in approval of the condemnation of Origen at Alex
andria, summoned Rufinus from his retirement at
274
Aquileia, to justify himself, but the latter, protected by John of Jerusalem, evaded the mandate, and Anastasius left him to his own conscience.
The turn of events at Alexandria had contributed decisively to the hostilities against Rufinus. The Bishop Theophilus, in his Easter letter of 399, opposed the anthropomorphic views wide spread among the monks of Egypt, who at
e. Among tributed body and human form to God
the since man was made in the image of
Monastic God, and Theophilus affirmed in Ori
Orders. genistic fashion that God and God only
must be regarded as non material.
But the monks of the Scetic desert burried to Alex
andria and so intimidated Theophilus that he ac
quiesced in the condemnation of the works of Origen,
and took occasion to proceed against the Origen
istic monks of the Nitrian mountains named " the
four long brothers " who had roused his anger by
joining his opponent, the presbyter Isidore. A
synod at Alexandria. in 399 or 400 and a stormy
assembly in the Nitrian mountains had to condemn
Origen. The stern measures of Theophilus against
the monks and his declaration against Origen even
as far as Jerusalem won approval from Anastasius,
Jerome, and Epiphanius; and in Constantinople,
whither "the four long brothers," Isidore, and fifty
monks had fled, began the repulsive proceedings
that were to end with the banishment of Chrysostom
(q.v.). Nevertheless, the partizans of Origen did
not disappear. Conspicuous among them were Evag
rius, Ponticus, Palladius, and Socrates. Even The
odoret, who differed from him in hermeneutics, did
not rank him as a heretic. Origen likewise found
supporters in southern France, as in Vincent of
Lerins. On the other hand, Leo the Great approved
the condemnation of Origen, and Antipater of
Bostra wrote an answer to the apology for Origen
by Eusebius. After the middle of the fifth century
the Palestinian Abbot Euthimius expelled monks
from the vicinity of Caesarea for Origenistic errors
as to preexistence. In 514, however, four Origen
istic monks led by Nonnus were received in the
laura. They were driven out by the new abbot,
but readmitted by his successor. They kept their
views quiet until 531, when one of their number,
Leontius of Byzantium, expressed Origenistic the
ories at a colloquy with the Monophysites. After
the death of Sabas (q.v.), Nonnus (q.v.) is said to
An assault by the new party failed, as also further
efforts for readmission. Both parties now sought
support from without. Through Eusebius the. Origenistic faction succeeded in having their most bitter opponents removed from the old laura about 542. The latter, in their turn, not only induced Ephraim, patriarch of Antioch, to condemn Origenism, but secured also the support of the papal apocrisary Pelagius and Mennas, patriarch of Constantinople. Under their influence Justinian wrote his famous letter to Mennas, calling for a synod for the condemnation of Origen's doctrines and for re
275 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA OOrlriCnieticneControversies
~a
quiring every bishop and abbot to anathematize Origen and his heresies before consecration. Justinian's plans were frustrated, however, by Theodorus Ascidas, who had risen from the new laura to episcopal dignity, and who by a counterstroke not only induced the emperor not to proceed further in the matter, but also moved him to condemn the dogmas of the Antiochians, which conjured up the " Three Chapter Controversy " (q.v.). Ascidas also enforced the readmission of the Origenistic monks to the new laura, from which they had been expelled for refusing to obey the edict against Origen's teachings. After the death of Nonnus in 547, a schism arose among the Origenistic monks themselves, the one faction being branded by their opponents as Isochristoi (because of the perfect equality with Christ which was to be attained at the final restoration), while the other was called protoktistai and Tetraditm (on account of their views concerning the doctrine of the preexistence of the soul of Christ). The superior numbers of the ISOchristoi obliged their antagonists to become formally reconciled with the orthodox; and when (probably in 552) the Isochristoi succeeded in having one of themselves chosen patriarch of Jerusalem, the orthodox in Constantinople were able not only to remove him, but even to secure the condemnation of Origenism together with Antiochian theology at the fifth ecumenical council in 553. The neolaurites, who refused to recognize the council, were expelled from the new laum and replaced by orthodox monks. There remains no doubt of the condemnation of Origen by the said council.
The special points regarded as offensive in Origen's teaching are given in the " Apology" of Pamphilus and by Methodius, De resurrections and De
ereatis; Epiphanius, Hwr., lxiv.; Je3. Points rome, Contra Johannem Hierosody
of An mitanum (Eng. transl. in NPNF, 2 ser.,
tagonism. vi. 185 18fi); Orosius, Commonitorium,
and Augustine's reply; Theophilus (Mansi, Coneilia, iii. 979 980); the anonymous writer in Photius, Bibliotheca, 117; and Justinian, Ad Menndm; and the anathemas. In contrast with later writers, Pamphilus defended Origen's doctrine of the Trinity against subordinationism as well as against Sabellianism and Gnostic theories of emanation; but from the first Origen caused offense by his restriction of the resurrection of the body to its mere " form " in unison with his doctrines of the incarnation of spirits fallen from a pretemporal state, the preexistence of souls, the eternal creation of the world, his idealized restatement of the Biblical construction of the creation and paradise, and the restoration of all, even the devil. Though there was no lack of partizans of Origen's peculiar doctrines, yet those who were later antagonized as apologists of Origen acknowledged his views only to a limited extent. By one witness only of the sixth century are the doctrines of the preexistence and restoration attributed to these later Origenists. Even the Isochristoi, against whom the resolutions of the council of 553 were directed, dared to teach only a union of pretemporal spirits in the Logos and a future translation of deified souls in him, to be considered Origenists a term which came to
include any who held the doctrine of preexistence and restoration to be Adiaphora (q.v.). See CHRYs
OSTOM; EPIPHANIUs oFCONSTANTIA; and LEONTIUS
of BYZANTIUM. (N. BONWET9CH.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY: C. W. F. Waleh, Historic der %etzereien, vii. 382 780, Leipsie, 178285; B. Eberhard, Die Betheiligung des Epiphanius am Streite itber Oripines, Treves, 1859; A. Vincenzi, In sancti Gregori Nyawni et Oripenis acripta et doctrinam nova defensio, Rome, 18&5; F. W. Farrar, Mercy and Judgment, London, 1881; H. N. Oxenbam, What is the Truth with Regard to Eternal Punishment? London, 1876; F. Loofs, in TU, iii. 1 2 (1887); W. Rilga. mer, Leontius roan Byzanz, Warzburg, 1894; F. Diekamp, Die origenistischen Streitipkeiten im B. Jahrhundert, Munster, 1899; N. Bonwetseh, in Abhandlungen der Gcttinger Gesellachaft vii. 1 (1903); G. Grtitemacher, Hieronymus, ii. 1 94, Berlin, 1908; L. B. Radford, Three Teachers of Alexandria, Theognostus, Pierius and Peter, London, 1908; Hefele, ConciZiengeschichte, ii. 89 sqq., 788 sqq., 859 sqq., Eng. transl., ii. 430 aqq., iii. 217 sqq., 289 sqq., Fr. transl., ii. 1, pp. 137 sqq. (where excellent notes and references to literature are provided), ii. 2, pp. 1182 sqq., iii. 1, pp. 73 aqq. (wherever possible, the Fr. transl. should be used for the valuable notes and literature); Schaff, Christian Church, iii. 698 sqq.; DCB, iv. 142 156; HL, ix. 1073 78; and the literature under the articles named in the text:
ORIGINAL ANTIBURGHERS. See PRESBYTERIANS.
ORIGINAL FREE WILL BAPTISTS. See BAPTISTS, 11., 4 (d).
ORLEANS, FIRST SYNOD OF: A synod called by Clovis, king of the Franks, after his conquest of the West Gothic kingdom in Gaul. It met July 10, 511, and consisted of thirty two bishops, including five metropolitans, viz., those of Bordeaux, Bourges, Tours, Elusa, and Rouen. Its principal concern was with matters of Asylum (q.v.), relations of the bishops to monks, the discipline of monks and the lower clergy, sexual relations and marriage, and matters of church property, and these are discussed in thirty one canons. The inviolability of churches as places of asylum is reasserted, though not against the ravisher of a woman or against a fugitive slave; provision is made for the application of income from church property to certain definite uses, and protection is afforded against episcopal aggression upon one who has claims on church property; the rights of ordination are carefully guarded a slave should not be ordained without his master's consent, and care in other matters was enjoined; abbots and monks are not to go over the heads of the bishop to the prince; the rights of bishops to certain parts of offerings and income, together with obligations to certain duties, are established; remarriage of widows of priests or deacons is forbidden; the discipline of the monasteries is regulated; a forty days' fast (not fifty days) before Easter is prescribed, and the Rogation Days are to be observed; divination is forbidden. The evident purpose of the synod was to organize the work of the church of the region after the mode deemed more orthodox than under the Goths. Other synods were held at Orl6ans in 533 (21 canons), 538 (33 canons), 541 (38 canons), 549 (24 canons), and 1022.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Sources are: Mansi, Concilia, viii. 350 aqq.; Harduin, Concilia, ii. 1008 sqq.; J. 8irmondi, Concilia antiqua Gallia, i. 177 sqq. Paris, 1629; Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, ii. 661 sqq., Eng. tranal., iv. 87 sqq., and especially Fr. tranal., ii. 2, pp. 1005 15 (valuable for the
Orme THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 276
Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy
notes and literature which are given); MGH, Conoilia,
i (1893), 1 14. Consult: Bouquet, Recueil, iv. 103 104;
D. Lobineau, Les Saints de Bretagne, i. 131 134, Paris,
1838; E. Bimbenet, Les Coneiles d'OrUans eonaidiris
comme sources de droit eoutoumier, pp 743 744, fb. 1884;
'G. Kurth, Clovis, ii. 131 154, ib. 1901.
ORME, WILLILM: Scotch Congregationalist;
b. at Falkirk (25 m. n.w. by w. of Edinburgh) Feb.
3, 1787; d. at London (?) May 8, 1830. He entered
upon the study of theology in 1805; became Con
gregational minister of Perth, 1807; and, removing
to London, was appointed pastor at Camberwell
Green, and foreign secretary to the London Mis
sionary Society. He wrote An Historical Sketch of
the Translation and Circulation of the Scriptures
from the Earliest Period to the Present Time (Perth,
is that of Zangemeister, in CSEL, vol. v. (Vienna,
1882; smaller edition, Leipsic, 1889); it is also in
MPL, xxxi. 663, 1216. The Commonitorium is in
MPL, xlii. 665 670, and, ed. G. Schepss, in CSEL,
voI. xviii. (Vienna, 1889). G. KRf)GER.
BIHuo68AF8T: For editions and literature cf. Potthast,
Wepweiaer, pp. 882883. An Anglo Saxon translation of
the Hietoriarum was made by King Alfred, ed. with Eng.
tranel. by D. Barrington, London, 1773; B. Thorpe. ib.
1854; and J. Bosworth, ib. 1856; and in Bohn's Antiqua
rian Library. Consult: T. de MSmer, De Grosiua vita
ejusque hidoriarum libris vii., Berlin, 1844; P. B. Game,
Kirchenyeaehichte von Spanien, ii. 1, pp. 398 411, Regens
burg, 1804; C. Paucker, Die Latinift des Oroaius, Berlin,
1883; A. Ebert, GeachicAte der Litteratur dea Mittekdtera,
i. 337 344, Leipaie, 1889; W. S. Teuflel, GeschicAte der
r6miachen Litteratur, ed. L. Schwabe, pp.1186 88, ib. 1890;
Ceillier, Auteura sacra, ix. 358 357, x. 1 6; DCB, iv. 157159.
ORPEft, RAYMOND D'AUDEMER:Church of Ireland; b. at Dublin Aug. 31, 1837. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin (B.A., 1859; M.A., 1864; D.D., 1907); was made deacon in 1860 and priest in 1861; was curate of Rathronan, 1860 02, of Holy Trinity, Limerick, 1862 63, of Tralee, 1863 67, and of Adare, 1867 69; rector of Tralee, 1869 1907; precentor of Ardfert, 1878,85, also rural dean of Tralee; archdeacon of Arfert, 1885 1907; chaplain to the bishop of Limerick, 1894 1907; canon of Taney at St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, 1905 07; canon of Efiin in St. Mary's Cathedral, Limerick, 1906 07; and was consecrated lord bishop of Limerick, Ardfert, and Aghadoe, 1907.
ORR, JAMES:United Free Church of Scotland; b. at Glasgow Apr. 11, 1844. He was graduated from the university of his native city (M. A., 1870) and the Theological Hall of the United Presbyterian Church (1872). He was minister of East Bank United Presbyterian Church, Hawick (18741891); professor of church history in the Theological College of the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland (1874 1901). Since 1901 he has been professor of apologetics and theology in Glasgow College of the United Free Church. He has lectured repeatedly in the United States under the auspices of various theological seminaries, at Chicago in 1895, at Alleghany and Auburn in 1897, at Princeton in 1903, and in Toronto in 1909, and was also one of the chief promoters of the union between the Free and United Presbyterian Churches in Scotland. Among his numerous writings, special mention may be made of his preparation of homilies on Exodus, Deuteronomy, 11 Kings, and Hosea for The Pulpit
historical evolution is further complicated by sec
tarian divisions of the Church, thus giving rise to
Lutheran orthodoxy and Reformed orthodoxy,
Roman Catholic orthodoxy and Greek Catholic
.orthodoxy, and the orthodoxy of the most varied
sects. This leads to the widest application of the
terms, but a narrower sense is approached in con
sidering in what measure the conformity of church
members with Church doctrine may be expected. While the terms are seldom used with reference to laymen and non theologians, all should be so instructed as to be able to give a reason for the faith that is in them (of. I Pet. iii. 15). Those who give religious instruction, on the other hand, must be known to be in strict conformity with the teaching of the Church; and orthodoxy becomes of decisive importance for the clergy and scientific theologians, for they expressly take upon themselves the obligation to defend and to present the teachings of the Church whose service they have entered. The clergy not only should give orthodox sermons and instructions, but should be orthodox themselves. Even granting that the academic teacher and the theological writer should have wider scope than the general clergy, nevertheless no church can disassociate its theology from connection with the creed which it professes so as to allow the theologian to exchange the banner of the Church for liberal science. At the same time, the question arises as to where orthodoxy ceases and heterodoxy begins, and as to how far heterodoxy is to be tolerated before it evolves into actual error.
In answering this problem, Marheineke, in Daub and Creutzer's Studien (1807), shows for the first three centuries the gradual unfolding of a fixed and authoritative norm of doctrine
s. His by the development of the rule of
torical faith, the labors of the Church Fathers,
Unfolding. and the Catholic episcopate. The
crystallization of doctrine involved
two elements. the divine, which assured the abi
ding foundation of the Christian faith (i.e., the right
understanding of the Scriptures); and the human,
which made the development the transition to a
stereotyped orthodoxy which sapped the spiritual
life of the Greek Church more and more since the
time of John of Damascus. In the western Church,
on the other hand, the popes, rather by neglect than
intention, gave ample scope throughout the Mid
dle Ages to individual concepts and presentations
of the doctrines of the Church. A great change was
ushered in by the Reformation; for the Protes
tants not only made for themselves formal creeds,
but forced others to do the same. The sixteenth
century, therefore, was the period of creeds, and
the seventeenth that of orthodoxy. Not only was
this true of Protestantism, especially in Germany;
again formulated her doctrines in the " Confession "
of Petrue Mogilas. When orthodoxy became idolized
and attempted to assert its exclusive despotism
over the Church, it led to its own downfall. Yet
the very flood of heterodoxy in the eighteenth cen
tury soon revealed what a dam had been removed;
nor could either Pietism or supernaturalism with
stand the onslaughts of rationalism, the Enlighten
ment, skepticism, and speculation. Despite all this,
faith gradually found a firmer basis, even though
there was, in the very nature of things, no return
to the seventeenth century. The orthodoxy of the
Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy Osborne
THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG
278
present must and will endure an entirely different measure of heterodoxy within the Church; and the reigning spirit is one of liberalism.
There is, however, another struggle pending,
which may lead to the last schism in Christianity.
This does not concern deviating con
3. The cepts and presentations of individual Modern doctrines, or the acceptance or rejecAntithesis. tion of this or that ecclesiastical position, but in it two views of the universe practically, two religions stand opposed to one another. For if, ostensibly to ethicize Christianity, its nerve of faith be severed, if the essential divinity of Christ be replaced by his human uniqueness, if the Bible be dethroned for the consciousness of the community, then there is no longer a mere conflict between orthodoxy and heterodoxy; but the existence of the confessional churches is imperiled, and the way is opened for the formation of entirely new types of religious organization. Protestantism is evidently destined to surrender to this new development. The antithesis is no longer between conservative and liberal theology, but between Church and modern theology. The question is whether Christianity is to maintain itself as the religion of revelation, or is to lapse to a mere phase of the general evolution of religious history.
(KARL BURGERt.)
Orthodoxy and heterodoxy receive a different
application according as there is an established
Church, or a binding creed to be interpreted by a
constituted authority, or a body of churches more
or less loosely connected with a declaration of faith
subject to revision or susceptible of a considerable
margin of explanation. In America
4. Con and Great Britain this subject has
flicts in come up under a variety of conditions.
America In America, e.g., about the middle of and Great the eighteenth century, the Arminian
(q.v.) was first tried and condemned by his presby
tery and afterward acquitted by the General As
sembly, and Lyman Beecher (q.v.) was tried but
acquitted for advocacy of the universality of the
Atonement (q.v.). A few years later Horace
Bushnell (q.v.) was repeatedly threatened with
prosecution by some of his ministerial brethren in
Connecticut for alleged heretical writings on Chris
tian nurture, the Trinity, and the atonement.
These movements were ultimately abortive and the
suspected teachings have long since taken their place by the side of other accredited doctrines of the respective churches. Near the close of the last century two other movements appeared in the same religious bodies. Professor C. A. Briggs (q.v.) of Union Theological Seminary (Presbyterian), tried for heresy by the New York Presbytery and acquitted, was the following year suspended by the General Assembly for heterodox teaching with reference to historical criticism of the Old Testament. The same ,year a similar fate and for a like reason befell Professor Henry Preserved Smith (q.v.) of Lane Theological Seminary. In the Congregational denomination (1882 93) the so called Andover hypothesis of probation after death (see PROBATION) became the subject of heated controversy, in which not only Andover Seminary, but all who sympar thized with the larger hope were charged with defection from the orthodox faith. This controversy was resolved by appointment of men as missionaries who were in sympathy with Andover, by a declaration by the National Council of Congregational Churches at Minneapolis in 1892 that creeds were to be used "not as tests, but as testimony," and finally (1908) by the affiliation of Andover Seminary with the Divinity School of Harvard University an event of extraordinary significance in the light of the early history of both institutions. In the Protestant Episcopal Church the opposition to teaching rebarded by many as heretical, for a long time smoldering, here and there breaking out, overtook the Rev. T. H. MacQueary, charged with the denial of miracles and suspended for six months (1891), and the Rev. A. S. Crapsey, deposed from the ministry (1908) on the ground of rejecting the birth stories of Jesus in the first and third Gospels. Other denominations have experienced similar conflicts between orthodoxy and heterodoxy, e.g., the Baptists in the agitation which resulted in the retirement of Professor C. H. Toy from the chair of Hebrew in the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Ky., in 1879, and is more recently convulsing the Northern Baptists on the subject of baptism (immersion) as a sine qua non of admission to the sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
In Great Britain in the Church of England (see ENGLAND, CHURCH OF), at one time the Evangelical, at another time the High church, party, professing the orthodox faith, has stamped as heterodox the Broad church or liberal party as heretical, without, however, being able to excommunicate their leaders. Scotland was the scene of a fierce battle when William Robertson Smith (q.v.), professor of Hebrew in the Free Church College of Aberdeen, was in 1881 removed from his chair by the extraordinary act of the General Assembly, on account of his articles in the Encyclopadia Britannica, in which he had advocated the views of Wellhausen and his school respecting the religion of Israel and the canon of the Old Testament.
C. A. BECKwrTH.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: J. H. Blunt, Dictionary of Sects, Heresies, Ecclesiastical Parties and Schools of Religious Thought, Philadelphia, 1874; J. H. Allen, Ten Discourses on Orthodoxy, Boston, 1849; J. F. Clarke, Orthodoxy, its Truths and Errors, ib. 1866; J. J. Overbeck, Catholic Orthodoxy and Anplo Catholicism. London, 1866; E. C. Towne, The
Question of Hell: Essay on New Orthodoxy, New Haven, 1873; J. T. Sunderland. Orthodoxy and Reoivwlism, New York, 1877; D. Dorchester, Concessions of "Liberalises" to Orthodoxy, Boston, 1878; J. Cook. Orthodoxy, ib. 1879; E. H. Hall, Orthodoxy and Heresy in the Christian Church, ib. 1883; S. E. Herrick, Some Heretics of Yesterday, ib. 1885; R. Balmforth, The New Reformation, London, 1893; W. G. T. Shedd, Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy, Drew York, 1893; G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy, ib., 1908.