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MEDIEVAL HISTORY LIBRARY

 

THE EMPEROR JULIAN THE APOSTATE

CHAPTER V

JULIAN’S IDEA OF RELIGION.

 

In his religious teaching Julian does not commence with evidences of the existence of God. God with him was a primary assumption; the knowledge of God is intuitive in man. “By our souls”, he writes, “we are all intuitively persuaded of the existence of a Deity”. Thus assuming the religious sense, he deduces from it the true relations of man to God, and to his fellow creatures.

Julian's idea of personal religion is undeniably lofty: its elevation of tone again and again betrays the   Christian sources from which it was in large measure—and not seldom confessedly—drawn. If Christian  shortcomings inevitably paved the way for a Pagan reaction, at least Christian virtues determined the cast which that reaction must take. Soaring beyond a utilitarian morality it recognized a duty to God as well as a duty to man.   

Religion is the highest concern of man, the most essential factor of happiness. Knowledge of the Gods is more desirable than the Empire of Rome; likeness to the Gods the crown of philosophy; devoutness and diligence in the service of the Gods are the primary requisites for due discharge of duty. Our souls—it is a noble Neo-Platonic thought—are not our own, but rather lent by God for a season. They are given to each man as genii or spiritual powers, located as it were on the highest surface of the body, so as to raise men from earth to the proper kinship that belongs to them in heaven.

The soul is “the God within us”; it is of heavenly birth, a colonist for a little space upon earth, imprisoned in the human body as a sanctifying and elevating power. And with this godlike element, waging unintermitting warfare with the dark and murky powers of the flesh, we must make it our endeavor to attain to absolute devotion of heart to God. “When the soul surrenders itself entire unto, the Gods, committing itself and all it hath to them that are greater than itself; then if purification follows under the guidance of the ordinances of the Gods, so that there is thenceforth nought to let or hinder—for all things are in the Gods, around them do all things consist, and of the Gods all things are full—forthwith there shineth in such souls the divine light; instinct with God they brace and enable the kindred spirit, which thereby steeled as it were by them and waxing strong is made salvation unto the whole body”. This knowledge or spiritual recognition of God is not  merely worthy of a monarch or general, but lifts man almost to the level of divinity itself. Imitation of the Gods, as evinced by the suppression of human wants and weaknesses, and by constant enlargement of virtuous activity must be the aim of the believer. True holiness is to live ever in the practice of the presence of God. Unseen though they be, the Gods are ever near, watching our every action: so that in the words of the inspired oracle

 

Everywhere the ray of Phoebus darts its all-pervading light;
Through the flint rocks unimpeded it pursues its nimble flight;
Through the azure depths it courses; not the circling starry throng
Hanging heaven under sway of laws inexorably strong
Can escape it; nor the toiling denizens of nether gloom
Whom dim Tartarus immureth, each according to his doom—

But in godly souls unto virtue given

I have joy that passeth the joys of heaven.

 

Thus God himself of his great kindness declares that he takes delight in the thoughts of the holy, which are dear to him as heaven's self. This holiness or godly reverence must declare itself in all our actions. Zeal in the small duties of life, in whatsoever is given us to do, is the surest test of true holiness. Among other parts of men's duty to God are enjoined piety, chastity, solemn meditation on divine things, and honor paid to God by holy worship. Prayer too is the duty of every believer, and no less his privilege, for so ready is the divine ear that “the Gods prevent our prayers”. No precise rule for laymen is laid down, beyond that prayer should be conducted reverently and in silence; by his own example Julian would bid them pray at least in all great emergencies and crises of life; but priests are expressly bidden to pray often, both in private and in public, certainly thrice a day, or at least twice, at daybreak and at nightfall, for it is not seemly that any priest should spend day or night without a sacrifice.

In his conception of duty to man, Julian takes no less high a tone. “Ye are all”, he says, “brothers one of another. God is the common father of us all”. From this fundamental truth of the universal brotherhood of man follows by logical deduction the obligation of charity to all. “I maintain”, writes Julian, “though I speak a paradox, that it is a sacred duty to impart raiment and food even to our enemies; for the bond of humanity, not the disposition of individuals, regulates our giving”. The duty of kindness, of almsgiving in the widest sense, he emphasizes again and again. It is the homily put in the mouth of every priest to every Gentile; the good customs of first-fruits and contributions to the service of the sanctuaries had fallen into a shameful desuetude: Believers had forgotten the undying precept of Homer, that

Zeus unfolds our hospitable door,

'Tis Zeus that sends the stranger and the poor.

Each beggar that goes about the street is, says Julian, an insult upon the Gods. It is our greed, not the unkindness of the Gods, that leaves him in such a plight; and in passing him by unaided we make ourselves the authors of untrue conceptions and unjust reproaches against the Deity. “No man”, he continues, “ever became poor from giving alms to his neighbors. Often have I given to the needy and received back mine own from them a hundredfold, and never do I repent of having given aught”.

We must give according to the measure of our means, for the virtue lies in the disposition of the giver rather than in the amount of the gift. As Julian borrowing almost the language of the New Testament again and again bids the believer “above all things practice charity, for in its train come many other goods”, there rings in the reader's ears the familiar “the greatest of these is charity”.      

Personal chastity is another moral obligation on which he strongly insists. All criminal or even unseemly self-indulgence is prohibited to the moral man, who will abstain from the exciting and often licentious spectacles to be witnessed at the theatres or other places of public resort. To be in bondage to the grosser appetites or passions is to create for ourselves a very hell upon earth. Sins of temper, hatred, passion, abusiveness, are to be  guarded against; patience, forbearance and gentleness to be practiced. Another remarkable characteristic of Julian's religious code is the very close connection into which he brings observance of law with religion. “The law is the daughter of justice, a hallowed and divinely consecrated treasure of the most high God, which no sensible man will undervalue or dishonor”. It is distinctly a part of a man's duty to his neighbor to be submissive respectful to the authorities, observant of law. “The true prince must be a prophet and minister of the king of the Gods, for “the laws are holy unto the Gods”: “the guardians of the laws are in a manner priests unto the Gods”.  Service of the Gods and the laws are coupled together as equally essential to true morality.

Such then were Julian's ideas regarding religion as an inward moral power, and such the rules of conduct he laid down. By way of sanction and confirmation these were to be supplemented by ceremonial observances.   

The Pagan convert was to be admitted—or readmitted—into his new Religion by rites of purification analogous to baptism, and by prayer to the averting Deities. Julian himself was duly initiated into the Eleusinian rites at Athens, and then or on some other occasion washed off the taint of Christian baptism with the blood of slain sacrifices; as the Christian father puts it, “he purged off the laver with unholy blood, matching our initiation with the initiation of defilement”. He declined to admit to Pagan worship any Christian, who had not first been purged in soul by solemn litanies, and in body by set lustral rites. From thenceforth he was to become a regular attendant at divine service, to revere the temples, groves and images of the Gods, to the maintenance of which, as a pious believer, he would naturally contribute. Indeed he was in all respects to invest with its proper dignity and use that elaborate ceremonialism and public ritual which Julian labored so energetically to restore.

For Julian, here palpably and confessedly plagiarizing from Christianity, endeavored to fortify his religious revival by a restored and purified ceremonialism. He came forward with a carefully prepared system of sacerdotalism. The priesthood was no longer to be a kind of hereditary property, transmitted as a social prerogative from father to son, irrespective of the qualifications of the possessor. It was no more to be confined to favored families. Distinctions of p0verty or wealth, high birth or low, were obliterated. The qualifications required were henceforth to be moral not social: the sole tests of fitness love of God and love of man: love of God first, as displayed in the religion and godly bringing up of a man's own household; love of man second, as tested by a ready and liberal charity in proportion to the means at command. The most religious and best of the citizens being thus selected, were to be carefully trained in a manner suitable to their high calling.

A guard was to be set on their thoughts, no less than upon their tongues. For their intellectual training, they were to avoid scrupulously not only indecent and lascivious writings, the sarcasms of Archilochus and the snarls of Hipponax, not only profane and skeptical philosophies, but also all that was trivial and frivolous, such as the Old Comedy, or love-tales, or works of fiction. They should study history, and for their philosophical training be reared on the pure milk of Pythagoras and Plato, and on the sound meat of Aristotle, to which should be added judicious. selections from the religious teaching of Chrysippus and Zeno. But no word of Epicurus or of Pyrrho must enter their ears. For devotional training, besides private exercises of prayer and attendance at public worship, they were to commit to heart and meditate upon the Sacred Hymns, the direct revelations of the Gods. When thus duly trained they were doubtless consecrated for their high functions by a solemn ordination service. No positive directions have chanced to survive, for Julian composed no formal Priest's Manual, but left only a variety of pastoral letters, called out by special occasions, and treating therefore of special points, from which his complete system may be fairly gleaned. But taking into account the common practice of Pagans and Christians alike, together with the analogy of the lustral rites of admission to the Church, it may fairly be assumed that provisions for priestly consecration were not omitted in the code of ritual elaborated by Julian.

The duties of the priest are carefully prescribed. To take first his distinctly religious duties. Twice or thrice a day must he sacrifice, not without prayer: when his turn for duty in the public celebration of temple-worship arrives, he must purify himself night and day: he must continually be at his post within the temple for his term of office, which according to the Roman custom at least extends over thirty days: during that space he should neither visit the market nor go to his own dwelling, but occupy himself wholly with divine worship and philosophic meditations. For his private bearing similarly strict injunctions are laid down.

Among the  first duties of a priest is that charity, on which Julian so strenuously insists: it is an attribute of the Deity, and therefore precious in his eyes: it will exercise itself in liberal almsgiving and ready hospitality. For active practical virtue is the highest religion, and holiness the child of righteous dealing. Habitual chastity, not only of person but in thought and word, holiness, which is to say the constant realized sense of God's presence, modesty, forbearance and gentleness of demeanour, and what is more vaguely termed goodness, are among the duties specially inculcated. 

Further, there must be always that gravity of demeanour, that sanctity, the habitual assumption of which by the Christian priests has tended so effectively to promote their religion. In order to this the priest will abstain rigidly from attendance at the theaters: he will eschew all public games, horse-races, and the  like: he will never frequent the wine-taverns, nor engage in any kind of business that could bring contempt upon his profession. Nay more, not content with these negative protests against dissolute or careless living, he will be very choice as to the society he keeps. Actors, jockeys and dancers he will absolutely avoid; and while permitted to resort freely to the houses and entertainments of his friends, to enhance his priestly dignity he will but rarely frequent the market; and will moreover seldom visit or meet municipal dignitaries or officers, except in temples and places where his sacerdotal position gives him acknowledged precedence: as a general rule he will communicate with them by letter alone. Above all he will bring up his own family in sobriety and the fear 0f God: the women, children, and domestics of his household will attend regularly the public services: a priest failing in this deserves to be dismissed from his priestly office.

Among the priests there is to be a regular discipline and various orders. Below the priest came the inferior orders of clergy, acolytes, and the like, who will be drawn from the poorer classes, and as paid subordinates of the priests will serve at the celebrations of temple-worship. While above the priests, administering set districts or dioceses as over­seers, will be the “high priests” or “bishops”. These Julian frequently chose from among the philosophers, who were his personal friends and guides. Chrysanthius, for instance, was named high priest of Lydia. It was their duty to conduct regular visitations of their dioceses, to promote meritorious priests; and, on the other hand, to exhort, rebuke, chastise, or even dismiss the unworthy: at the same time he was bound rigorously to abstain from personal violence; a bishop must be no striker. Moderation and appreciative kindness are the primary requisites. In one of his pastoral letters Julian promotes the high priest Theodorus to such a position in Asia: another he addresses to Arsakius, who holds a similar place in the district of Galatia; while in a third, he himself, in virtue of his high priestly authority, suspends an unworthy priest for a term of three calendar months. In this instance, as habitually in sacrifice and temple-worship, Julian asserts very plainly his own sacerdotal prerogative: is as sovereign pontiff of the national Church, and as mouthpiece of the Didymaean oracle that he pronounces sentence.

His treatment of this question of unworthy priests is full of interest, and shows how strongly he was impressed with the need and value of that ecclesiastical discipline which was theoretically maintained in the Christian Church, though among his own contemporaries it so often fell into abeyance before the consuming blight of heresy and its attendant spirit of faction. In his surviving Pontifical Charge he dwells upon it at length.    The unworthiness of a priest or a prophet cannot indeed cast any reflection upon the perfectness of the God he unworthily serves, nor can any personal demerit degrade the majesty of his office. So long as he bears the name of priest and ministers before the altar, he must be regarded with a submissive and reverential piety as the  authorized representative of God, to strike or insult  whom is sacrilege.

He is no less consecrate to God than the inanimate stones of which the image or altar is fashioned, and like them is to be reverenced for his consecration's sake. But if he is a notorious or open sinner, then the high priest should first openly admonish and rebuke him, and if he still persist, should chastise him heavily, and at the last strip him of his priesthood as a reprobate. For the solemn anathema with which the ancients accompanied such degradation Julian finds no divine, or as we may say Scriptural, authority.  Thus it is in our power to gather very fully Julian's conception of the priestly office.  

It is a calling more exalted than that of any citizen, for the lustre of the divine dignity is reflected upon it. As the immediate servants and ministers of the Gods, priests are in the truest sense their vicars or representatives.  They pray, they sacrifice, on behalf of the congregation and in its stead. And no personal unworthiness can derogate from their high office. It follows immediately that corresponding honor must be paid them. In the   temple they are supreme, and take rank before all earthly potentates: the highest officer of state is but a private individual, and lower than the priest so soon as he passes the threshold of the shrine. This inalienable dignity it is the bounden duty of the priest on all occasions to as­sert; no pious believer will contest it, be he an officer of army, of city, or of State, unless he is puffed up with self-conceit and vainglory.

It will be sufficient merely to mention the fact that priestesses as well as priests found a place, as always, in the ranks of the Pagan ministry. A brief but interesting letter survives from Julian to the priestess Callixene; “all men”, he writes, “sing the praises of Penelope for the constancy of her love to Ulysses. Not less praise could be due to Callixene for her love to God; and the constancy of her devotion had stood the test of not ten but twenty years”. As a fitting acknowledgment of merit, Julian nominates her priestess of Cybele at the famous shrine of Pessinus, in ad­dition to the previous dignity she held as priestess of Demeter—a proof by the way that pluralists were tolerated in the Pagan Church.

Temple restoration.

With a sound polytheistic basis thus firmly laid, a moral law annexed, depending for vitality on its purity and elevation, and an elaborate sacerdotal structure superadded, Julian attempted to reanimate the decaying reverence for the temples, to revive the beauties of neglected precincts and the splendor of the ancient festivals, to attract and awe the public imagination by a more gorgeous ritual, to which the genius of Hellenism so freely lent itself.

The prophecy of the blind hag who met him on his entry to Vienne, and hearing that it was Julian Caesar passing by, cried out that he should be the restorer of the temples of the Gods, found a very literal fulfillment. He did the work in part directly, in part indirectly. In some cases he gave state subsidies, or set apart local imposts, or contributed from the fiscal purse to promote these objects, while at other places he encouraged the people to restore the fallen fabric, or duly celebrate the time-honored festivals, by promises of his favor and patronage, which not seldom took, as at Pessinus, the very substantial form of remission of taxation, if they satisfied his wishes in this respect.

Among the most famous of these attempts at Church restoration was the proposed rebuilding of the Jewish Temple. Partly from a desire to signalize his reign by lasting architectural memorials, partly from his habitual partiality to the Jews, partly perhaps in the hope of giving prophecy the lie, he took in hand the enterprise in compliance with the petition of the Jews. The strange issue of the undertaking, and the controversies that have raged around it, have imparted a fictitious importance to this particular attempt.   In itself it was but one item in a long list, and one too to which Julian himself has left but one or two passing allusions.

Everywhere throughout the realm, at Heliopolis, at Pessinus, at Alexandria, at Antioch, at Cyzicus, he stimulated like efforts. Besides rebuilding the temples, Julian tried everywhere to restore to something of their ancient splendor the solemn festivals, that had everywhere fallen into disrepute. To forward this object he not only expressed special delight, when such celebrations formed part of the programme of his reception, but used himself to contribute largely to the maintenance of their becoming magnificence.

At Batnae, a small Pagan town east of the Euphrates, not very far from Carrhae in Mesopotamia, he was overjoyed at the excellent preservation  in which he found the temples and groves, and with unfeigned satisfaction contrasted their well-to-do appearance with the simple structure of mud and wood that served him there for a palace. As Emperor, careless of the offence he might give to a giddy population like that of Antioch, he declined to give any of those frivolous or  immodest exhibitions that most gratified the popular taste, and confined his bounty to religious celebrations of various kinds, the magnificence of which entailed a lavish outlay. The Apostle of Paganism employed the imperial prerogative to preach as well as practice.

He made bold to go down in person to the Council of Antioch, and deliver an indignant remonstrance at the scandalous neglect shown in the conduct of the yearly festivals. In their dinners and banquets, he bitterly said, there was no stint of lavish expenditure: while the poverty and meanness of their temple ceremonial would have disgraced the remotest hamlet in Pontus. Nor was it only to the conduct of special festivals that he devoted himself. The ordinary temple-service was to be rendered at once more attractive and more imposing by an improved ritual.

His taste for music, and that general aesthetic susceptibility which characterized him as a true Hellene, made him specially alive to the advantage of such accessories to worship. In the great towns choir-boys were to be selected and carefully trained in sacred music, their maintenance being provided for at the public cost. These Ephebi, or choristers, were to be habited in white, richly set off by ornamental appendages. Thus the charm of surplices, the steam of incense, the lines of initiated hierophants and bearers of the sacred basket would match or outvie the nascent pomp of Christian ritual; nor in allurements for the aesthetic were the tastes of the religious overlooked. However undevotional was the spirit of fourth century Paganism, Julian hoped it might become less so. Pulpits, with all the charm of novelty, swelled the furniture of the sanctuary; lectures were held and addresses delivered by trained expositors of Hellenic dogma. The officiating priest was to be robed very sumptuously, though when not acting officially he was to wear the modest garments that befitted his humility, imitating the retiring modesty of Amphiaraus, who when he went to the battle bore no crest or blazon upon his shield. The holy vestment were not to be made a public spectacle or gazing stock about the streets: to do so were dishonor to the symbolized majesty of the Gods: they must be seen and worn only in the holy place, where none but the pure in heart drew nigh.

By example and precept alike Julian did his utmost to encourage, at times almost to enforce, regular attendance at religious services. Worship he looked upon not as necessary to the Gods, as though in any carnal sense they fed on the smoke and reek of sacrifice: nor again as positively necessary to man, for indeed the highest natures might rise above it; but rather as the natural outward correlative of inward reverence and virtue, a due to the Gods, and not less a benefit and delight to god fearing men. Their abandonment of sacrificial practices is one of the allegations brought against the Christians; while the Jews are praised aloud for adherence to the old rites. Accordingly fixed days and hours were set apart for public sacrifice and prayer.

No less important in his eyes than regularity was reverential demeanour on the part of those present: he longed, to see the service conducted with decency and quiet gravity: it was real pain to him to find a disorderly crowd rushing to the temples to catch a good sight of the Emperor, and receiving him it may be with vivas and plaudits that honored the sovereign to the dishonor of the sovereign's God. He went so far as to deliver a public harangue against such desecration. The shortest and pithiest of his surviving letters is the order addressed to the populace who cheered in the temple of Fortune: '”If I enter the theatre unexpectedly, cheer; but if the temple, then keep silence, giving cheer to the Gods alone—nay, but the Gods have no need of cheers”.

The whole rationale of reverence paid to temples, altars and images, he expounds very clearly. Between his view of the case and that of an enlightened Romanist at the present day, there is little sensible difference. He scornfully and indignantly rejects the supposition that the worshippers confound the sticks or stones they reverence with the God whom these symbolize.  Such a notion could emanate only from the addled prejudice of a Christian.

Jewish denunciations of idols arise from pure misconception. Their prophets are in reality like men who gaze through a cloud of mist upon a light perfectly serene and pure: then in their short-sightedness  not discerning the purity of the light beyond, but beholding only the illuminated mist, they mistake the mist itself for fire, and screaming out Fire! Murder! Sudden Death! and such alarmist cries, set to work to extinguish what they suppose to be the devouring element. The true and reasonable use of images is very different. They are human handiwork; they are not the Gods themselves, but symbolic representations of the Gods: material images of deities who themselves are immaterial. Nay, they are acknowledged to be an accommodation to man's creature limitations; it is man's bodily nature alone that makes them useful adjuncts of worship. Of the highest supreme Being no physical representation has ever been attempted.

Even in the case of the second grade of deities emanating immediately from the first, all corporeal embodiment and service proved impossible; for they are by nature unindigent of such, and can be approached only by more exalted spiritual communion. It is the third order of Gods alone that the service of images can propitiate, and thus in this third grade of worship only do they become effectual. But in their proper sphere they are to be commended and to receive due honor: they become evidences of alacrity in worship: like other rites they have the sanction of antiquity: our fathers delighted thus to do honor to the Gods, in precisely the same way as we delight to do honor to kings or princes by rearing statues or images to represent them. Thus images care not to be regarded as mere bits of wood or stone, any more than they are to be confounded with the Gods. What they really are is simply what they set up to be, wood or stones representing, symbolizing the Gods. As such they are entitled to reverence. A fond parent will take delight in the likeness of his child; why? because it is stone? or because it is bronze? or because it is his child? No, but because it is stone or bronze representing and recalling the likeness of his child. A loyal subject will honor the statue of his sovereign for precisely the same reason. Just as the parent loves the likeness of his child, or the subject honors the statue of his prince, so will the worshipper revere the image of his God, and in its presence realize in trembling awe the unseen presence in whose gaze he at that moment stands. True of course the Gods have no need of images; neither have they need of prayers. The need lies with the worshipper. It would be as reasonable to deny the Gods the service of the lips, that is prayer, as that service of the hands which comes to us with the sanction of thrice a thousand years and the consent of all known races. It is needless Julian thinks to refute the  sorry argument of those who would discredit images by acts of wanton insult or destruction. It is they, not the image-worshippers, who are discredited by such exhi­bitions of folly and crime. A wicked brutal man can easily enough destroy the handiwork of a wise good man: that is all that is done. Even then there remain the living uneffaceable images of the unseen essence of the Gods, even the imperishable stars which from everlasting to everlasting run their courses in the heavens.

This survey of Julian's position with regard to the external expression of the religious sense would be incomplete selection without a reference to his leaning towards observances which are apt to be regarded as even more formal ceremonialism than any yet alluded to. He approved and justified ceremonial abstinence at stated seasons from certain, kinds of food. This was a genuine part of his Neo-Platonic creed, in more than one branch of which Orphic influences are clearly traceable. Plotinus had abstained almost entirely from meat, and seldom touched even bread: subsisted indeed on the scantiest diet that sufficed to support life, and recommended similar denial to his disciples. One explanation of the name applied to Porphyry is that he was a vegetarian.

Following in the same track, Julian, not content with himself adopting sparse, if not vegetarian fare and fasting at appointed religious seasons, recommends to others the observance of traditional rules about diet, and sees in them a genuine and permanent symbolical significance. He takes devout pride in the insight vouchsafed to him in these matters: but does not press his theories intolerantly. The rules are for set times and certain persons, where the means, the physical condition, and the individual's will are favorably disposed. The benefit to be derived is primarily moral, and only indirectly physical. 'Purification' was a catch-word of Neo-Platonic Ethics: and soul being in itself perfectly pure and every contamination derived from man's corporeal part, mortification, asceticism and fasting availed naturally for personal holiness.

In his Oration to the Mother of the Gods Julian vents his opinions at length, prescribing minute dietary rules for the religious observance of the Cybelean ceremonial. With regard to vegetables, while cabbages, sprouts and the like were permissible articles of food, seeds and all roots such as turnips, were forbidden; while in the case of fruit, figs received the preference over apples, pomegranates or dates. Fish was prohibited, while birds of almost every kind were approved. Among four-footed beasts the swine attained am enviable monopoly of uncleanness. Julian proceeds to point out the underlying significance of these at first sight arbitrary restrictions. Seeds (except indeed the pods of leguminous plants whose manner of growth secured them exemption) and roots, no less than creeping plants, are forbidden as symbolizing a groveling earthward tendency, while vegetable shoots typify the opposite heavenward desire, always looking upward to the pure aether. The apple or rather probably the orange is too holy for consumption; it recalls the golden Apples of the Hesperides, and has served as the guerdon and symbol of mystic quests and triumphs. The pomegranate is interdicted as a ground plant; the sanctity of the date is perhaps a survival from Phrygia, birthplace of the Phrygian Mother's rites, where the palm grows not.

But Julian rather descries in it the fruit sacred to the sun, and which never grows old. Fish are spared, first, in compliance with the general rule that that which is not sacrificed to the Gods is not to be eaten of men; and secondly, because they too diving down into the depths signify those lower groveling desires which have been already attributed to the root-plants. Birds, on the contrary, who constantly soar, seeking the mountain-tops or the expanse of heaven, are fit food (except such as be sacrosanct to the Gods) for the soul that would aspire upwards. No wonder that the leprous pig is tabooed. He is pursy of habit, fleshly, gross: he cannot, if he would, turn his eyes heavenwards: he is fit only to be the victim offered to the nether Gods. The seriousness and manifest earnestness of the writer in tracing these rather droll symbolisms remind the reader of works like the Epistle of Barnabas, or later writers of the allegorical school with whom Julian had little enough of common ground. Quite consistently with this expression of his views, he lauds the rigidity of Jewish abstinence in the matter of meats clean or unclean, and denounces Christian laxity in this respect. It is to this apparently as much as to anything that he refers, when he charges the Christians with having abandoned the purer portion of the law, and retained all that was less edifying. Elsewhere drawing a nobler contrast, he says that Pagan coldness and unbelief is put to shame by those who display the burning zeal that would choose death rather than violate the law of holiness, and that would suffer hunger and starva­tion rather than eat of the flesh of swine, or of meat that had been choked or strangled.

Yet while thus insisting on the consistent and prominent recognition of the value of externals in religion, Julian taught that these were after all secondary to that inner life and spirit of which they were but the outward expression. Without holiness, he says, the hecatomb, aye and chiliomb as well, are waste only and nothing else.   

Sanctification of the soul was the first supreme necessity, the alpha and omega of true philosophy. So completely did he recognize this, that he explains and defends the avowed contempt expressed by Diogenes the Cynic for the outward paraphernalia of worship. “If any detect atheism in his not drawing near nor ministering to temples or statues or altars, they are mistaken; none such did he use, neither frankincense, nor libation, nor silver wherewith to buy them. But if his heart was right toward the Gods, that and that only sufficed; for with his true and very soul he worshipped, giving them I ween the most precious of all things he had, the sanctification of his own soul by the thoughts of his heart”. Thus he obeyed the voice of the oracle within and wisdom was justified of her child.   

The mysteries as then conducted were one of those shams of custom against which his whole life was a protest.  It was his very reverence for the universal Gods and his desire for communion with them, that made him revolt against that narrow exclusive ritualistic temper, that religious quackery which limited participation in the mysteries to citizens of Athens. This is a spirit so free and noble that only a chosen few can attain to it: for the mass it is safer and more laudable to follow obediently on the lines of religion laid down for them.

Neo-Platonism sought also to catch converts by more questionable attractions, stored in the theurgic or super­natural department. These were more effective than unintelligible mysticism, doomed to elicit from the masses nothing but impatience or blank bewilderment. On Julian's own mind they laid fast hold. Not only was belief in oracles, dreams, prophecies, augury and divination a constituent part of his faith, but the sorceries of the necromancer or spiritualist enchained him with their spell. But he never thrusts these forward as evidences of Paganism, nor in any single passage of his works adduces them either as corroborative of the existence of the Gods, or as inducements to convert the believer. He appears to have felt the dangers of popular superstitions in these respects, to have endeavored to extirpate quackery in divination, and reduced the practice of it to a science, governed by revealed and rigid laws, and administered only by trained exponents.

His dogmas and rules of conduct were further enforced by a doctrine of future retribution, not however very loudly or prominently put forward. Holding fast in person the mope of immortality, allowing that hope as a motive to effort, and confronting with a resolute denial those who believed that the soul's life was as frail or frailer than that of the body, he acknowledges that the life to come is veiled in mystery, known to the Gods but unrevealed to man: “men do well to conjecture, the Gods must know”.

The retributive punishment of vice commences in this life; for if not all, at any rate most, and those the most virulent, diseases are the result of spiritual aberrations or delinquencies. The childlessness of Constantius Julian regards as a distinct dispensation of Divine displeasure. After death sinful souls will be imprisoned in the darkness of Tartarus; “but the pit itself does not lie outside the omnipotence of God, for God knoweth even them that are fast shut up in Tartarus, and them that draw nigh to him with godliness he will deliver”. But Julian loves far more to dwell upon the brighter side, to hail death as the entering into rest, and the cessation of the long conflict, as the separation of body from spirit, which will then be remitted to the Gods from whom it came, and fare trustfully forth under guidance of its tutelar deity; or he will picture the heaven which is reserved for the souls of the righteous, or tell of Hades the gentle beneficent God, who sets souls free for the communion for which they pine.

When the conflict is all ended, he writes impressively, and the immortal soul set free, when the dead body is turned to dust, then will the Gods be potent to make good all their promises to men; and we know of a surety, that great are the rewards which the Gods give unto their priests for a possession. The immortality to which he taught men to aspire was not continuance, but rather an entire change of being to a new and more perfect state which can at present be only spiritually imagined. Indeed, notwithstanding fugitive expressions of an opposite character, Julian did not believe in personal immortality. He rejected the Christian doctrine, in favor of the Neo-Platonic supposition of pre-existent emanation before life, and subsequent re-absorption into the ocean of divinity. He held no doctrine of the resurrection of the body, an idea absolutely alien to the Neo-Platonist. His conviction of life after death was resolute; but the individual life was merged in a higher life, assimilated by kindred and, divine essence:  the emanative soul was once more absorbed in the spiritual order determined by its own choice and bias in mundane life; unless it passed by self-determination into other congenial phases of material connection. The one Tartarus of physical suffering on which Julian dwells is of this earth: the horrors of alarmist myths are flatly discarded: when the souls of the righteous are translated to the presence of Serapis the unseen, Hades the mild and placable absolves them absolutely from the bonds of created being, and at their enfranchisement does not fasten them to other material forms, as vehicles for chastisement and retribution, but conducts and elevates them to the sphere from which they were derived. There the separated soul is affiliated to the inseparate essence with which it is most homogeneous.

Towards alien philosophies  Julian adopted the normal attitude of the Neo-Platonist. First of all with some characteristic inexactness of thought he strove to identify them all, all at least which he approved. Herein later Neo-Platonism followed the same bent which it displayed in identifying all the shifting forms of Paganism, and evolving theoretic monotheism from a ferment of active Polytheism. Here is Julian's superficial generalization:  “Truth is one and philosophy is one; all philosophers had one single end, which they reached by different paths: the tasks of Plato and Diogenes were not different, but one and the same; why should we erect partition walls, and separate men conjoined by love of truth, disdain for popular prejudice, and aspiration after virtue?” By this route Stoicism is but a form of Cynicism, and both of Platonism. At the same time minuter differences were partially recognized, and two philosophies at least were denied a place in the goodly company. The Neo-Platonist estimate of philosophies corresponds very closely to the appreciativeness displayed by them towards current religion. Epicureanism was the most open and bitter foe of Paganism, Skepticism a less violent but as insidious an opponent, Stoicism a friendly neutral, Platonism and Pythagoreanism bold and ardent supporters. To Epicureanism accordingly Julian never gives one kind word. To refer the creation or generation of the material world to the impulse of blind uncaused forces in accordance with the Epicurean theory, he accounts the reductio ad absurdum of a philosophic system. Epicurean morality likewise with its scientific selfishness and apathetic indifference he condemns most strongly; while as for the dogmatic teaching of Epicureanism and Pyrrhonism alike, he thanks God that nearly all the treatises of these schools have perished.

Stoics on the contrary he treats with modified approval. While criticizing their doctrine of happiness, he admires their stern self-control and self-denying virtue; this he could to the full appreciate, and regarded with no less admiration the deeply religious  sentiment which pervades their greatest masters' teaching on the Gods. He even recommends extracts from   Zeno and Chrysippus as useful devotional manuals for priests, notwithstanding that some of their professed opinions were dangerously heterodox or immoral. In the satirical Caesars Zeno finds admission and patronage   in heaven, where no Epicurus or Pyrrho may enter. Octavian there makes his appearance, his color changeful as the chameleon's, now pale, now red, now black and dark and lowering. Silenus jocosely suspects that there is mischief in the beast, but Apollo rebukes him with these words, “Hush! nonsense, Silenus! I will consign him to Zeno's charge and will forthwith make of him pure gold. Come, Zeno”, said the God, “take my child in charge”. Then Zeno hearkened to his bidding, and sang over him catches from the  dogmas, like  the incantations of   Zamolxis, and made him a wise good man.

Much that attracted Julian in Stoicism was present also in Cynicism. The sixth and seventh Orations are a full exposition of Julian's views on Cynicism true and Cynicism false. As a rebound from the utilitarianism and insincerity of those about him, its self-abnegation and reality laid hold of him pith peculiar force. With all its defects and one-sidedness, its mistakes as to the true nature of happiness, and its failure to acknowledge the real claims and needs of soul as opposed to body, it yet remained a worthy monument of genuine philosophic zeal.   

For the poor self-deceptions and the low worldliness of his own day, no better physic could be prescribed than the old Cynic maxims of self-knowledge and war against all shams. —Know thyself—Down with convention—let men guide their lives by that twin rule, and brighter days would dawn for all. In true Cynicism, though least of all in that base counterfeit of the original which did but ape the outward ugliness of the Silenus mask and contained no God, Julian recognized a stalwart protest for the truth, more articulate than speech. Such Cynicism was an acted creed, a sermon written in the life. Julian reaches the very bounds of praise when he declares the genuine Cynic to be a kind of incarnate Platonism. Indeed Julian was himself, if the term may pass, a rationalizing Cynic;   latitudinarian enough to reject its eccentricities and indecencies, though viewing them not without tenderness, but faithfully following the principles of the school as adapted to his own times and position, and repudiating the  extravagance which disparaged all book-learning as compared with the practice of virtue.

The Peripatetic philosophy is rated higher than any of the preceding. On the moral side Julian considers that it has hardly received full justice as compared with Stoicism. In one of his letters, after quoting an Aristotelian adage, “Better a brief span of right, than a life-time of wrong” he adds, “Whatever people may say the Peripatetic teaching is as high-souled as the Stoic. The only difference is that Peripateticism is less habitually cool and prudential, while stoicism commends itself permanently to the intelligence of its disciples”. But intellectually, if not morally or theologically, Aristotle stands side by side with Plato; in a brief note to two fellow-students Julian urges them to concentrate their efforts on the doctrines of Aristotle and Plato, to make them the base, the foundation, the walls and the roof of all knowledge. But with all this exalted respect for Aristotle he dares criticize and at times reject Peripatetic teaching, as well as compare it eclectically with other systems. For Plato such criticism or comparison, even by way of commendation, were an insult: far better strain an interpretation or distort an argument, than correct an error, or acknowledge a defect. Plato is an infallible guide. He is quoted, lauded, imitated in almost every treatise Julian wrote. His ipse dixit is absolute. He is the perfect seer, standing on the pinnacle of truth, the sure guide for this world and the next. Iamblichus himself cannot soar higher than to be an alter Plato.

 

VI.

JULIAN'S PERSONAL RELIGION