Biography
Date of birth unknown; died
after 385 or 386. He belongs to the group known as the "Cappadocian
Fathers", a title which reveals at once his birthplace in
Some think that Gregory spent a
certain time in retreat before his consecration as bishop, but we have no proof
of the fact. His extant letters make no mention of such retirement from the
world. Nor are we better informed of the circumstances of his election to the
See of Nyssa, a little town on the banks of the Halys, along the road between
Cæsarea and
On arriving in his see Gregory
had to face great difficulties. His sudden elevation may have turned against
him some who had hoped for the office themselves. It would appear that one of
the courtiers of Emperor Valens had solicited the see either for himself or one
of his friends. When Demosthenes, Governor of Pontus, convened an assembly of
Eastern bishops, a certain Philocares, at one of its sessions, accused Gregory
of wasting church property, and of irregularity in his election to the
episcopate, whereupon Demosthenes ordered the Bishop of Nyssa to be seized and
brought before him. Gregory at first allowed himself to be led away by his
captors, then losing heart and discouraged by the cold and brutal treatment he
met with, he took an opportunity of escape and reached a place of safety. A
Synod of Nyssa (376) deposed him, and he was reduced to wander from town to
town, until the death of Valens in 378. The new emperor, Gratian, published an
edict of tolerance, and Gregory returned to his see, where he was received with
joy. A few months after this (January, 379) his brother Basil died; whereupon
an era of activity began for Gregory. In 379 he assisted at the Council of
Antioch which had been summoned because of the Meletian schism. Soon after
this, it is supposed, he visited
An edict of Theodosius (30
July, 381; Cod. Theod., LXVI, tit.
Works
Exegetical
Most of his writings treat of
the Sacred Scriptures. He was an ardent admirer of Origen, and applied
constantly the latter's principles of hermeneutics. Gregory is ever in quest of
allegorical interpretations and mystical meanings hidden away beneath the
literal sense of texts. As a rule, however, the "great Cappadocians"
tried to eliminate this tendency. His "Treatise on the Work of the Six
Days" follows St. Basil's Hexæmeron. Another work, "On the Creation
of Man", deals with the work of the Sixth Day, and contains some curious
anatomical details; it was translated into Latin by Dionysius Exiguus. His
account of Moses as legislator offers much fine-spun allegorizing, and the same
is true of his "Explanation of the Titles of the Psalms". In a brief
tractate on the Witch of Endor he says that the woman did not see Samuel, but
only a demon, who put on the figure of the prophet. Besides a homily on the
sixth Psalm, he wrote eight homilies on Ecclesiastes, in which he taught that
the soul should rise above the senses, and that true peace is only to be found
in contempt of worldly greatness. He is also the author of fifteen homilies on
the Canticle of Canticles (the union of the soul with its Creator), five very
eloquent homilies on the Lord's Prayer, and eight highly rhetorical homilies on
the Beatitudes.
Theological
In theology Gregory shows
himself more original and more at ease. Yet his originality is purely in
manner, since he added little that is new. His diction, however, offers many
felicitous and pleasing allusions, suggested probably by his mystical turn of mind.
These grave studies were taken up by him late in life, hence he follows step by
step the teaching of St. Basil and of St. Gregory of Nazianzus. Like them he
defends the unity of the Divine nature and the trinity of Persons; where he
loses their guidance, our confidence in him tends to decrease. In his teaching
on the Eucharist he appears really original; his Christological doctrine,
however, is based entirely on Origen and St. Athanasius. The most important of
his theological writings is his large "Catechesis", or "Oratio
Catechetica", an argumentative defence in forty chapters of Catholic
teaching as against Jews, heathens, and heretics. The most extensive of his
extant works is his refutation of Eunomius in twelve books, a defence of St.
Basil against that heretic, and also of the Nicene Creed against Arianism; this
work is of capital importance in the history of the Arian controversy. He also
wrote two works against Apollinaris of Laodicea, in refutation of the false
doctrines of that writer, viz. that the body of Christ descended from heaven,
and that in Christ, the Divine Word acted as the rational soul. Among the works
of Gregory are certain "Opuscula" on the Trinity addressed to
Ablabius, the tribune Simplicius, and Eustathius of Sebaste. He wrote also
against Arius and Sabellius, and against the Macedonians, who denied the
divinity of the Holy Spirit; the latter work he never finished. In the "De
anima et resurrectione" we have a dialogue between Gregory and his
deceased sister, Macrina; it treats of death, resurrection, and our last end.
He defends human liberty against the fatalism of the astrologers in a work
"On Fate", and in his treatise "On Children", dedicated to
Hieros, Prefect of Cappadocia, he undertook to explain why
Ascetical
He wrote also on Christian life
and conduct, e.g. "On the meaning of the Christian name or
profession", addressed to Harmonius, and "On Perfection and what
manner of man the Christian should be", dedicated to the monk Olympius.
For the monks, he wrote a work on the Divine purpose in creation. His admirable
book "On Virginity", written about 370, was composed to strengthen in
all who read it the desire for a life of perfect virtue.
Sermons and Homilies
Gregory wrote also many sermons
and homilies, some of which we have already mentioned; others of importance are
his panegyric on St. Basil, and his sermons on the Divinity of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost.
Correspondence
A few of his letters
(twenty-six) have survived; two of them offer a peculiar interest owing to the
severity of his strictures on contemporary pilgrimages to
For a discussion of his
peculiar doctrine concerning the general restoration (Apocatastasis) to divine
favour of all sinful creatures at the end of time, i.e. the temporary nature of
the pains of hell, see the articles APOCATASTASIS and MIVART. The theory of
interpolation of the writings of Gregory and of Origen, sustained among others
by Vincenzi (below), seems, in this respect at least, both useless and
gratuitous (Bardenhewer).
Notes
The
writings of Gregory are best collected in P.G., XLIV-XLVI. There is no critical
edition as yet, though one was begun by FORBES and OEHLER (Burntisland, 1855,
61); of another edition planned by Oehler, only one volume appeared (Halle,
1865). The best of the earlier editions is that of FRONTO DUCÆUS (
H. LECLERCQ Transcribed by
Elizabeth T. Knuth
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York