Hart 276 Oriental Orthodox such as Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria 277 Fr Tadros Yakoup Malaty 278 and the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States 279 Origen s father Saint Leonides of Alexandria has a feast day on April 22 in the Catholic tradition and the Evangelical Church in Germany celebrates April 27 as Origen s feast day 262 Translations EditThe Commentary of Origen On S John s Gospel the text revised and with a critical introduction and indices A E Brooke 2 volumes Cambridge University Press 1896 Volume 1 Volume 2 Contra Celsum trans Henry Chadwick Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1965 On First Principles trans GW Butterworth Gloucester MA Peter Smith 1973 also trans John Behr Oxford University Press 2019 from the Rufinus trans Origen An Exhortation to Martyrdom Prayer First Principles book IV Prologue to the Commentary on the Song of Songs Homily XXVII on Numbers trans R Greer Classics of Western Spirituality 1979 Origen Homilies on Genesis and Exodus trans RE Heine FC 71 1982 Origen Commentary on the Gospel according to John Books 1 10 trans RE Heine FC 80 1989 Treatise on the Passover and Dialogue of Origen with Heraclides and his Fellow Bishops On the Father the Son and the Soul trans Robert Daly ACW 54 New York Paulist Press 1992 Origen Commentary on the Gospel according to John Books 13 32 trans RE Heine FC 89 1993 The Commentaries on Origen and Jerome on St Paul s Epistle to the Ephesians RE Heine OECS Oxford OUP 2002 The Commentary of Origen on the Gospel of St Matthew 2 vols trans RE Heine OECS Oxford OUP 2018 Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 1 5 2001 Thomas P Scheck trans The Fathers of the Church series Volume 103 Catholic University of America Press ISBN 0 8132 0103 9 ISBN 9780813201030 280 Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Books 6 10 Fathers of the Church 2002 The Fathers of the Church Thomas P Scheck trans Volume 104 Catholic University of America Press ISBN 0 8132 0104 7 ISBN 9780813201047 281 On Prayer in Tertullian Cyprian and Origen On the Lord s Prayer trans and annotated by Alistair Stewart Sykes Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press 2004 pp 111 214Translations available onlineTranslations of some of Origen s writings can be found in Ante Nicene Fathers or in The Fathers of the Church Church Fathers Home Newadvent org Retrieved 2014 04 24 Material not in those collections includes Dialogue with Heracleides Origen Dialog with Heracleides Christian History Retrieved 2014 04 24 On Prayer William A Curtis Origen On Prayer Unknown date Translation Tertullian org Retrieved 2014 04 24 Philocalia Origen The Philocalia of Origen 1911 pp 1 237 English translation Tertullian org Retrieved 2014 04 24 See also EditAdamantius Pseudo Origen Allegorical interpretations of Plato Apocatastasis Descriptions in antiquity of the execution cross Pre existence of the soul Priesthood of all believersNotes Edit ˈ ɒr ɪ dʒ en Greek Ὠrigenhs Ōrigenes Origen s Greek name Ōrigenes Ὠrigenhs probably means child of Horus from Ὧros Horus and genos born 8 Ὠrigenhs Ἀdamantios Ōrigenes Adamantios The nickname or cognomen Adamantios Ἀdamantios derives from Greek adamas ἀdamas which means adamant unalterable unbreakable unconquerable diamond 10 11 The discrepancy concerns the 74 homilies on the Psalms attributed to Jerome but which V Peri has argued Jerome translated from Origen with only minor changes Both 205 and 279 exclude the 2012 discoveries Heine 2004 p 124 And possibly the extra 74 homilies on the Psalms Heine 2004 p 124 When Rufinus translated the commentary in the early fifth century he noted in his preface that some of the books were lost and doubted his ability to supply what was missing and to restore the work s continuity He also noted his intention to abbreviate the work Rufinus s abbreviated Latin version in ten books is extant The Greek fragments were found in papyri at Tura in 1941 and contain Greek excerpts from books 5 6 of the commentary Comparison of these fragments with Rufinus s translation led to a generally positive evaluation of Rufinus s work Heine 2004 p 124 Books 1 3 and the beginning of the Book 4 survive covering Song of Songs 1 1 2 15 Besides not including the later books of the commentary Rufinus also omitted all of Origen s more technical discussions of the text Heine 2004 p 123 Codex Vaticanus 1215 gives the division of the twenty five books of the commentary on Ezekiel and part of the arrangement of the commentary on Isaiah beginnings of books VI VIII XVI book X extends from Isa viii 1 to ix 7 XI from ix 8 to x 11 XII from x 12 to x 23 XIII from x 24 to xi 9 XIV from xi 10 to xii 6 XV from xiii 1 to xiii 16 XXI from xix 1 to xix 17 XXII from xix 18 to xx 6 XXIII from xxi 1 to xxi 17 XXIV from xxii 1 to xxii 25 XXV from xxiii 1 to xxiii 18 XXVI from xxiv 1 to xxv 12 XXVII from xxvi 1 to xxvi 15 XXVIII from xxvi 16 to xxvii 11a XXIX from xxvii 11b to xxviii 29 and XXX treats of xxix 1 sqq Codex Athous Laura 184 gives the division of the fifteen books of the commentary on Romans except XI and XII and of the five books on Galatians as well as the extent of the commentaries on Philippians and Corinthians Romans I from 1 1 to 1 7 II from 1 8 to 1 25 III from 1 26 to 2 11 IV from 2 12 to 3 15 V from 3 16 to 3 31 VI from 4 1 to 5 7 VII from 5 8 to 5 16 VIII from 5 17 to 6 15 IX from 6 16 to 8 8 X from 8 9 to 8 39 XIII from 11 13 to 12 15 XIV from 12 16 to 14 10 XV from 14 11 to the end Galatians I from 1 1 to 2 2 II from 2 3 to 3 4 III from 3 5 to 4 5 IV from 4 6 to 5 5 and V from 5 6 to 6 18 the commentary on Philippians extended to 4 1 and on Ephesians to 4 13 Socrates Scholasticus describes this condemnation as a deception to gain the confidence of the Alexandrian monastic community which vehemently upheld the teaching of an anthropomorphic Deity 250 References Edit Itter 2009 pp 9 10 The Birth of Purgatory University of Chicago Press 1986 12 15 p 52 ISBN 9780226470832 to say a few words about the two Greek inventors of Purgatory Clement of Alexandria d prior to 215 and Origen Origen de Principiis II Chapter 3 6 Markus Vinzent 2019 Writing the History of Early Christianity From Reception to Retrospection Publisher Cambridge University Press Origen of Alexandria who in his Homily on the Song of Songs explicitly refers to Ignatius as one of the saints Iliara LE Ramelli 2016 Social Justice and the Legitimacy of Slavery The Role of Philosophical Asceticism from Ancient Judaism to Late Antiquity 53 pp Ramelli Ilaria L E 2008b Philosophical Allegoresis of Scripture in Philo and its Legacy in Origen and Gregory of Nyssa Studia Philonica Annual 20 55 99 Ramelli Ilaria L E 2012b Philo as Origen s Declared Model Studies in Christian Jewish Relations 7 1 17 Prestige G L 1940 Origen or The Claims of Religious Intelligence PDF Fathers and Heretics Bampton Lectures London SPCK p 43 Archived PDF from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 4 September 2009 The New Catholic Encyclopedia Detroit Gale 2003 ISBN 978 0 7876 4004 0 ἀdamas Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project adamant Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 2015 01 11 Retrieved 2014 08 20 Wilken Robert Louis 2013 A Learned Faith Origen of Alexandria The First Thousand Years A Global History of Christianity New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 55 64 ISBN 978 0 300 11884 1 JSTOR j ctt32bd7m 10 LCCN 2012021755 S2CID 160590164 Archived from the original on 2021 04 15 Retrieved 2021 04 15 a b Richard Finn 2009 Origen and his ascetic legacy Origen and his ascetic legacy in Asceticism in the Graeco Roman World Cambridge University Press pp 100 130 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511609879 005 ISBN 9780511609879 McGuckin 2004 pp 25 26 64 a b c d McGuckin 2004 p 25 a b c d e f g h i McGuckin 2004 p 15 a b Olson 1999 p 105 a b c d e f g h i Olson 1999 p 102 a b c d e f g h i j Olson 1999 p 101 Grafton 2011 p 222 Runia David T 1995 Philo and the Church Fathers A Collection of Papers Leiden Germany E J Brill p 118 ISBN 978 90 04 10355 9 Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2020 11 18 a b Pope Benedict XVI 2007 pp 24 27 Litfin Bryan M 2016 2007 Getting to Know the Church Fathers An Evangelical Introduction Grand Rapids Michigan Baker Academic p unpaginated ISBN 978 1 4934 0478 0 Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2020 11 18 a b Olson 1999 p 99 a b c d e f g h i j k l Olson 1999 p 100 Patrides C A October December 1967 The salvation of Satan Journal of the History of Ideas 28 4 467 478 doi 10 2307 2708524 JSTOR 2708524 reprinted in Patrides C A 1982 1967 A principle of infinite love The salvation of Satan Premises and motifs in Renaissance literature Journal of the History of Ideas Vol 28 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 467 478 doi 10 2307 2708524 JSTOR 2708524 a b c d Trigg 1983 p 9 Trigg 1983 pp 9 10 McGuckin 2004 p 2 Trigg 1983 p 8 Eusebius Ecclessiastical History Book VI 1766 a b c d e f g h i j k McGuckin 2004 p 3 a b Trigg 1983 p 10 McGuckin 2004 pp 2 3 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 3 4 Trigg 1983 pp 11 16 a b Trigg 1983 p 12 a b c d e f g h i McGuckin 2004 p 4 Trigg 1983 pp 12 13 a b c d e f Trigg 1983 p 30 a b c d e f g h i Trigg 1983 p 53 a b Eusebius Historia Ecclesiastica VI 3 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n McGuckin 2004 p 6 a b c d e f g h i j k McGuckin 2004 p 5 Olson 1999 pp 100 101 Watts 2008 pp 158 161 Trigg 1983 pp 66 75 a b c d e f g h i j Grant 1967 p 551 Trigg 1983 pp 54 66 McGuckin 2004 pp 6 13 14 Matthew 19 12 Eusebius Historia Ecclesiastica VI 8 Digital Bodleian Archived from the original on 2017 05 10 Retrieved 2016 02 23 Trigg 1983 p 54 Keough Shawn W J 2008 Christoph Markschies Origenes und sein Erbe Gesammelte Studien Texte und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altchristlichen Literatur 160 Bryn Mawr Classical Review 03 30 Archived from the original on 2008 06 08 Retrieved 2009 01 25 a b c d Prat Ferdinand 1911 Origen and Origenism In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company a b Chadwick 1993 pp 108 109 a b William Placher A History of Christian Theology An Introduction Philadelphia Westminster Press 1983 p 62 a b c d e f McGuckin 2004 p 7 a b c McGuckin 2004 pp 7 8 a b c d e f g h i McGuckin 2004 p 8 McGuckin 2004 pp 8 9 a b c d e f g h i j k McGuckin 2004 p 9 McGuckin 2004 pp 9 10 a b c d e f g h i j k McGuckin 2004 p 10 a b c d McGuckin 2004 p 11 a b c d Marcos 2000 p 205 Marcos 2000 pp 204 205 a b c McGuckin 2004 p 12 a b c d e McGuckin 2004 p 13 McGuckin John Anthony 2004 The Life of Origen ca 186 255 In McGuckin John Anthony ed The Westminster Handbook to Origen The Westminster Handbooks to Christian Theology Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press p 13 ISBN 9780664224721 Archived from the original on 28 April 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2020 The writings brought to a head the growing tension between the philosopher theologian Origen and the local bishop Demetrios One could suspect that his doctrine of incorporeal resurrection bodies and the other speculations that must have been contained in the Stromata as well as many of the unusual points of doctrine still extant in the De principiis would have been enough to give Demetrios grounds for complaint The latest conflict between Origen and his bishop seems to have been the last straw Eusebius Church History VI 14 See Eusebius Church History Book VI Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine a b c Griggs 2000 p 61 a b c d e Crouzel 1989 p 18 Eusebius Historia Ecclesiastica VI 26 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 13 14 a b c d e f McGuckin 2004 p 14 McGuckin 2004 pp 14 15 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 15 16 a b c d e McGuckin 2004 p 17 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 15 17 a b Kelly 2006 p 199 a b c d e f g h i j McGuckin 2004 p 18 a b c d e f McGuckin 2004 p 16 a b c Watts 2008 pp 161 164 Watts 2008 pp 161 166 McGuckin 2004 pp 16 17 McGuckin 2004 pp 12 17 a b c Grant 1967 p 552 Watts 2008 p 158 From The Emergence of Christianity Cynthia White Greenwood Press 2007 p 14 a b c d e f g h i j k l McGuckin 2004 p 19 Heine 2004 p 122 Watts 2008 p 165 a b c McGuckin 2004 p 20 McGuckin 2004 pp 20 21 a b c d McGuckin 2004 p 21 a b c d e f g h McGuckin 2004 p 22 a b c MacMullen 1992 Eusebius Ecclesiastical History Book 6 chapter 39 Christianbookshelf org Archived from the original on 2013 05 11 Retrieved 2014 04 24 Timothy David Barnes Constantine and Eusebius page 351 footnote 96 Cambridge Mass London Harvard University Press 1981 ISBN 0 674 16530 6 McGuckin 2004 pp 3 22 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 3 23 Jerome Chapter 54 Origen surnamed Adamantius De viris illustribus On Illustrious Men a b c d e f McGuckin 2004 pp 25 26 Trigg 1983 p 245 Ehrman 2003 pp 154 155 Watts 2008 p 159 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p McGuckin 2004 p 26 Haer lxiv 63 Ecclesiastical History VI xxxii 3 Eng transl NPNF 2 ser i 277 Epist ad Paulam NPNF vi 46 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 10 27 Trigg Joseph W Origen The Early Church Fathers 1998 Routledge London and New York page 16 Retrieved 2 September 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l McGuckin 2004 p 27 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 27 28 a b c Lockett 2017 pp 71 72 Lockett 2017 p 71 Heine 2004 p 125 Vatican reports discovery of ancient documents Associated Press June 12 2012 Archived from the original on April 24 2014 Retrieved April 28 2014 Greek text found of Origen s homilies on the Psalms at Roger Pearse Roger pearse com 2012 06 11 Archived from the original on 2014 04 24 Retrieved 2014 04 24 Lorenzo Perrone About Origen s Newly Discovered Homilies on the Psalms Alin Suciu 2012 06 12 Archived from the original on 2016 06 23 Retrieved 2014 04 24 Digitalisat Archived August 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Lockett 2017 pp 71 73 a b C G Bateman Origen s Role in the Formation of the New Testament Canon 2010 Archived 2012 11 02 at the Wayback Machine archive Lockett 2017 p 72 a b McGuckin John A Origen as Literary Critic in the Alexandrian Tradition 121 37 in vol 1 of Origeniana octava Origen and the Alexandrian Tradition Papers of the 8th International Origen Congress Pisa 27 31 August 2001 Edited by L Perrone Bibliotheca Ephemeridum theologicarum Lovaniensium 164 2 vols Leuven Leuven University Press 2003 a b c d e f g McGuckin 2004 p 29 McGuckin 2004 pp 29 30 Joel C Elowsky editor John 1 10 Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture New Testament Voliume 4a page xix InterVarsity Press Academic 2007 ISBN 978 0 8308 1489 3 a b c d e f g McGuckin 2004 p 30 Heine 2004 p 124 a b c d e f g h i j k l m McGuckin 2004 p 31 a b c d e f g h i j k McGuckin 2004 p 36 McGuckin 2004 pp 36 37 a b c McGuckin 2004 p 37 a b Olson 1999 pp 101 103 a b c d e McGuckin 2004 pp 32 34 a b c d e f McGuckin 2004 p 32 a b c Olson 1999 p 103 a b c d e Heine 2004 p 127 a b c d Olson 1999 pp 102 103 McGuckin 2004 p 33 a b McGuckin 2004 pp 34 35 Somos 2015 pp 145 146 An English translation of the Dialogue is in Oulton and Chadwick eds Alexandrian Christianity pp 430 455 a b Somos 2015 pp 145 149 McGuckin 2004 p 35 Historia ecclesiastica VI xxxvi 3 Eng transl NPNF 2 ser i 278 279 a b c d Heine 2004 p 126 Vicchio Stephen J 4 October 2006 Job in the Medieval World Wipf and Stock Publishers p 23 n 2 ISBN 978 1 59752 533 6 Archived from the original on 20 August 2020 Retrieved 23 October 2016 Origen produced a full length exposition of the book of Job as did his student Avagrius Fragments of Origen s commentary survive in Migne s Patrologia Graeca under the titles Selecta of Job and Enarrationes in Job Another Job commentary attributed to Origen and extant in a Latin translation in three books is not genuine Early twentieth century scholars conclusively have attributed the work Commenttarium on Iob to Maximinus a fourth century Arian writer A third anonymous work on Job preserved in the Migne interprets the book of Job from 1 1 to 3 19 This text also mistakenly has been attributed to Origen This writer takes the suffering of Job as a symbolic representation of the passion of Christ He also places the blame for Job s suffering squarely on the shoulder of Satan who is seen in the commentary as a demonic figure Fragments of a smaller work of Job written by Athanasius bishop of Alexandria from 328 to 373 also survives in the PG under the title Exerpta in Job Two other selections in Migne Didymus the Blind s exegesis of Job modeled on Origen s commentary and a sermon by Eusebius of Emesa also attest to the interest in Job on the part of the Christian Alexandrian school Scheck Thomas P Erasmus Desiderius 1 February 2016 Erasmus s Life of Origen CUA Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 8132 2801 3 Archived from the original on 20 August 2020 Retrieved 23 October 2016 Pseudo Origen 1844 Carl Heinrich Eduard Lommatzsch ed Origenis Opera omnia quae graece vel latine tantum exstant et ejus nomine circumferuntur Vol XVI Anonymi in Job commentarius Adamantii de recta in Deum fide Sumtibus Haude et Spener Archived from the original on 2020 08 19 Retrieved 2016 07 18 Images of Title page i and Title page ii at Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a External link in code class cs1 code quote code help a b c d e f Greggs 2009 p 61 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ehrman 2003 p 155 a b Greggs 2009 pp 61 62 Greggs 2009 p 62 a b c d e f g h Eddy amp Beilby 2008 p 86 a b Plantinga Thompson amp Lundberg 2010 a b c d e f Scott 2012 pp 53 55 MacGregor 1982 pp 55 56 a b c d e f g h Greggs 2009 pp 55 56 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Chadwick 2017 Ilaria Ramelli 2018 Chapter 14 Origen In Anna Marmodoro and Sophie Cartwright 2018 A History of Mind and Body in Late Antiquity Cambridge University Press pp 245 266 a b c d MacGregor 1982 pp 56 57 a b c MacGregor 1982 p 55 a b MacGregor 1982 pp 54 55 a b c d e Olson 1999 pp 99 100 Butterworth 1966 p lvi a b c Cahill 1994 p 53 a b c d e Cahill 1994 pp 53 54 a b Cahill 1994 p 54 a b c d e MacGregor 1982 p 56 a b c d McGuckin 2004 p 96 a b Moore 2005 p 96 a b c Greggs 2009 pp 58 59 Greggs 2009 pp 56 59 a b Greggs 2009 p 58 a b c Greggs 2009 p 79 Enn 6 8 4 11 Ramelli Ilaria L E 2022 The Legacy of Origen in Gregory of Nyssa s Theology of Freedom Modern Theology 38 2 363 388 doi 10 1111 moth 12777 S2CID 247117697 a b Caspary 1979 pp 125 127 a b Brock 1972 pp 11 12 a b c Trigg 1983 pp 235 236 a b c Charles 2005 p 36 Caspary 1979 pp 126 127 a b Brock 1972 p 12 Psalm 7 4 6 Lamentations 3 27 29 Trigg 1983 p 236 a b Scott 2012 pp 55 58 Scott 2012 pp 58 60 a b Ludlow 2013 pp 87 88 a b c McGuckin 2004 pp 13 17 a b c d e Ludlow 2013 p 88 a b c d Ludlow 2013 p 90 Soler Fernando 2019 The Theological Use of Eating and Drinking Metaphors in Origen s De Principiis Zeitschrift fur Antikes Christentum 23 1 4 20 doi 10 1515 zac 2019 0001 ISSN 1612 961X S2CID 171528428 Perkins 2007 p 292 a b Kugel amp Greer 1986 p 183 a b Keefer 2006 pp 75 76 Genesis 1 26 a b c d Layton 2004 p 86 Genesis 2 7 Layton 2004 pp 86 87 Genesis 3 21 a b Olson amp Hall 2002 p 24 a b La Due 2003 p 37 a b Ehrman 2003 pp 154 156 a b c d e f g h Olson amp Hall 2002 p 25 a b c d e La Due 2003 p 38 a b c Pollard 1970 p 95 a b c d e Greggs 2009 p 161 a b Greggs 2009 p 80 a b Greggs 2009 pp 79 80 Greggs 2009 pp 80 81 Greggs 2009 pp 159 160 Greggs 2009 p 160 a b c d e Williams 2001 p 132 a b c d Greggs 2009 pp 152 153 Greggs 2009 p 153 Greggs 2009 p 154 a b c Badcock 1997 p 43 a b c d Trigg 1983 pp 249 250 Moore 2014 a b c d Rusch 1980 pp 15 16 a b c Chadwick 1993 p 114 Trigg 1983 p 246 Harding 2004 p 162 Rusch 1980 p 15 a b Ehrman 2003 pp 155 156 Harding 2004 pp 162 163 Ramelli 2013 p 262 a b c d Harding 2004 p 163 Trigg 1983 p 247 Ramelli 2013 pp 262 263 Trigg 1983 p 249 Williams 2001 pp 131 134 Patristic literature The post Nicene period Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2019 12 03 Retrieved 2019 10 14 Hanson R P C 1988 The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God The Arian Controversy 318 381 AD T amp T Clark pp 61 ISBN 9780567094858 a b Williams 2001 p 131 Trigg 1983 pp 249 251 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Harding 2004 p 164 a b c Trigg 1983 pp 252 253 a b c d e Trigg 1983 p 253 a b Harding 2004 pp 163 164 a b Kim 2015 p 19 a b c Trigg 1983 p 252 Trigg 1983 pp 248 249 a b c Heine 2010 p 125 a b c Wessel 2004 p 24 Harding 2004 pp 164 165 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Harding 2004 p 165 a b c MacGregor 1982 p 57 Wessel 2004 pp 24 25 a b Harding 2004 pp 165 166 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Harding 2004 p 166 1 Archived 2020 11 24 at the Wayback MachineApocatastasis 2 Opponents in New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol I Aachen Basilians at Christian Classics Ethereal Library Strauli Robert 1987 Origenes der Diamantene Zurich ABZ Verlag pp 71 355 357 ISBN 978 3 85516 005 1 Greer Rowan A 1979 Origen New York City Paulist Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 8091 2198 4 Wittlin Curt J Francesc Eiximenis and the Sins of the Tongueu Observations on a Semantic Field Catalan Review 13 1 2 1999 255 276 p 255 Llibre de les dones Barcelona Curial Edicions Catalanes 1981 p 387 Introduction by Curt Wittlin in Catalan a b Origenes Adamantios Okumenisches Heiligenlexikon Archived from the original on 2021 04 11 Retrieved 2021 05 11 a b c d e f g h Trigg 1983 p 255 a b c d e f g Trigg 1983 p 256 a b c Hutton 2006 p 205 Pope Benedict XVI 2007 p 24 Pope Benedict XVI 2007 p 27 a b Franke 2003 Hook Walter Farquhar The Nonentity of Romish Saints and the Inanity of Romish Ordinances John Murray 1850 p 21 Welchman Edward The Thirty nine Articles of the Church of England Illustrated with Notes and Confirmed by Texts of the Holy Scripture and Testimonies of the Primitive Fathers Written in Latin by the Rev Mr Archdeacon Welchman and Now Translated Into English According to the Sixth Edition by a Clergyman of the University of Oxford No 4 John and Francis Rivington 1767 p 54 Howson John Uxore dimissa propter fornicationem aliam non licet superinducere Barnesius p 16 Churchill Winston Divi Britannici Being a Remark Upon the Lives of All the Kings of this Isle from the Year of the World 2855 Unto the Year of Grace 1660 Tho Roycroft to be sold by Francis Eglesfield 1962 p 49 Bayle Pierre et al A General Dictionary Historical and Critical in which a New and Accurate Translation of that of the Celebrated Mr Bayle with the Corrections and Observations Printed in the Late Edition at Paris is Included and Interspersed with Several Thousand Lives Never Before Published The Whole Containing the History of the Most Illustrious Persons of All Ages and Nations Particularly Those of Great Britain and Ireland Distinguished by Their Rank Actions Learning and Other Accomplishments Vol 4 J Bettenham 1736 Liomin Georges Louis Preservatif contre les opinions erronees qui se repandent au sujet de la duree des peines de la vie a venir chez le Sr Frederic Louis Liomin 1760 Gantet Claire La religion et ses mots La Bible latine de Zurich 1543 entre la tradition et l innovation Zwingliana 23 2010 143 167 p 149 Saint Origen First Things October 2015 Archived from the original on 7 October 2022 Retrieved 22 January 2023 H H Pope Shenouda III THE BEHOLDER OF GOD MARK THE EVANGELIST SAINT AND MARTYR 1995 p 95 Fr Malaty Tadros Yakoup Divine Love and Divine Commandment Divine Love Vol 4 2019 p 203 Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States NT 101 Gospel and Acts Servants Preparation Program 2005 p 75 Origen April 2010 Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Origen Google Books ISBN 9780813212036 Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2018 04 16 Origen 1985 09 06 Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Origen Google Books ISBN 9780813201047 Archived from the original on 2021 11 07 Retrieved 2018 04 16 Bibliography Edit Badcock Gary D 1997 Light of Truth and Fire of Love A Theology of the Holy Spirit GrandRapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 4288 6 archived from the original on 2021 08 31 retrieved 2020 11 18 Pope Benedict XVI 25 April 2007 Origen of Alexandria Life and Work Church Fathers From Clement of Rome to Augustine Vatican City Libreria Editrice Vaticana pp 24 27 ISBN 978 1 68149 472 2 archived from the original on 7 November 2021 retrieved 18 November 2020 Bostock Gerald 2003 Origen the Alternative to Augustine The Expository Times 114 10 327 doi 10 1177 001452460311401001 S2CID 170295024 Brock Peter 1972 Pacifism in Europe to 1914 Princeton New Jersey Princeton 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2772 5 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Crouzel Henri 1989 Origen First ed Edinburgh T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 09500 8 Eddy P R Beilby J 2008 Atonement in Dyrness William A Karkkainen Veli Matti eds Global Dictionary of Theology A Resource for the Worldwide Church Downers Grove Illinois and Nottingham England IVP Academic pp 84 92 ISBN 978 0 8308 2454 0 archived from the original on 2021 04 13 retrieved 2020 11 18 Ehrman Bart D 2003 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scriptures and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514183 2 Franke John R 2003 Origen Friend or Foe By turns bizarre and insightful Origen s allegorical forays remain fascinating reading today Christianity Today no 80 The First Bible Teachers archived from the original on 2018 02 16 retrieved 2018 02 15 Grafton Anthony 2011 Worlds Made by Words Scholarship and Community in The Modern West Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03257 6 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Kugel James L Greer Rowan A 1986 Early Biblical Interpretation Philadelphia Pennsylvania The Westminster Press ISBN 978 0 664 25013 3 Grant Robert M 1967 Origen in Edwards Paul ed The Encyclopedia of Philosophy vol 5 New York City New York The MacMillan Company amp The Free Press pp 551 552 Greggs Tom 2009 Barth Origen and Universal Salvation Restoring Particularity Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956048 6 archived from the original on 2021 08 31 retrieved 2020 11 18 Griggs C Wilfred 2000 Early Egyptian Christianity From Its Origins to 451 CE Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11926 0 archived from the original on 2020 08 15 retrieved 2018 02 27 Harding E M 2004 Origenist Crises in McGuckin John Anthony ed The Westminster Handbook to Origen Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press pp 162 167 ISBN 978 0 664 22472 1 Heine Ronald E 3 May 2004 The Alexandrians in Young Francis Ayres Lewis Louth Andrew Casiday Augustine eds The Cambridge History of Early Christian Literature Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 46083 5 Heine Ronald E 2010 Origen Scholarship in the Service of the Church Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 920908 8 Hutton Sarah 2006 Chapter 10 Iconisms Enthusiasm and Origen Henry More Reads the Bible in Hessayon Ariel Keene Nicholas eds Scripture and Scholarship in Early Modern England Farnham England Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 3893 3 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Jackson Samuel Macauley ed 1914 Origen New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge third ed London and New York Funk and Wagnalls Keefer Kyle 2006 The Branches of the Gospel of John The Reception of the Fourth Gospel in the Early Church New York City New York and London England T amp T Clark ISBN 9780567028617 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Kelly Henry Ansgar 2006 Satan A Biography Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521604024 archived from the original on 2021 04 13 retrieved 2020 11 18 Kim Young R 2015 Epiphanius of Cyprus Imagining an Orthodox World Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 11954 7 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 La Due William J 2003 Trinity Guide to the Trinity Harrisburg Pennsylvania Trinity Press International ISBN 978 1 56338 395 3 archived from the original on 2021 08 31 retrieved 2020 11 18 Layton Richard A 2004 Didymus the Blind and His Circle in Late antique Alexandria Virtue and Narrative in Biblical Scholarship Urbana and Chicago Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02881 6 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Lockett Darian R 2017 Letters from the Pillar Apostles The Formation of the Catholic Epistles as a Canonical Collection Eugene Oregon Pickwick Publications ISBN 978 1 5326 1517 7 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Ludlow Morwenna 2013 Spirit and Letter in Origen and Augustine in Fiddes Paul S Bader Gunther eds The Spirit and the Letter A Tradition and a Reversal T amp T Clark Theology New York City New York and London England Bloomsbury T amp T Clark pp 87 102 ISBN 978 0 567 21885 8 MacGregor Geddes 1982 Reincarnation as a Christian Hope New York City New York Springer ISBN 978 1 349 06094 8 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 MacMullen Ramsey 1992 1966 Enemies of the Roman Order Treason Unrest and Alienation in the Empire New York City New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 08621 9 Marcos Natalio Fernandez 2000 The Septuagint in Context Introduction to the Greek Version of the Bible Leiden The Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11574 3 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 McGuckin John Anthony 2004 The Westminster Handbook to Origen Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22472 1 archived from the original on 2021 05 15 retrieved 2020 11 18 Moore Edward 2005 Origen of Alexandria and St Maximus the Confessor An Analysis and Critical Evaluation of their Eschatological Doctrines Boca Raton Florida Universal Publishers ISBN 978 1 58112 261 9 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Moore Edward 2014 Origen of Alexandria 185 254 C E Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy A Peer Reviewed Academic Resource ISSN 2161 0002 archived from the original on 2018 02 13 retrieved 2018 02 14 Olson Roger E 1999 The Story of Christian Theology Twenty Centuries of Tradition amp Reform Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 1505 0 archived from the original on 2021 08 31 retrieved 2020 11 18 Olson Roger E Hall Christopher A 2002 The Trinity Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdman s Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 8028 4827 7 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Perkins Pheme 2007 Introduction to the Synoptic Gospels Grand Rapids Michigan and Cambridge England William B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 6553 3 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Plantinga Richard J Thompson Thomas J Lundberg Matthew D 2010 An Introduction to Christian Theology Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 69037 9 archived from the original on 2021 04 14 retrieved 2020 11 18 Pollard T E 1970 Johannine Christology and the Early Church Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series vol 13 Cambridge University Press p 95 ISBN 978 0 521 07767 5 Ramelli Ilaria 2013 The Christian Doctrine ofApokatastasis Leiden The Netherlands Koninklijke Brill ISBN 978 90 04 24570 9 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Rusch William G 1980 The Trinitarian Controversy Minneapolis Minnesota Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 1410 2 Scott Mark S M 2012 Journey Back to God Origen on the Problem of Evil Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 984114 1 Somos Robert 2015 Furst Alfons ed Logic and Argumentation in Origen Adamantiana Texte und Studien zu Origines und seinem Erbe vol 7 Munster Germany Aschendorff Verlag ISBN 978 3 402 13717 8 Trigg Joseph Wilson 1983 Origen The Bible and Philosophy in the Third Century Church Atlanta Georgia John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 804 20945 8 Watts Edward J 2008 City and School in Late Antique Athens and Alexandria Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 9780520258167 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Wessel Susan 2004 Cyril of Alexandria and the Nestorian Controversy The Making of a Saint and of a Heretic Oxford Early Christian Studies Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926846 7 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18 Williams Rowan 2001 1987 Arius Heresy and Tradition Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 4969 4 archived from the original on 2021 11 07 retrieved 2020 11 18Further reading EditBigg Charles The Christian Platonists of Alexandria 1886 revised 1913 Edwards Mark 2009 Catholicity and Heresy in the Early Church Ashgate ISBN 9780754662914 Martens Peter Origen and Scripture The Contours of the Exegetical Life Oxford Oxford University Press 2012 Morgan Brandon August 15 2014 We Will All Be Changed Materiality Resurrection and Reaping Spiritual Bodies in Origen s Peri Archon PDF American Theological Inquiry 7 2 13 19 Archived from the original on September 3 2014 Pelikan Jaroslav The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition 100 600 Chicago University of Chicago Press 1977 Scheck Thomas P 2016 Origen and the History of Justification The Legacy of Origen s Commentary on Romans University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 09302 0 von Balthasar Hans Urs Origen Spirit and Fire A Thematic Anthology of His Writings Washington DC Catholic University of America Press 1984 Westcott B F Origenes Dictionary of Christian Biography Williams Rowan Origen Between Orthodoxy and Heresy in W A Bienert and U Kuhneweg eds Origeniana Septima 1999 pp 3 14 External links EditOrigen at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Analysis and criticism Modern Coptic Church on Origen Archived 2015 07 13 at the Wayback Machine The two part Roman Catholic meditation on Origen by Pope Benedict XVI April 25 2007 and May 2 2007 Ancient The Anathemas Against Origen Evagrius Ponticus and the Condemnation of Origen Derivative summaries Edwards Mark J Origen In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Edward Moore Origen Entry in Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Harnack Adolf 1911 Origen Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed pp 270 273 Toy Crawford Howell 1905 Origen The Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 9 p 433 434 Origen from New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Bibliography EarlyChurch org uk Extensive bibliography and on line articles Original texts Greek and Latin Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Graeca with Analytical Indexes and Concordances Lexicon Proprium Other resources Table of Origen s Works with Links to Texts and Translations Morwenna Ludlow Lecture on Origen for St John s College Nottingham June 13 2016 Works by Origen at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Origen amp oldid 1144869677, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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