The fourth-century bishop Eusebius of Emesa has drawn increased scholarly attention in recent years. Many have focused on his theology and how his nuanced position defies easy classification within the traditional framework of the ‘Arian Controversy’.Footnote 1 Although Eusebius was described as a ‘standard bearer of Arianism’ by St Jerome, the bishop's extant sermons seem to offer little to modern historians or theologians that would justify such a title.Footnote 2 Indeed, as several studies have illustrated, Eusebius kept an apparent distance from the stereotypical sides often associated with this Christological controversy.Footnote 3 Other scholars assess his known writings in the light of subsequent developments and are keen to understand his role in the later development of the so-called Antiochene tradition.Footnote 4 Such studies have helped to illuminate this obscure, yet important, figure. Recent evidence further suggests another aspect to the bishop's life and writings. The seemingly unrelated endeavours of Richard Burgess to reconstruct a lost fourth-century chronicle may identify a previously unknown work of this prelate and reveal more fully the role of Eusebius in his own time and his legacy for historians.
The brief surviving biographical material relating to Eusebius of Emesa can be found chiefly in the fifth-century Ecclesiastical histories of Socrates and Sozomen, both of whom drew upon an encomium written by Eusebius' fellow-bishop, George of Laodicea.Footnote 5 Eusebius came from a noble family in Edessa and received his religious education from Eusebius of Caesarea. His growing reputation for sanctity included the performance of miraculous works, and he eventually received the episcopal rank in 341. Eusebius of Nicomedia, who performed the consecration, entreated the new bishop to accept the see of Alexandria, but he declined, thinking correctly that the people would resent any bishop other than Athanasius. Ultimately, the new prelate received as his charge the Syrian city of Emesa (modern Homs). His efforts and even residence in his see, however, came to an end because of the people's suspicions regarding his study of the stars and alleged Sabellianism.Footnote 6 He retreated to Antioch, where he enjoyed the favour of Constantius ii and participated in at least one of the emperor's military campaigns against the Persians. Eusebius died and was buried in the environs of Antioch in the 350s.Footnote 7 To judge from a concise biographical note in Jerome's De viris illustribus, he wrote prolifically – including commentaries on various books of sacred Scripture – and his preaching was admired and imitated by many.Footnote 8
Unfortunately, little of this corpus remains extant, but what has survived gives an image of a man who desired to remain aloof from the contemporary turmoil within the Christian Church.Footnote 9 Eusebius' surviving sermons provide a wealth of instances in which the bishop was careful to distinguish himself from the various sides of the ‘Arian’ controversy. Rather than explicitly denouncing Nicaea, he called for unity among the different Christian parties.Footnote 10
Several examples will suffice to give a general picture of Eusebius as one who avoided party polemics and proffered a potential solution to the divisions.Footnote 11 Once, while preaching, he conveyed succinctly his programme for a purely scriptural articulation of Christology – a position at variance with both Athanasius' stance and the predominant homoeousian position.Footnote 12 Eusebius none the less carefully refrained from openly blaming specific individuals even when he addressed the controversy: in one sermon he demonstrated a generally negative attitude towards all the curious who exceeded the bounds of sacred Scripture when discussing the relationship between the Father and the Son, implicitly criticising the majority of those involved in the debate.Footnote 13 Eusebius also refused to use a clear opportunity in his sermon Adversus Sabellium – the Sabellian heresy then being commonly attributed to proponents of Nicaea – to attack specifically the adherents of that council. Instead, he censured all who claimed to know more than Scripture contains, a critique that included many who condemned Athanasius and his theological sympathisers.Footnote 14
Eusebius' sermon De filio, in particular, presents many moments in which he explicitly rejected the opportunity, or even necessity, of debate. Such a habit of contention, he implied, turned the Church of God into a circus.Footnote 15 Although the charity of God was supposed to be our model, he complained, lawsuits and fights had taken root.Footnote 16 The bishop then carefully noted the limits of human understanding and distinguished the proper way to express disagreements, all the while emphasising that he would willingly accept fraternal correction in regard to his own theology.Footnote 17 This context explains Eusebius' description of himself in another public forum as one who emphatically abstained from contention. The bishop's ‘Et non contendo!’ manifested his refusal to engage in personal, party-driven polemics even when facing the controversial theological questions of his day.Footnote 18
It could be argued that these reflections imply that Eusebius of Emesa embraced the homoean theology associated with Acacius of Caesarea. Acacius' position, ultimately championed by Constantius shortly before his death in early 361, advocated the restriction of theological discussion solely to Scriptural language – a move that avoided the troublesome ‘essence’ terminology – as the way to resolve the conflict. Since this is what Eusebius himself advocated in his sermons, a link between Acacius (or some other homoean figure) and Eusebius might appear as a possible touchstone for the latter's Scripture-based Christology. Yet a facile association fails to consider the nuances of Eusebius' position, which on some points stands closer to Athanasius than to any non-Nicene prelate.Footnote 19 Moreover, the homoean position gained predominance only in the years after Eusebius' death. As Robert Winn has demonstrated, Eusebius enjoyed friendly relations with key figures of the homoeousian persuasion throughout his life.Footnote 20 That George of Laodicea, a prominent homoeousian and enemy of the homoean Acacius, composed this bishop's encomium further implies that Eusebius was not involved with the nascent homoean party but remained in positive relations with the homoeousian camp, despite his apparent distance on a theological level.Footnote 21
This difference not withstanding, Eusebius' respected status among the members of the episcopate throughout his life is obvious. His studies under the learned and famous Eusebius of Caesarea, his being the preferred candidate for the see of Alexandria, and his reputation for miracles no doubt distinguished him. His activity, furthermore, extended beyond spiritual concerns, for his position of respect in the church hierarchy was complemented by his position close to the emperor. As is known from the information preserved by the ecclesiastical historians, Eusebius enjoyed access to the imperial court, presumably at least during the military endeavours that he accompanied. The bishop's writings could therefore be a valuable source for historians in assessing the developing relationship between Empire and Church. Unfortunately, his precise attitude towards Constantius and the imperial world is, at first glance, impossible to ascertain. The surviving sermons never touch directly upon political concerns or voice a particular posture regarding the Christian emperors.
Until now these particular insights of the bishop had been lost, but the meticulous efforts of Richard Burgess to uncover a lost chronicle from this period allow a reassessment of the matter. Burgess's endeavours advance significantly the work of Joseph Bidez, an early twentieth-century historian who attempted to identify and reassemble a series of fragments from a lost fourth-century ‘Arian’ history used by the fifth-century heterousian historian Philostorgius and other writers.Footnote 22 The idea that there was an unknown non-Nicene historian from this period predated Bidez, but his particular contribution was the suggestion that the work could be partially reconstructed from multiple sources that betrayed a common, seemingly ‘Arian’ origin.Footnote 23 His reconstructed narrative draws from eight different works spanning several centuries of historiography.Footnote 24 Similar or identical descriptions or other linguistic clues allowed Bidez to explore the possible connections among them. Due to the text's fragmentary nature, however, it is difficult to state conclusively whether Bidez's particular reconstruction, which begins during the reign of Constantine and ends with the death of Valens in 378, is an accurate reflection of the original chronicle.
Richard Burgess's Studies in Eusebian and post-Eusebian chronology reveals the weaknesses in Bidez's presuppositions and argues convincingly that some of these fragments actually belong to a hitherto unknown Antiochene continuation of the Chronicle of Eusebius of Caesarea.Footnote 25 Burgess maintains, contrary to Bidez, that many of the passages pertaining to the years prior to 350 have their source in this Antiochene document. One of the many achievements of Burgess's study is the reconstruction of the Antiochene chronicle, which he dubs the Continuatio Antiochiensis Eusebii. His careful linguistic analysis is persuasive. For example, he notices a striking difference among the excerpts collected by Bidez.Footnote 26 Until 350 it seems that the unknown author was scrupulous in providing a chronological framework; after that year the dating becomes less precise and reflects more a narrative style than the style of a chronicle.Footnote 27 In a similar fashion, explicitly non-Nicene attitudes surface predominantly after the year 350.Footnote 28 Burgess argues that these later fragments reflect a second, ‘Arian’ narrative source.Footnote 29 He also asserts that the Continuatio did not share the non-Nicene beliefs apparent in the remainder of Bidez's fragments.Footnote 30 This claim, coupled with his observations regarding the chronicle's frequent emphasis on Antioch and detailed knowledge of the emperor Constantius and secular affairs, helps to shape his conclusion that the chronicle came from the hand of a pro-Nicene layman living in Syria.Footnote 31 Burgess further notes that the source's ‘ordinary and sometimes clumsy Greek’ suggests that the author had received some education but had not mastered the highest levels of rhetoric, a detail that he believes fits well with his depiction of a layman as the author.Footnote 32 The following analysis of the evidence suggests otherwise. By revisiting in detail Burgess's assumptions in this regard, it is possible to exploit his findings further and posit a link between this chronicle and Eusebius of Emesa.
The case for Burgess's pro-Nicene layman relies in part upon the epithet ‘the chaste’ (ὅ ἁγνός) that the chronicle attaches to Leontius, an ‘Arian’ bishop of Antioch. Leontius had castrated himself to dispel rumours of an illicit relationship with a consecrated virgin.Footnote 33 Athanasius, in a polemic, had mentioned this mutilation to humiliate his theological foe; indeed, Burgess highlights the saint's derisive term ‘eunuch’ (ὁ ἀπόκοπος) and seeks to associate it with the word ‘chaste’ used in the Antiochene continuation.Footnote 34 This argument appears forced when Burgess insinuates that ‘chaste’ could be a ‘sarcastic swipe’ at Leontius.Footnote 35 He admits that the word ‘gives no real indication’ of the author's theology but then argues that the term ‘does suggest that he [the author] did not approve of Leontius’.Footnote 36 This suggestion has no clear foundation in the source itself. The idea that the epithet ‘the chaste’ can be freely read as showing disfavour seems to contradict the value that Christians placed upon sexual purity. A more text-based interpretation suggests that the phrase ‘Leontius the chaste’ was praise, for there is no intrinsic reason to think otherwise.
Nor should one be quick to dismiss the admiration for the same Leontius as an individual who preserved the ‘true faith’ (τῆς ἀληθοῦς πίστεως).Footnote 37 Burgess avoids this obvious evidence against his theory by minimising the importance of such high acclaim for a visibly non-Nicene figure. However, such words as ‘true faith’ have meaning, especially in a world torn asunder by religious battles over correct terminology. As the theological crisis of the fourth century demonstrates, words – and even single letters – mattered to contemporaries.
Burgess's assumptions regarding Constantine, who receives favourable treatment at the hands of the continuation's author, should also be subject to reconsideration. He writes: ‘The positive epithets applied to Constantine strongly suggest that the author was not an Arian, though his acceptance of Gregory of Alexandria and the Arian successors of Eustathius of Antioch shows that he was no radical homoousian either.’Footnote 38 It is true that at least one Christian historian – the heterousian Philostorgius – did not embrace the memory of Constantine without criticism. In Philostorgius' fifth-century history of the Church the reader finds a negative view of the emperor who executed members of the imperial family.Footnote 39 Burgess evidently assumes that many who were against Nicene theology, presumably including those who enjoyed the favour of Constantine's son Constantius, shared Philostorgius' hostility. This does not necessarily follow. Burgess provides no further evidence, nor does he discuss the praise for Constantine by Eusebius of Caesarea, whose tendencies towards Arius' position are well known. Burgess's observation, meanwhile, that the fragments never use an epithet for Constantius and mention Constantine frequently is interesting but hardly suggestive of a theological position.Footnote 40
He also stresses the lack of polemics within the chronicle as evidence in favour of a pro-Nicene author. Burgess remarks that the irenic tone of the work suggests a Nicene author, but one who had not adopted an extreme position regarding the theological struggles.Footnote 41 By the year 350 the homoousian position was reeling from severe setbacks. Council after council had gone against its adherents, the high-profile Athanasius had already suffered exile and would again, and the emperor Constantius, who often resided in Antioch during this period, had embraced a contrary theology. This situation would seem to imply an inauspicious moment at which to write a pro-Nicene chronicle. Hans Brennecke's suggestion that pro-Nicene authors were too beleaguered during this period to compose historical works seems plausible; their efforts would more likely have been directed towards a defence of their theology.Footnote 42 It is not impossible that a pro-Nicene composed the chronicle described by Burgess, but these observations show it to be less likely. Indeed, given Constantius' presence in Antioch, the neutral tone of the Continuatio is just as likely to imply confidence in a secure, and presumed triumphant, non-Nicene position.
Finally, Burgess declares that Jerome would never have incorporated a heretical author into his own chronicle given ‘Jerome's viciously anti-Arian stance’.Footnote 43 This observation raises the question of Jerome's relationship to Eusebius of Caesarea, but Burgess attempts to resolve this by stating that the latter's religious beliefs were not obvious in his Chronicle.Footnote 44 Yet this same ambiguity confronts the reader of the Antiochene continuation as reconstructed by Burgess. The fact that the modern historian must employ various inferences in order to discern a pro-Nicene theological position reveals that the issue is not as simple as proposed. Burgess's own arguments do not allow him to reject the possibility that Jerome unwittingly, as it were, used an ‘Arian’ source. In addition, there is reason to suspect that, contrary to Burgess's suggestion, Jerome did not hesitate to use heterodox writings when it suited his purposes.
The hermit's De viris illustribus can serve as an example in this matter. Jerome wrote this work in 392 as a response to a request that he compose a list of famous Christian authors using the genre of illustrious lives.Footnote 45 The introduction tells his audience not only that many Christians have contributed works worthy of note but also that he has worked diligently to list these various treasures within a single volume.Footnote 46 Jerome's design is to refute the pagan contention that Christianity lacked intellectual vigour, and it would seem the ideal forum for the irascible saint to include only those authors whom he admired or with whom he agreed. Yet this is far from the reality, for he includes authors such as Ambrose of Milan, with whom he had strong personal disagreements.Footnote 47 Perhaps more surprising is his addition of men whose beliefs he condemned as heretical. Included among the names that he selected are not only ambiguous figures like Eusebius of Caesarea but also notorious heresiarchs like the heterousian Eunomius.Footnote 48
This observation does not directly refute Burgess's claim that Jerome would never have used an ‘Arian source’. It is one thing to list authors and their works, another to incorporate their writings into one's own endeavours. None the less, it does demonstrate that he could curb his ‘viciously anti-Arian stance’ in order to suit his needs. Jerome apparently felt that the advantage of listing as many Christian intellectuals as possible outweighed the dangers of including men with whose theology he vehemently disagreed.Footnote 49 Since he acted in such a fashion in regard to his De viris, the possibility exists that Jerome did likewise when using the Continuatio Antiochiensis Eusebii, particularly because Jerome himself noted the haste with which he wrote his own chronicle.Footnote 50 Such speed implies the use of other sources, and Jerome – under a scholar's time constraints – may have accepted more readily a work that assisted his own, especially since sources for the period were presumably not very common. In addition, it follows that Jerome would most likely mention the author of this Antiochene continuation in his De viris, since he had used that source in the composition of his own chronicle just a few years earlier.Footnote 51 None the less, there is no author mentioned by Jerome who fits the hypothetical character indicated by Burgess: a pro-Nicene, lay Antiochene.Footnote 52
A figure whom Jerome does include is Eusebius of Emesa. Jerome's own testimony reveals that Eusebius composed works of an historical nature that were popular reading among some.Footnote 53 Furthermore, Burgess's arguments in favour of a pro-Nicene layman could easily describe the bishop of Emesa. The polemical neutrality, for example, shown by Eusebius of Emesa in his preaching coincides with the non-controversial nature noted by Burgess in the Antiochene chronicle. Eusebius' long sojourns in Antioch would have allowed him to write with familiarity about that city and its events. Furthermore, as an intimate of the emperor, his knowledge of the wider imperial world and military campaigns would naturally be a part of his vision. The praise of Leontius and acceptance of Gregory – who became bishop of Alexandria after Eusebius himself had refused that honour in 341 – also fit well with what is known of the bishop's life.
There are even personal touches that indicate a connection. Certain entries from the chronicle, for example, mention stars in some detail, an apparent interest of the author's that calls to mind the fascination with the heavens exhibited by Eusebius of Emesa.Footnote 54 Nor is this a minor detail: it was this very interest that led to Eusebius' departure from his see. Emesa was known for its solar cult, and, though he as its bishop explicitly condemned astrology in his sermons, Eusebius could not suppress his evident interest in the heavenly bodies and expressed it in his preaching.Footnote 55 This characteristic apparently aroused suspicion in the Christian community of Emesa and led to Eusebius' withdrawal to Antioch. It would not be surprising, therefore, if traces of this enthusiasm were reflected in the bishop's other writings, such as the Continuatio if it is his.
A specific entry may confirm a connection between Eusebius' stargazing and the content of the Continuatio. Fragment 22 of Burgess's reconstruction, derived from Theophanes AM 5826 (ad 333/4), mentions a star, ‘smoking greatly as from a furnace’ (καπνίζων σφόδρα ὡς ἀπὸ καμίνου), that appeared in Antioch from the third to the fifth hour.Footnote 56 Burgess identifies this star as a comet that appeared on 16 February 336.Footnote 57 Given the confused description and lack of details, traits not common among the entries that Burgess identifies, Burgess further asserts that the author of the Continuatio was not present in Antioch at that time.Footnote 58 Such a circumstance would explain the apparent lack of precise dating and even the mistake in the record, if Theophanes' AM 5826 is an accurate representation of the entry's chronology originally found in the Antiochene chronicle.
This theoretical absence coincides perfectly with the time when Eusebius of Emesa was away from Antioch. Eusebius left the city sometime after the deposition of Eustathius of Antioch only to be again present by the time of the Dedication Council of 341.Footnote 59 According to both Socrates and Sozomen, he left the city in order to avoid ordination there and instead embraced the study of philosophy in Alexandria.Footnote 60 Unfortunately, it is not known when Eustathius suffered the loss of his bishopric.Footnote 61 To make matters more complicated, there were two short-lived bishops who held the position for an undetermined time before it eventually came to Flacillus, the bishop during the time of the Dedication Council. Robert Winn, building on others, suggests that Eusebius may have been a candidate for the episcopacy of Antioch during one of these vacancies and fled in order to avoid that fate.Footnote 62 Though there is not enough information to know when during this period his exit took place, the Continuatio may offer a clue. The last detailed entry regarding Antioch and its environs involved a famine that broke out in 332.Footnote 63 From that point until 341 the chronicle, as reconstructed by Burgess, departed from its typical Antiochene focus and included only one entry – the confused record of the ‘smoking star’ – involving that city. This relative silence may be evidence for Eusebius of Emesa's absence, and it is possible that his residence elsewhere may have begun shortly after 332 and may have lasted until the Dedication Council itself.Footnote 64
At the very least, it is certain that Eusebius was absent from Antioch for some years and would not have had first-hand knowledge of the city during that time. Furthermore, it is important to consider the type of person who, without being an eye-witness, would seek to record an otherwise unimportant event. It is one thing to record a comet that made an impression on you personally; it is another to seek out second- or even third-hand information about the stars in order to include it in your chronicle.
Furthermore, other aspects of the Continuatio, such as the mention of certain, otherwise minor, figures, become more intelligible through this proposed authorship by Eusebius of Emesa. If Burgess's theory of a pro-Nicene layman as the author were correct, it would be difficult to account for the inclusion of two minor church clerics: indeed, both the existence and the success of Zenobius, who built the Martyrs' Shrine in Jerusalem, and Eustathius, a locally-renowned presbyter from Constantinople, come to us primarily through the Continuatio.Footnote 65 What is puzzling about these entries is the very specific knowledge that is evident in the unknown author's entry. The Martyrium was an integral part of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, a structure that was probably completed in 335 after some ten years of construction.Footnote 66 Zenobius' fame would undoubtedly have spread upon its completion, though the fact that his name was apparently recorded only in accounts derived from the lost history is striking. Even more intriguing is the author's apparent knowledge of Eustathius, who, like Zenobius, is not otherwise mentioned. Burgess suggests that these two disparate figures met the author of the history at some later time while they travelled through Antioch. This, he argues, would explain how it is that the unknown historian, whose knowledge of Constantinople and its affairs is otherwise limited, could know an obscure figure like Eustathius who achieved only local fame.Footnote 67 Burgess dates this hypothetical meeting to the year 336 or later, because he uses the ‘smoking star’ above to emphasise the hypothetical layman's absence from Antioch.Footnote 68 This would explain how the author came to interact with figures not associated with Antioch.
Yet Eusebius of Emesa's presence in Alexandria explains even more conveniently how it was that these two men found a place in the Continuatio. Eusebius may have journeyed to Jerusalem during his absence from Antioch in order to be present at the dedication of this building and thus interacted there with these clerics. By 341 Eusebius had associated with and gained the trust of Eusebius of Nicomedia, who by then was the bishop of Constantinople. It is possible that Eusebius of Emesa, during his travels outside Antioch, came to know locally prominent figures from Constantinople who may have accompanied Eusebius of Nicomedia during his journeys through the Levant and elsewhere during the 330s.
This hypothesis gains strength from the realisation that the last specific entry concerning events in Alexandria involved the elevation to the episcopate of Gregory in 339.Footnote 69 Burgess suggests that ‘whatever episcopal source’ the author had employed ended at this point.Footnote 70 While this may be so, it is even simpler to propose that Eusebius of Emesa returned to Antioch after Gregory became bishop of Antioch and perhaps in conjunction with the impending Dedication Council. This would neatly explain both the return of an Antiochene focus to the chronicle in 341 and the dearth of Alexandrian material beginning at that same time.
Even Burgess's observations regarding the language of the chronicle are germane. Burgess notes that the Greek employed is superior to the spoken Koine but not indicative of the highest education.Footnote 71 The bishop of Emesa apparently learned Greek as his second language after Syriac, and it is easy to understand how his style could fall short of the most polished Greek prose.Footnote 72 Nor is Burgess's description of the chronicle's language as ‘ordinary and sometimes clumsy’ incompatible with the fact that Eusebius was an orator.Footnote 73 The genre of a chronicle, with its abbreviated statements, is far from that of a didactic or persuasive sermon, and there have been many who can preach well but whose writings are not of the same quality. Moreover, Burgess himself notes that the author of the continuation emulated the writing style of Eusebius of Caesarea, the very man who taught the future bishop of Emesa.Footnote 74
There remains the suggestion that the secular material implies a lay author. It is true that much of the information in the reconstruction is focused on temporal affairs. Except for a passing reference to the expulsion of Arius by St Alexander of Alexandria and the summoning of the ecumenical council of Nicaea, the Continuatio's author avoids even indirect mention of the strife then dominating the Christian hierarchy.Footnote 75 Instead of records of councils and episcopal depositions, earthquakes seemingly alternate with military operations or details about foreign lands.
If the theory is correct that Eusebius of Emesa was the chronicle's author, the question remains why a bishop would write of such things while avoiding affairs presumably closer to his heart. First, it is important to remember that the fragments presented by Burgess are a reconstruction; perhaps data concerned more exclusively with the Church have since been lost and our reading is subsequently biased. One can easily imagine a scenario in which later pro-Nicene authors excised non-Nicene (or even insufficiently anti-‘Arian’) material from their accounts. Even if this is not so and the Continuatio's secular bent is indicative of the entire work, it does not follow that its author was not Eusebius, let alone not a cleric. It can be explained by recalling that the material preserved in the two ecclesiastical histories of Socrates and Sozomen demonstrates that Eusebius of Emesa had a keen mind for things not commonly associated with his duties as a bishop. His star-gazing and his presence on at least one military campaign reveal a man whose life encompassed many interests and whose experience involved far more than the world of ecclesiastical disputes.
It would not be surprising if the very ecclesiastical discord from which Eusebius distanced himself in his extant sermons had been treated in a similar fashion in his chronicle. The very nature of the chronicle's fact-driven genre may have led Eusebius to avoid the entire issue as much as he could. In Eusebius' preaching, he hesitated to name individuals involved in the contemporary theological strife even as he rebuked in general those who sought their understanding outside the bounds of Scripture. The distinction between a generic condemnation and individual censure might be more difficult to maintain in the context of specific facts concerning councils, disputes and depositions. The self-consciously irenic Eusebius might have decided to avoid a potentially polemically-charged situation by ignoring developments subsequent to the Council of Nicaea.
Rather than focusing on the turmoil and division in the Church, he offered instead a vision of solidarity within the empire by demonstrating its power and identity vis-à-vis its often-hostile neighbours. Eusebius' own participation in at least one campaign presumably influenced his decision to describe imperial affairs in such a fashion. In addition, the bishop preached on the duty of the community to hold together in order to support its members or to avoid threats posed by those who did not share their faith.Footnote 76 Perhaps the bishop's chronicle sought to encourage this unity by reminding his listeners and readers that the real threat came not so much from their fellow Christians as from those outside either their shared Christian faith or their borders. The Continuatio's frequent praise of Constantine as a promoter of Christianity and victor over his enemies hints, too, that in the author's mind religious peace and imperial stability were inextricably associated.Footnote 77
Nor should one rule out that a cleric wrote the Continuatio simply on the basis of the frequency of non-religious data. Eusebius' life and interests provide an obvious context in which such a choice of material would be natural. There is also the possibility that personal friendship or esteem for Constantius ii – perhaps consciously modelled on the prior relationship between Eusebius' teacher Eusebius of Caesarea and Constantine in the 330s – guided the composition of the chronicle. For example, despite the small size of the young diocese of Emesa, it apparently received special notice in church-building efforts by Constantius.Footnote 78 The fact that its church was singled out by the historian Sozomen for its particular beauty may reflect its imperial patron's personal regard for its bishop, a regard perhaps reflected and reciprocated in the content of the Continuatio.
Burgess's last great objection to non-Nicene authorship is Jerome's obvious disdain for heretics, which presumably would have inhibited his use of an ‘Arian’ chronicle. Jerome's own testimony highlights that many emulated and diligently read Eusebius of Emesa's works.Footnote 79 What the saint does not tell his audience, however, is whether he himself is among them: in his On Galatians Jerome depended, in part, on the commentary penned by Eusebius.Footnote 80 Other evidence demonstrates that the hermit was well versed in Eusebius' exegetical writings and methodology, though he often disagreed with the position taken by the bishop.Footnote 81
There is also the odd presence of Eusebius of Emesa within the Chronicle of Jerome. The very fact that Eusebius is included among the entries is difficult to explain. He was, after all, not a prominent polemicist and apparently shunned controversy, as when he refused the prestigious see of Alexandria; there appears no reason for Jerome to include him. A possible answer can be found in examples left by two other educated churchmen. Jerome dedicates the concluding section to himself in his De viris and Eusebius of Caesarea dominates the tenth book of his Ecclesiastical history with his own sermon. Consequently, it should be no surprise if Eusebius of Emesa mentioned his own efforts at the end of his chronicle.Footnote 82 Jerome, meanwhile, may have grudgingly included this reference because of the fact that Eusebius was too well-known for him to omit.Footnote 83 Jerome, who was known for being hesitant in giving proper attribution to others, may have simply decided to blacken Eusebius' character in this entry as a way of disassociating himself from one of his main sources.Footnote 84 In support of this notion is the evidence from De viris that the saint masked his dependence upon others and even claimed to have read sources to which he had no access.Footnote 85 One last detail that strengthens this argument is Jerome's own testimony that Eusebius composed works of an historical nature that became popular reading among some.Footnote 86
Thanks to Richard Burgess's research, the passages collected by Bidez can now be divided into at least two different sources. Burgess dismisses the idea that an ‘Arian’ wrote the Antiochene continuation because he assumes that Jerome would never use such a source. As has been shown, however, this claim is not conclusive. Other evidence indicates not only that the chronicle was by a non-Nicene hand but also that that hand belonged to Eusebius of Emesa.