Feast of St. Gregory of Nazianzus, Bishop and Theologian, 389
Gregory of Nazianzus, one of the Cappadocian Fathers, loved God,
the art of letters, and the human race—in that order. He was born
about 330 in Nazianzus in Cappadocia (now Turkey), the son of a
local bishop. He studied rhetoric in Athens with his friend Basil of
Caesarea, and Julian, later to be the apostate emperor.
In 361, against his will, Gregory was ordained as a priest, which he
described as an “act of tyranny”. At first he fled with Basil to Pontus
where he lived a monastic life of seclusion, but eventually he
returned home to assume to work of a priest. His Oration 2, “In
Defense of his Flight to Pontus”, remains one of the classic
treatments of the weight and responsibilities of the pastoral office.
He writes: “I was ashamed of all of those men who intrude into these
most sacred offices when they are no better than ordinary people.
Indeed, it is really very lucky if they are not a good deal worse, with
unwashed hands and uninstructed souls, laying claim to the
sanctuary before being worthy even to approach the temple, and
pushing and shoving their way up to the holy altar as if they thought
that the priesthood was simply a way of earning a living rather than
a pattern of virtue, or as though it were an absolute authority instead
of a ministry for which we will have to render an account. Indeed,
such priests are almost more numerous than those whom they are
supposed to govern, pathetic with respect to piety and completely
lacking in dignity, so that it seems to me that as time and evil
progress, they will eventually have no one left to rule because
everyone will be a teacher.”
In time, however, Gregory reconciled himself to his calling and felt
prepared to undertake it, and settled down to live an austere,
priestly life. He was not to have peace for long. Basil, in his fight
against the Arian Emperor Valens, compelled Gregory to become
Bishop of Sasima. According to Gregory, it was “a detestable little
place without water or grass or any mark of civilization.” He felt, he
said, like “a bone flung to the dogs.” His friendship with Basil
suffered a severe break. Deaths in his family, and then that of his estranged friend Basil, brought Gregory himself to the point of death,
and he withdrew into seclusion again for healing.
In 379, Gregory moved to Constantinople, a new man and no longer
in despair. He appeared as one a fire with the love of God. His fame
as a theologian rests on five sermons he delivered during this period
on the doctrine of the Trinity. They are marked by clarity, strength,
and cheerfulness, and remain to this day one of the most influential
expositions of Trinitarian theology. The next year, the new Emperor
Theodosius entered Constantinople and expelled its Arian bishop
and clergy. Then, on a rainy day, the crowds in the Great Church of
Hagia Sophia acclaimed Gregory bishop, after a ray of sunlight
suddenly shone on him.
Gregory was asked to preside over the ecumenical council in
Constantinople in 381. However, exhausted by the politicking and
infighting that beset the task, he shocked the assembled bishops by
abruptly tendering his resignation. He retired to his home town of
Nazianzus, where he continued to write and minister to the people
until his death in 390.