- Nov 26, 2019
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It's rough to be Origen about now.
Origen did not actually voluntarily castrate himself, although he was later accused from it, rather, what happened was the Romans arrested him and demanded that he offer a sacrifice to an idol or they would burn off his manhood. Rather than offering a sacrifice to the idol, he threw himself on the fire.
This makes him a Holy Confessor who is worthy of veneration, and not a heretic. The Oriental Orthodox never anathematized him, he was anathematized by Emperor Justinian in an act that caused a schism, the Three Chapters Controversy, which people then blame on the Fifth Ecumenical Synod, but this issue is quite complex. Furthermore he was regarded as a saint by the Cappadocians, who are rather important in the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the thing he was anathematized for, belief in apokatastasis, was also believed in by St. Gregory of Nyssa, who was not anathematized.
The real problem was there was a faction of monks in the fourth century who were heretical who called themselves “Origenists” and in opposition to them, St Epiphanios of Cyprus, who I much admire, and others such as St. Jerome, attacked Origen and tried to blame Arianism on him, when really, Arius was most likely inspired by Paul of Samosata and Lucian of Antioch, who actually denied the deity of Christ. The best works of Origen, omitting some of his controversial speculations, were collected by the Cappadocians in a book called the Philocalia (with a “c”, the Philokalia with a “k” is something else, a collection of later Patristic material relating to prayer, hesychasm, monasticism and mystical theology assembled by St. Nicodemus the Hagiorite and his friend St. Macarius of Corinth on Mount Athos in the 18th century).
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