Saint Léonidas
Martyr de la foi sous
Septime Sévère, à Alexandrie, en 203, Saint Léonide est le père d'Origène, l'un
des plus grands penseurs chrétiens de l'Antiquité (185-254). Rhéteur,
philosophe et professeur de renom, Léonide dirigea les premières études et la
formation religieuse de son fils. Origène avait environ 17 ans quand son père
fut arrêté. Désireux de mourir avec lui pour la foi, il voulut le rejoindre
devant le tribunal. Sa mère dut cacher ses vêtements pour l'empêcher de sortir
de la maison. Léonide eut la tête tranchée ; ses biens furent confisqués ; une
riche femme pourvut aux besoins de sa veuve et de ses sept enfants.
Saint Léonide
Père d'Origène et martyr
(+ 204)
Martyr. Rhéteur,
professeur et philosophe de renom à Alexandrie, il dirigea les premières études
et la formation de son fils qui devint un des grands noms de l'Église :
Origène. Quand il fut arrêté, Origène, qui n'avait que dix-sept ans, voulut le
rejoindre devant le tribunal mais sa mère l'en empêcha en cachant tous ses
vêtements. Léonide eut la tête tranchée.
SOURCE : http://nominis.cef.fr/contenus/saint/1019/Saint-Leonide.html
SAINT LÉONIDE
Père d'Origène et Martyr
(+ 202)
L'an 202 vit éclater une
cruelle persécution qui fit couler dans tout l'empire, et surtout en Égypte, le
sang d'une multitude de chrétiens. Parmi ceux dont le triomphe illustra la
ville d'Alexandrie, on compte saint Léonide.
Sa principale gloire,
après son martyre, est d'avoir donné la vie à l'un des plus fameux génies qui
aient paru sur la terre, le grand Origène. Léonide était probablement un
rhéteur d'Alexandrie, philosophe chrétien, également versé dans les sciences
sacrées et profanes.
Parmi ses sept enfants,
il donna un soin tout spécial à l'éducation d'Origène, dont il pressentait le
brillant avenir; mais, tout en ornant son esprit de toutes les autres
connaissances, il l'initia surtout à la connaissance des Saintes Écritures.
Chaque jour l'enfant
était obligé d'apprendre par coeur et de réciter quelques pages des Livres
divins, et son esprit vif et curieux se plaisait singulièrement à ce genre
d'étude. Sans se contenter du sens que présente tout d'abord la lettre du texte
sacré, il en cherchait de plus profonds, trahissant ainsi dès l'origine son
penchant à scruter les vérités de la foi. Il accablait son père de questions un
peu difficiles, il demandait des explications qui ne laissaient pas quelques
fois d'embarrasser le précepteur.
En apparence et devant
l'enfant, Léonide tâchait de modérer cette ardeur intempestive; il exhortait
l'impatient élève à s'en tenir au sens littéral de l'Écriture, sans vouloir
résoudre des problèmes qui n'étaient pas de son âge; mais au fond et en
lui-même, l'heureux père se réjouissait de voir une intelligence si précoce, et
il remerciait Dieu de lui avoir donné un tel fils. Souvent même, pendant que
l'enfant dormait, le pieux chrétien s'approchait de lui doucement, et lui
découvrant la poitrine, il la baisait avec respect comme un sanctuaire où
résidait l'Esprit-Saint.
Léonide ayant été pris
par les persécuteurs, Origène voulait le rejoindre en prison, mais, sur les
instances de sa mère, il se contenta d'écrire une lettre à son père pour
l'exhorter au martyre. Léonide fut décapité. La confiscation de ses biens
réduisit sa famille à une extrême pauvreté; mais l'hospitalité généreuse d'une
noble dame la sauva du besoin.
Quant à Origène,
"pour le talent et l'étendue de ses connaissances, il l'emporte sur la
plupart des Pères de l'Église; en tous cas, il n'est inférieur à aucun,"
dit Mgr Freppel. Mais ses spéculations hasardées l'ont privé du titre de Saint
et de Docteur.
Abbé L. Jaud, Vie
des Saints pour tous les jours de l'année, Tours, Mame, 1950.
SOURCE : http://magnificat.ca/cal/fr/saints/saint_leonide.html
Also
known as
Leonides
Profile
Wealthy and pious layman. Father of seven sons,
the eldest of whom was the philosopher Origen,
whom he raised and taught. Philosopher and
rhetorician. Imprisoned and martyred by
command of Laertus, Governor of Egypt,
during the persecutions of emperor Septimius Severus. All his property was
confiscated, and his family reduced to complete poverty until
they were “adopted” by a wealthy Christian woman.
beheaded in 202 at Alexandria, Egypt
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MLA
Citation
“Saint Leonidas of
Alexandria“. CatholicSaints.Info. 14 November 2018. Web. 21 April 2021.
<https://catholicsaints.info/saint-leonidas-of-alexandria/>
SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-leonidas-of-alexandria/
St. Leonidas
(Or LEONIDES.)
The Roman Martyrology records
several feast
days of martyrs of
this name in different countries. Under date of
28 January there is a martyr called Leonides,
a native of the Thebaid,
whose death with several companions is supposed to have occurred during
the Diocletian persecution (Acta
SS., January, II, 832). Another Leonides appears on 2 September, in a
long list of martyrs headed
by a St. Diomedes. Together with a St.
Eleutherius, a Leonides is honoured on
8 August. From other sources we know of a St. Leonidas, Bishop of Athens,
who lived about the sixth century, and whose feast is
celebrated on 15 April ("Acta SS.", April, II, 378; "Bibliotheca
hagiographica graeca", 2nd ed., 137). Still another martyr of
the name is honoured on
16 April, with Callistus, Charysius, and other companions (Acta SS., April, II,
402). The best known of them all, however, is St. Leonides of Alexandria,
father of the great Origen.
From Eusebius (Church
History VI.1.2) we learn that he died a martyr during
the persecution under Septimius
Severus in 202. He was condemned to death by
the prefect of Egypt,
Lactus, and beheaded. His property was
confiscated. Leonides carefully cultivated the brilliant intellect of
his son Origen from
the latter's childhood, and imparted to him the knowledge of Holy
Scripture. The feast of St. Leonidas
of Alexandria is celebrated on 22 April.
Kirsch, Johann Peter. "St. Leonidas." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 15 Mar. 2015 <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09179a.htm>.
Transcription. This
article was transcribed for New Advent by Michael T. Barrett. Dedicated to
the martyrs of Rome.
Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil
Obstat. October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, Censor. Imprimatur. +John
M. Farley, Archbishop of New York.
Copyright © 2020 by Kevin
Knight. Dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
SOURCE : http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09179a.htm
Leonides of Alexandria M (RM)
(also known as Leonidas)
Died 202. The Alexandrian martyr Leonides was the father of seven children, one
of whom was Origen whose clothes had to be concealed by his mother in order to
prevent him from accompanying his father to his martyrdom. He was himself a
distinguished philosopher. Prior to his beheading under Laetus, governor of
Egypt, during the reign of Septimus Severus, his property was confiscated and
he was imprisoned for being a Christian (Benedictines, Delaney, Encyclopedia).
Source : http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0422.shtml
Saint Leonides of
Alexandria
St. Leonides of
Alexandria was a Christian martyr of the 3rd century AD. According to the
Christian historian Eusebius, his son was the early Church father Origen. In
the same passage Eusebius tells us that Leonides was martyred during the
persecution of the Roman emperor Septimus Severus in the year 202 AD.
He was a Christian
philosopher, and excellently versed both in the physical and sacred sciences.
He had seven sons, the eldest of whom was Origen, whom he brought up with
abundance of care, returning God thanks for having blessed him with a son of
such an excellent disposition for learning, and a very great zeal for piety.
These qualifications endeared him greatly to his father, who, after his son was
baptized, would come to his bedside while he was asleep, and, opening his
bosom, kiss it respectfully, as being the temple of the Holy Ghost. When the
persecution raged at Alexandria, under Lætus, governor of Egypt, in the tenth
year of Severus, Leonides was cast into prison. Origen, who was then only
seventeen years of age, burned with an incredible desire of martyrdom, and
sought every opportunity of meeting with it. But his mother conjured him not to
forsake her, and his ardor being redoubled at the sight of his father’s chains,
she was forced to lock up all his clothes to oblige him to stay at home. So,
not being able to do any more, he wrote a letter to his father in very moving
terms, strongly exhorting him to look on the crown that was offered him with
courage and joy, adding this clause, “Take heed, sir. that for our sakes you do
not change your mind.”
Condemned to death by the
Egyptian prefect Lactus, he was beheaded, and his property seized. The feast of
St. Leonides is celebrated on April 22. He is a patron of large families.
SOURCE : https://ucatholic.com/saints/st-leonides-of-alexandria/
ST. LEONIDES, Martyr.
THE Emperor Severus, in the year 202, which was the tenth of his reign, raised
a bloody persecution, which filled the whole empire with martyrs, but
especially Egypt. The most illustrious of those who by their triumphs ennobled
and edified the city of Alexandria was Leonides, father of the great Origen. He
was a Christian philosopher, and excellently versed both in the profane and
sacred sciences. He had seven sons, the eldest of whom was Origen, whom he
brought up with abundance of care, returning God thanks for having blessed him
with a son of such an excellent disposition for learning, and a very great zeal
for piety. These qualifications endeared him greatly to his father, who, after his
son was baptized, would come to his bedside while he was asleep, and, opening
his bosom, kiss it respectfully, as being the temple of the Holy Ghost. When
the persecution raged at Alexandria, under Lætus, governor of Egypt, in the
tenth year of Severus, Leonides was cast into prison. Origen, who was then only
seventeen years of age, burned with an incredible desire of martyrdom, and
sought every opportunity of meeting with it. But his mother conjured him not to
forsake her, and his ardor being redoubled at the sight of his father's chains,
she was forced to lock up all his clothes to oblige him to stay at home. So,
not being able to do any more, he wrote a letter to his father in very moving
terms, strongly exhorting him to look on the crown that was offered him with
courage and joy, adding this clause, "Take heed, sir. that for our sakes
you do not change your mind." Leonides was accordingly beheaded for the
faith in 202. His estates and goods being all confiscated, and seized for the
emperor's use, his widow was left with seven children to maintain in the
poorest condition imaginable; but Divine Providence was both her comfort and
support.
SOURCE : http://www.sacred-texts.com/chr/lots/lots131.htm
Pictorial
Lives of the Saints – Saint Leonides, Martyr
Article
The emperor Severus, in
the year 202, which was the tenth of his reign, raised a bloody persecution,
which filled the whole empire with martyrs, but especially Egypt. The most
illustrious of those who, by their triumphs, ennobled and edified the city of
Alexandria, was Leonides, father of the great Origen. He was a Christian
philosopher, and excellently versed both in the profane and sacred sciences. He
had seven sons, the eldest of whom was Origen, whom he brought up with
abundance of care, returning God thanks for having blessed him with a son of
such an excellent disposition for learning, and a very great zeal for piety.
These qualifications endeared him greatly to his father, who, after his son was
baptized, would come to his bedside while he was asleep, and, opening his
bosom, kiss it respectfully, as being the temple of the Holy Ghost. When the
persecution raged at Alexandria, under Laetus, governor of Egypt, in the tenth
year of Severus, Leonides was cast into prison. Origen, who was then only
seventeen years of age, burned with an incredible desire of martyrdom, and
sought every opportunity of meeting with it. But his mother conjured him not to
forsake her, and his ardor being redoubled at the sight of his father’s chains,
she was forced to lock up all his clothes to oblige him to stay at home. So not
being able to do any more, he wrote a letter to his father in very moving
terms, strongly exhorting him to look on the crown that was offered him with
courage and joy, adding this clause, “Take heed. Sir, that for our sakes you do
not change your mind.” Leonides was accordingly beheaded for the faith in 202.
His estates and goods being all confiscated, and seized for the emperor’s use,
his widow was left with seven children to maintain in the poorest condition
imaginable; but Divine Providence was both her comfort and support.
MLA
Citation
John Dawson Gilmary Shea.
“Saint Leonides, Martyr”. Pictorial Lives of the
Saints, 1889. CatholicSaints.Info.
7 March 2014. Web. 21 April 2021.
<https://catholicsaints.info/pictorial-lives-of-the-saints-saint-leonides-martyr/>
SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/pictorial-lives-of-the-saints-saint-leonides-martyr/
April
22
St. Leonides, Martyr
THE EMPEROR Severus, in the year 202, which was the tenth of his reign, raised
a bloody persecution, which filled the whole empire with martyrs, but
especially Egypt. The most illustrious of those who, by their triumphs ennobled
and edified the city of Alexandria, was Leonides, father of the great Origen.
He was a Christian philosopher, and excellently versed both in the profane and
sacred sciences. He had seven sons, the eldest of whom was Origen, 1 whom
he brought up with abundance of care, returning God thanks for having blessed
him with a son of such an excellent disposition for learning, and a very great
zeal for piety. These qualifications endeared him greatly to his father, who,
after his son was baptized, would come to his bedside while he was asleep, and,
opening his bosom, kiss it respectfully, as being the temple of the Holy Ghost.
When the persecution raged at Alexandria, under Lætus, governor of Egypt, in
the tenth year of Severus, Leonides was cast into prison. Origen, who was then
only seventeen years of age, burned with an incredible desire of martyrdom, and
sought every opportunity of meeting with it. But his mother conjured him not to
forsake her: and seeing his ardour redoubled at the sight of his father’s
chains, was forced to lock up all his clothes to oblige him to stay at home.
So, not being able to do any more, he wrote a letter to his father in very
moving terms, strongly exhorting him to look on the crown that was offered him
with courage and joy; adding this clause: “Take heed, sir, that for our sakes
you do not change your mind.” Leonides was accordingly beheaded for the faith
in 202. His estates and goods being all confiscated and seized for the
emperor’s use, his widow was left with seven children to maintain, in the
poorest condition imaginable; but Divine Providence was both her comfort and
support. Suidas informs us, that St. Leonides was honoured with the episcopal
character; which Dom. Vincent de la Rue confirms by the authority of two
Vatican MS. copies of St. Jerom’s catalogue of illustrious writers. See Euseb.
Hist. l, 6, c. 12, and Chron. ad an. 10 Severi; also St. Jerom, Catal. c. 54.
Note 1. Origen, from his unwearied assiduity in writing, surnamed
Adamantius, (from adamus, a diamond,) a native of Alexandria, was a scholar of
St. Clement, then regent of the famous catechetical school in that city. He was
afterwards a scholar of the celebrated Christian philosopher, Ammonius Saccas,
who, with most philosophers of that age, adhered principally to Plato, though
he joined with him also Aristotle, and had thus reconciled those inveterate
feuds and differences which had subsisted between the schools of those two
celebrated philosophers. With our Origen, Plotinus, the most judicious heathen
critic, Longinus, and many other eminent men, frequented the lectures of
Ammonius. Origen, in consequence of the acuteness of his parts and great
industry, made vast improvements in all sorts of learning; being imcomparably
skilled (according to St. Jerom and Suidas) in dialectic, geometry, arithmetic,
music, rhetoric, and the several sentiments and opinions of all the sects of
philosophers: he was also a great proficient in the Hebrew language and the
knowledge of the sacred writings. Being reduced to extreme poverty, after the
death of his father, he was relieved by the liberality of a rich lady of
Alexandria; but never could be prevailed upon to communicate with a certain
heretic named Paul, her particular favourite. Whether the lady on this account
withdrew her charity, or that he thought it more agreeable to the Christian
rule to live by his labour, he opened a grammar-school at Alexandria, and the
year following he instructed certain catechumens in the faith. The applause
which this procured him, moved Demetrius, the bishop, to appoint him to preside
in the great catechetical school at Alexandria, though he was not then above
eighteen years of age; (S. Jerom, Catal. c. 54;) whereas that province was
seldom intrusted but to persons well advanced in years. But Origen was a quite
finished man by the time nature in others begins only to open their genius to
serious studies: a time of life never so remarkable upon the same account in
any other person. At this age, he was an accomplished master of so much
learning as to be respected, consulted, and followed by a number of disciples;
and many, after being with the greatest masters in the world, were thereby only
better qualified to be his scholars. From his school, innumerable doctors,
priests, confessors, and martyrs came forth. Even heathens crowded to his
lectures, whom he admitted, that, under the opportunity of profane learning, he
might draw them to the faith of Christ. So high did his reputation run, that
Porphyrius himself tells us, Origen, going by chance into the school of
Plotinus, the famous philosopher, that haughty sophist blushed at the sight of
such a person, stopped short, and refused to proceed though desired: till at
last he resumed his discourse only for the sake of an opportunity of passing a
fine compliment upon him. (Porphyr. in Vit. Plotini.) Origen taught all the
arts and sciences as well as divinity; and besides his public lectures, the
fatigue of which was enough to kill another person, he dictated to seven
amanuenses. Such a fertility of knowledge, such a clear order in his ideas on
all sciences, such a presence of mind and facility of expression, will be the
admiration of all succeeding ages. He seemed scarcely ever to cease from
application, or to allow his body any other refreshment than what proceeded
from a variety of labour. Even when he travelled, he every where was crowded
with scholars, and every where studied to improve his mind, and taught others;
so that wherever he went he left, as it were, a track of light behind him. He
knew hardly any difference, as to repose, between day and night. His
constitution, naturally strong, was still fortified by his way of living, which
was, in all respects, most austere. In quitting his profession as a grammarian,
he sold all his books that related to profane learning, to one who daily
supplied him with four Oboli, or about five pence of our money, for his
subsistence, which served to maintain him several years; for he had led a most
austere life, sleeping upon the bare ground, watching much, besides fasting
very often. In this new station of catechist he was of great use, as well by
strengthening believers in the faith, as by gaining over to it a great number
of Gentile philosophers; and had so many martyrs among his disciples, that his
school might more properly be called a school of martyrdom, than of theology.
The most eminent martyrs amongst his disciples were St. Plutarch, whom Origen
followed to execution, and narrowly escaped being slain by the citizens,
because he was looked upon as the cause, by his exhortations, of the other’s
death. The second was St. Serenus; the third, St. Heraclides; the fourth, St.
Heron: the fifth, another St. Serenus; the sixth, St. Herias, a woman
catechumen, who was baptized by fire, the instrument of her martyrdom; the
seventh, St. Basilides, with St. Potamiœna, &c. Origen’s school was
frequented by very great personages, amongst whom St. Gregory Thaumaturgus was
none of the least. He also taught many young virgins and women the principles
of Christianity. As he was a young man, and by his office of catechist was
obliged to converse daily, not only with men but women, by an indiscreet zeal
against temptations, and to avoid all calumny, he made himself an eunuch, an
action which he afterwards most justly condemned, (t. 15, in Mat. p. 369, ed.
Huet.) He always walked barefooted, abstained from flesh-meat, and during many
years from wine, till the weakness of his breast obliged him to mingle a little
with his water. The bare floor was the only bed he ever made use of. To his
continual fasts and watchings he added the rigours of cold and nakedness, and
lived to his last breath in extreme voluntary poverty, constantly refusing the
offers of many who earnestly desired to oblige him to share their estates with them.
Yet he always thought that much was wanting to his poverty, that his
disengagement from earthly things might be perfect. Whence, mentioning the
precepts which Christ gave to priests, of renouncing all they possess in order
to become his disciples, (Luke xiv. 33,) he says, “I tremble when I recite
these words. For I am above others my own accuser, repeating my own
condemnation. At least, awakened by this warning, let us hasten to accomplish
this precept, let us hasten to throw off the character of the priests of
Pharaoh, whose possessions are on earth, and rank ourselves among the priests
of God, whose portion and inheritance is the Lord.”—Orig. Hom. 16, in Gen. p.
104.
The desire of seeing so ancient a Church as that of Rome, induced him to take a
journey thither, St. Zephyrinus being then bishop of that see, (Euseb. l. 6, c.
14.) He made no long stay in that city, but returned back to Alexandria, and to
his former office of catechist, Demetrius earnestly importuning him to resume
it. About this time he converted several from the errors of Marcion and
Valentinus to the Catholic faith; and among the rest Ambrose, a very
considerable man at Alexandria, both on account of his riches and abilities,
who became one of the most intimate friends of Origen, and from that time
maintained for his use ten amanuenses, or clerks, to copy his works, besides
several other transcribers for his service. The emperor Heliogabalus happened
to make along stay at Antioch, in 218, together with his aunt Mammea, mother of
the emperor Alexander. She being a lady of great wisdom, virtue, and learning,
sent for Origen to Antioch, and detained him a long time with her in great
honour. Nor does it seem to be doubted, that, through his instructions, she
embraced the faith, and inclined her son Alexander to favour the same. Origen
mentions the abatement of the persecution during the reign of Heliogabalus, (l.
3, c. Cels.) which is generally ascribed to his influence and credit at court:
and, if he modestly decline telling us the part he bore in it, we owe him so
much the more honour, the less he seems to claim. When Origen returned to
Alexandria, he there composed his works on the holy scriptures, from the year
219 to 228.
In 230, being at Cæsarea in Palestine, he was ordained priest by Theoctistus,
bishop of that city, with the approbation of St. Alexander of Jerusalem and
other bishops. This step gave offence to Demetrius, bishop of Alexandria, who
not long after, in two councils, deposed and excommunicated him. Origen had
fled back to Palestine in 231, to withdraw himself from his censures, which he
foresaw. The matters laid to his charge were, that he had made himself an
eunuch, which indeed was afterwards declared by the church an irregularity,
rendering a man incapable of holy orders; that he had been ordained without the
consent of his own bishop; and that he taught several errors in doctrine,
chiefly that the devil will at last be freed from his torments and saved.
Origen in a letter to his friends at Alexandria, (apud S. Hieron. l. 2, contra
Rufin. p. 413,) condemns this error, and avers, that it had been foisted into
his writings by heretics, willing to authorize their erroneous tenets under his
great name. Nevertheless, the Origenist heretics, who maintained that error,
boasted of his authority, and he certainly fell into several errors in his
books, On Principles, and for some time denied the eternity of the torments of
the damned, as is clear from this work still extant. Both his writings and his
name were condemned in the fifth general council. Who does not tremble for
himself, whilst he trembles for an Origen? Halloix, Tillemont, and Ceillier
strain matters too far in his vindication. He seems indeed to have speedily
risen from his errors. For the most learned and holy prelates of Palestine, as
those above mentioned, always continued to entertain him in their communion,
and treat him with honour. St. Gregory Thaumaturgus spoke his panegyric, in
which he exceedingly extols his learning and virtues. St. Pamphilus composed
his apology, in which he produces his letter, proving that his works had been
corrupted by heretics. We should be willing even to forget that he ever sinned,
if deference to truth and the greatest authority could allow it. However, some
ancients have spoken against him with the greater bitterness, to destroy an
authority of which the Origenist heretics availed themselves: though their
principal error, by which they denied the eternity of the torments of hell,
seems only derived from a mistake of his words, that if the devil could repent
he would still be saved, as Origen himself assures us, in words quoted by St.
Pamphilus, and also by St. Jerom, during the time that his zeal against the
Origenists had made him the most violent enemy to his memory. When Beryllus,
bishop of Bostra, in Arabia, fell into dangerous errors relating to the
divinity of Christ, Origen was despatched to him from Cæsarea, in 238; and such
was the success of his conference, as to convert Beryllus and crush his heresy
in its birth; who, as became a true convert, in several letters, gave thanks to
Origen for his kind pains in his conviction. He performed the functions of
catechist and preacher at Cæsarea, making sometimes remote excursions. In the
persecution of Maximinus he retired into Cappadocia; in that of Decius to Tyre;
where, nevertheless, he was apprehended, and suffered cruel tortures and a long
imprisonment, from which the death of Decius released him: for the slander of
his having yielded under his torments, though credited by St. Epiphanius, and
amongst the moderns by Petavius, (Animadv. in Epiph. hær. 64, et lib. de
Ponder. c. 18,) is confuted by Baronius, Halloix, (Orig. defens. l. 4, du. 3,
et Not. p. 35,) Raynaudus, (Hopop. sect. 2,) Henry Valois, (in Eus. Hist. l. 6.
c. 39,) Huet, (Origeniana, l. 1, c. 4,) Charles Vincent le Rue, (ib. p. 102,)
&c. Origen died soon after at Tyre, and most probably of his torments, in
253, being sixty-nine years old. His tomb, with an epitaph on a marble pillar,
near the high altar in the cathedral of Tyre, is mentioned by many ancient
writers down to the year 1283; but is not now known, the city of Tyre itself
being destroyed. See Dom. Ch. Vincent le Rue, not. in Huetij Origeniana, t. 4.
parte 2. p. 103.
Origen’s style is diffusive and prolix, and the arbitrary allegorical manner of
interpreting the holy scriptures he certainly carried to an excess: but an
astonishing erudition and other great qualities will ever support his
reputation against the heavy censures of his enemies. They who call Origen a babbler
and trifler, betray the weakness of their own judgment, or the violent bias of
prepossession. As to his principal works, the Hexapla, which he published in
the year 231, contained the holy scriptures in Hebrew: the same in Greek
letters: the Greek versions of Aquila, Symmachus, the Seventy, and Theodotion,
in six columns corresponding to each other. In his Octapla he added two other
Greek versions, viz. a fifth, found at Jericho, and a sixth at Nicopolis in
Epirus. His Tetrahla consisted only of the versions of Aquila, Symmachus, the
Seventy, and Theodotion. From various sources and manuscripts, Montfaucon
gathered together what fragments of this work could be met with, which he
printed in two volumes, folio, at Paris, in 1713. So many expositions, additions
from the other Greek versions, and other alterations, had crept into the common
copies of the Seventy, with infinite variety amongst themselves, that this
performance of Origen was of great advantage. To every word in the margin which
was an explication or an addition borrowed from any of the other three Greek
versions allowed by the Jews, he prefixed an asterisk, or star *. To all such
words as were not found in the Hebrew as then extant, he prefixed an obelus, or
dagger †. The signification of two other marks which he made use of, is not
very well known: the one called lemniscus, a kind of double obelus ††; the
other hypolemniscus †. The asterisk is much the most frequent mark, and an
omission of it before any word by the carelessness of a copyist, was sufficient
to introduce a foreign word into the text. Montfaucon received great succours
in restoring the Greek text of the Seventy, in the Hexapla, from an imperfect
manuscript of the Pentateuch of this edition, of the seventh century, in the
king’s library at Paris; and from the Chigi manuscript of the prophets,
belonging to the library of that prince at Rome; and another of the same in the
hands of the Jesuits at Clermont college, at Paris, of the seventh or eighth
centuries; both very fair and entire: and in both is contained the old version
of Daniel, called of the Seventy, never printed; that which is published in our
Greek bibles being universally allowed to be the version of Theodotion. It is a
great pity that the learned Montfaucon wrote often too hastily some words of
this MS. of the Jesuits, which he probably took upon trust, being quite
mistaken and wrong copied throughout his citations, doubtless by the fault of
his copier. The original work of Origen, which was deposited by him with his
other writings in the library of Cæsarea, is supposed to have perished when
that city was taken and destroyed (not by Chosroes, the Persian, who only
plundered Jerusalem and Cæsarea in Cappadocia, not this city of Palestine, as
appears from Theophanes, Chron. p. 199, but) by the Saracens in 653, after a
siege of seven years. See Hoffman’s Lexicon. Kennicot, Diss. 2, p. 392, and
Montfaucon, Prælim. in Hexapla, p. 76.
As to his comments on the scriptures, those extant in Greek are published with
dissertations by Huet. The same with additions, and those only extant in the
Latin translation, by Dom. Charles de la Rue, the Benedictin Maurist monk, with
his other works. This learned editor has given us, with notes, (Op. Origenis,
t. 1. p. 43, Parisiis, 1733,) his four books [Greek], or On Principles, in the
Latin translation of Rufinus, in which only it is extant. Though Rufinus
declares he had corrected the errors of this work, because it had been
corrupted by heretics, we still discover in it dangerous principles concerning
the pre-existence of souls, the plurality of worlds, the nature of the stars,
as if endued with understanding and souls, the salvation of the devils, &c.
This work raised clamours against the author, who in it attempted to blend the
principles of many philosophic sects with those of religion: though they are
only problematically asserted, or with a perhaps; and Origen, in the preface to
this very work, clearly teaches, that nothing is to be admitted as a religious
doctrine or point of faith which squares not with the tradition of the church,
and with what was preached by the apostles and preserved entire in the doctrine
of the church. His treatise On Prayer, to Ambrose, proves its necessity, and
expounds the Lord’s Prayer. We have a good edition of this work given by
William Reading, at London, in 1728; and a later still improved, by De la Rue,
(t. 1, p. 195.) His golden book, On Martyrdom, was an exhortation to certain
confessors in prison for the faith at Cæsarea in Palestine. De la Rue has
enriched his edition with judicious notes. But the most valuable and finished
work of Origen is his Apology for the Christian Religion, written in 249, in
the reign of the emperor Philip, in eight books, against Celsus, an Epicurean
philosopher, to whom the impious Lucian dedicated his Pseudomantis. De la Rue
has, by ample notes, rendered it more useful, though those of the learned
Spencer, in the Cambridge edition, in 1658, had before justly received the
thanks of all lovers of ecclesiastical antiquity. This Celsus was an Epicurean
philosopher, who lived in the reign of Adrian, and is to be distinguished from
one of the same name and sect who lived in Nero’s time. He was the most
formidable adversary that ever attacked in writing the Christian religion. For
Porphyrius, the Tyrian philosopher, in his voluminous invective, about the year
270, endeavoured to invalidate the truth of the history of the Old and New
Testament, by pretended contradictions, but by a sophistry equally weak and
extravagant, as appears from Eusebius, (de Præp. Evang. l. 1, 5, 10.) St.
Jerom, (Præf. Comm. in Gal,) &c. Hierocles, a judge and cruel persecutor of
the Christians, first at Nicomedia, afterwards at Alexandria, in the reign of
Dioclesian, wrote a bitter book against the Christians, entitled Philalethes,
in which he only repeated the slanders of Celsus and Porphyrius, and drew a
supposed parallel between the miracles of Christ and the pretended miracles of
Apollonius Tyanæus, borrowed from the fabulous life of that famous impostor and
magician, written by Philostratus: of which absurd blasphemy Eusebius of
Cæsarea published an ample confutation. Julian the Apostate, after trying in
vain every other expedient to extirpate Christianity, set himself to write
against that divine religion. He had the advantage of the most perfect
knowledge of its doctrine, and of whatever the philosophers and Jewish or Pagan
historians could furnish against it: yet was not able to start any objection
deserving a serious regard, or that could be a solid apology for his apostacy.
St. Gregory Nazianzen and St. Cyril of Alexandria answered his cavils. From the
latter it appears, that he laid his main stress upon the want of antiquity in
the Christian religion; as if Moses, who foretold Christ throughout the whole
dispensation of the Old Law, was not far more ancient than all the
philosophers, not to mention Abraham, &c. Secondly, he insisted on the
authority of Pagan philosophers. Thirdly, he argues ludicrously on several
passages of the Mosaic history, not from reason, but with a low ridicule
unbecoming so serious a subject. Lastly, he scornfully insults the person and
sufferings of Christ. It is happy for religion that the objections of Julian
have been transmitted down to our times: otherwise some might have imagined
that this learned emperor had sufficient reasons for his apostacy. But nothing
more visibly betrays the weakness of infidelity, nor more strengthens the cause
of truth.
Of all these writers, Celsus is the most crafty and subtle. He
wrote with the most refined fallacy that sophistry could invent, with an air of
positiveness to impose on the vulgar, and all the advantages that wit and fine
raillery could give; he was also master of all the difficulties that an
extensive knowledge, seconded by artifice and management, could object. On the
other side, Origen, with all the force and solidity of right reason, reduces
every argument to its true principles, follows his adversary step by step,
convicts him of falsehood in point of fact, sets in the true light things which
his adversary disguised or smothered, and establishes the truth of the
Christian doctrine by the evidence of facts and of its history. Eusebius (l. ad
Hieroclem) and St. Jerom (ep. adv. Magn.) say, that all objections that ever
were, or can be made to Christianity, will find an answer in this work. Celsus
objects the privacy of the assemblies of the Christians: that their precepts of
morality were not new. And though he does not deny that Christ wrought
miracles, yet he ascribes them to magic. Origen, answering this last, says that
miracles were still wrought in his time by the disciples of Christ, and that he
had been himself an eye-witness of several. (l. 1, pp. 5, 7, 37.) Origen
answers next his objections to the ancient prophecies, to the meanness of the
disciples of Christ, to the descent of God on earth in Christ, and to various
passages of the scriptures. (l. 2, 3, 4.) He refutes the principle of Celsus,
big with fatal consequences, that the Jews and other people ought to follow the
customs and religion of their own country. (l. 5, p. 248.) He compares the
prophets with the heathen philosophers, and shows that Christ had borrowed no
points of his doctrine from Plato, as his adversary pretended. (l. 5.) He
proves the heathenish oracles to proceed from the devil, because their
priestesses uttered them in fits of phrensy, and possessed by evil spirits, not
knowing what they said; and he displays the truth of the prophets, and the
sanctity of the Christian morals. (l. 7.) Lastly, he says, that Christians
adore both God, the Father of the Truth, and the Son, who is the Truth; and
takes notice of the assiduity of prayer, the humility, contempt of the world,
and other virtues practised by the Christians. (l. 8.)
Certain modern free-thinkers affect to throw out surmises in their writings,
that if these works of Celsus, Porphyrius, and Julian had come down to us, they
doubt not but they could have made their cause good. But nothing could betray
more their want of judgment or sincerity. A great part of Julian’s three books
upon this subject, St. Cyril has preserved us in his own words, omitting only
some unmeaning blasphemies, as he assures us: and this specimen suffices to
satisfy all modern enemies of Christianity, that this author only discovers his
distress for the want of anything which might so much as wear the appearance of
a solid objection. Porphyrius was still more senseless and extravagant in his
silly enthusiasm. As for Celsus, Origen has mentioned everything material that
he objected. By all which it is evident, that none of the early enemies of
Christianity were able to charge the main of the gospel-history with any
suspicion of imposture in any of its circumstances—the only point our modern
infidels want to make out from the writings of their predecessors, who lived
contemporary with these facts, and wanted neither power, nor abilities, nor
inclination to detect a fraud in them; yet this they were never able to do in
any one circumstance or miracle of Christ’s life. And we cannot imagine they were
wanting to practise every art upon many of the eye-witnesses, especially upon
apostate Christians among the first disciples, who could not but be all
conscious of a conspiracy in a cheat, had there been any. But the public
evidence of these facts, and sincere humility and virtue of the witnesses,
their multitude, unanimity, and constancy, in the testimony they gave to the
miracles and other events, removed all possibility of doubt. We must add, that
this their testimony they maintained against all human motives and passions,
and joyfully sealed the same with their death, and under every sort of torment
and suffering. I cannot dismiss this subject without mentioning two other
reflections. First, that it is an undoubted matter of fact, that of all the adversaries
that attacked Christianity at the beginning, not one ever had the assurance to
return to the charge after the first defeat; and no Pagan attempted to answer
Origen or any other of our apologists. When the spirit of controversy, which is
always so keen, subtle, and fertile, is driven to this extremity, we need not
ask whether the answers that forced them were solid. Secondly, all these
adversaries confessed the truth of the miracles wrought by Christ and his
apostles, and could make no other reply than by ascribing them to magic; which
is a clear proof of the undoubted evidence of the facts. See the testimonies of
Celsus, (in Origen, l. 1 and 2,) of the Jews, (in Tertullian contra Judæ. c. 9,
p. 48,) of Julian the Apostate, (in St. Cyril, l. 6, p. 191, t. 6, part 2,) of
Porphyrius, as St. Jerom testifies, (l. contr. Vigilant.) &c. As to the
testimony of Origen concerning miracles wrought in his time, Mr. Jortin writes
as follows, (t. 2, p. 249:) “He speaks of miracles which were performed even then,
as healing the sick, and casting out devils by the invocation of Jesus, and he
mentions some who were converted to Christianity by visions and revelations. He
speaks of some of these things as one who was well-informed, and he appeals to
God that what he says is true. Thus much may be affirmed that he was utterly
incapable of affirming a fact which he knew or suspected to be false.” It is
probable that among other conversions effected by visions, he had in his
thoughts that of Basilides by a vision of St. Potamiœna, who was a disciple of
Origen. (See her life.) That Origen was an advocate for the divinity or
consubstantiality of the Son, and that his doctrine on the article of the
Trinity was orthodox, is excellently shown against Petavius and Huet, by Marand,
De Divinitate Christi, l. 4, c. 14, 15, 16. Bull, Defensio fidei Nicenæ, c. 9.
Witasse, Tournely, and at length by Dom. Charles Vincent de la Rue, Notis
in Huetii Origeniana, l. 2, c. 2, p. 107, ad p. 139, t. 4, parte 2. This
latter strenuously clears his doctrine of the charge of Pelagianism, ib. l. 2,
qu. 7, p. 192. Huet, though carried away by the authority of his friend, F.
Petau, the most declared adversary of Origen, condemns him with too great
severity, yet demonstrates that he never maintained his errors with obstinacy,
which is required to the guilt of heresy. (Origeniana, l. 2, c. 3, n. 19, and
c. 4.) Nevertheless, that he for some time denied the eternity of the torments
of hell, is clear both from the torrent of the fathers and councils, and from
his genuine writings, such as were deposited by him in the library of Cæsarea.
(See Huet, Origen, l. 2, c. 11.) Nor does Dom. Charles Vincent de la Rue offer
to vindicate him from the charge of having maintained this and certain other
errors relating to the human soul, angels, &c. The Benedictin complete
edition of Origen’s works was undertaken by Dom. Charles de la Rue, who
published two volumes, and prepared the third. His nephew, Charles Vincent de
la Rue, took care to have this printed in 1749, and added himself, in 1759, the
fourth or last volume, with curious judicious critical notes on several parts
of Huet’s Origeniana; wherein he clears his author of many things laid to his
charge by Huet, and especially by that learned prelate’s friend, F. Petau; yet
shows, against Halloix, Tillemont, and Ceillier, that he certainly fell into
several dangerous errors against the eternity of hell torments, &c., though
never with obstinacy; and that he undoubtedly died in the bosom of the Catholic
Church. [back]
Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73). Volume IV: April. The Lives
of the Saints. 1866.
SOURCE : http://www.bartleby.com/210/4/227.html
April 22nd - Saint Leonides, Martyr
(d. 202)
The Emperor Severus, in the year 202, the tenth of his reign, raised a bloody
persecution which filled the entire empire with martyrs, but especially Egypt.
The most illustrious of those who by their triumphs ennobled and edified the
city of Alexandria was Leonides, father of the great Origen. He was a Christian
philosopher and excellently versed both in the profane and sacred sciences.
He had seven sons; the eldest was Origen, whom he brought up with very great
care, returning thanks to God for having blessed him with a son of such an
excellent disposition for learning, and so remarkable a piety. After his son
was baptized, he would come to his bedside while he was asleep and, bending
over the child, would kiss his breast respectfully, as the temple of the Holy
Spirit.
When the persecution reached Alexandria in 202, under Laetus, governor of
Egypt, Leonides was cast into prison. Origen, who was then only seventeen years
of age, burned with a fervent desire for martyrdom, and sought every
opportunity of facing it. His ardor redoubled at the sight of his father's
chains, and his mother was forced to lock up all his clothes to oblige him to
stay at home.
She conjured him not to forsake her; thus, unable to do more, he wrote a letter
to his father in very moving terms, strongly exhorting him to look at the crown
that was offered him with courage and joy. He added this exhortation:
"Take heed that for our sakes you do not change your mind!" Leonides
was indeed beheaded for the faith in 202.
Sources: Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on
Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea
(Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894); Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des
Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 4.
SOURCE : http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Alt/alt.religion.christian.roman-catholic/2008-04/msg00238.html
San Leonida Martire,
padre di Origene
Etimologia: Leonida =
simile al leone, forte, dal greco
Emblema: Palma
Martirologio Romano: Ad
Alessandria d’Egitto, commemorazione di san Leonida, martire, che sotto
l’imperatore Settimio Severo fu trafitto con la spada per la fede in Cristo,
lasciando Origene, suo figlio, ancora bambino.
L'editto di Settimio Severo, come dice Clemente Alessandrino, riempí l'Egitto di martiri: tra questi Eusebio nomina Leonida che ebbe il capo troncato nel 204, lasciando orfani sette figli, il maggiore dei quali, appunto Origene, aveva appena diciassette anni.
Nel narrare la vita di quest'ultimo poi, il medesimo storico si sofferma lungamente a descrivere le cure con le quali Leonida educò il figlio allo studio della S. Scrittura prima che a quello delle lettere, come ringraziasse Iddio di aver avuto un figlio cosí precocemente entusiasta di quegli studi, come riconoscesse la mano di Dio nel fanciullo, e di notte, quando questi dormiva, si soffermasse a baciargli il petto quasi fosse un sacrario dello Spirito Santo. Lo stesso Eusebio ci ha conservato un frammento della lettera che il figlio diciassettenne gli inviò in prigione per esortarlo al martirio.
Nella letteratura agiografica greca, il nome di Leonida, padre di Origene, appare in mezzo ad un gruppo di dieci martiri celebrati il 5 giugno: ma le cose che si raccontano di essi sono frutto piú di immaginazione che di indagine storica. Chi forgiò quelle tradizioni non immaginò che quel Leonida fosse appunto il padre di Origene di cui parlava già Eusebio. Il Martirologio Romano, invece, celebra Leonida al 22 aprile, giacché il Baronio credette di ravvisare il nome del nostro nel Geronimiano a questa data, dove invece è celebrato l'omonimo martire di Corinto.
Autore: Giovanni Lucchesi