Interpreting the Functions of the Roman Clergy in the Early Fifth Century

Q1 Arts and Humanities Studies in Late Antiquity Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1525/sla.2022.6.1.174
Geoffrey D. Dunn
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Abstract

Examining the information we have about deacons and presbyters in Rome during the first two decades of the fifth century contributes to the larger picture of their role and function and is instructive for several reasons. While there has been scholarly attention drawn to the prescriptive decrees of the Roman bishops regulating the life of their clergy, particularly regarding the clerical cursus honorum and lifestyle (marriage and sexual continence), less has been given to descriptive information about how deacons and presbyters operated. Although far from complete, this information is valuable. From the letters of Innocent I (402–417) we discover much about the liturgical functions of such clerics (through the invaluable letter to Decentius of Gubbio) as well as the role they played in being episcopal letter-bearers and negotiators. From Boniface I (418–422) we are reminded of another role of deacons and presbyters, that of electors and candidates for episcopal office. This information is filtered through the imperial correspondence concerning the electoral dispute between Boniface and Eulalius. We only gain insight into this process of episcopal election in practice when something went wrong. In this case, the undercurrent of tension between deacons and presbyters in Rome overflowed into open rivalry that required imperial intervention. This dispute is linked with the tensions that characterized the last months of Zosimus’s episcopacy of 417–418, where complaints about the bishop reached the imperial court in Ravenna and seem to have flowed from reactions to Zosimus’s changing responses to the Pelagian controversy. Such tension between deacons and presbyters existed in the time of Damasus (366–384), as revealed through Ambrosiaster and Jerome. It would be reasonable to conclude that such tension was present throughout this fifty-year period, ignited by different issues and most visible at the time of the election of a new bishop. Why then do we not find evidence of this tension under Innocent I? Perhaps he was a successful enough manager of his personnel that there were no significant outbreaks, or whatever problems there were did not require him to write about them to anyone else, thereby eliminating any trace of them from recorded memory. Most of our information comes filtered through the bishop’s perspective, and it is only with a letter sent from the presbyters of Rome to Ravenna in 419 in support of Boniface that we hear anything from the clergy themselves during this period. The evidence for the liturgical function of presbyters in the letter to Decentius perhaps unwittingly helps us understand the tension. Presbyters were closely tied to the populace, while, as we know from elsewhere, deacons were more closely tied to the bishop. It was the priestly or sacramental function of presbyters in controlling the boundaries of church membership that contributed to the collision course between them and the financially and administratively powerful deacons.
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解读五世纪早期罗马神职人员的职能
检查我们所拥有的关于罗马执事和长老的信息,在五世纪的前二十年,有助于更全面地了解他们的角色和功能,并且有几个原因具有指导意义。虽然学术界一直关注罗马主教规范神职人员生活的说明性法令,特别是关于神职人员的荣誉课程和生活方式(婚姻和性节制),但很少有关于执事和长老如何运作的描述性信息。虽然还不完整,但这些信息是有价值的。从英诺森I(402-417)的信件中,我们发现了很多关于这些神职人员的礼仪功能(通过给古比奥的德森提乌斯的宝贵信件)以及他们在主教信件传递和谈判中所扮演的角色。从博尼法斯一世(418-422),我们可以看到执事和长老的另一个角色,即主教职位的选民和候选人。这一信息是从有关博尼法斯和尤拉留斯之间选举纠纷的帝国信件中过滤出来的。只有在出现问题的时候,我们才真正了解到主教选举的过程。在这种情况下,罗马执事和长老之间的紧张关系的暗流溢出了公开的竞争,需要帝国的干预。这一争议与佐西莫斯417-418年担任主教最后几个月的紧张关系有关,当时对主教的抱怨传到了拉文纳的朝廷,似乎是佐西莫斯对伯拉纠争议不断变化的反应。这种执事和长老之间的紧张关系存在于达玛斯(366-384)的时间,通过Ambrosiaster和杰罗姆透露。可以合理地得出结论,这种紧张局势在这五十年期间一直存在,由不同的问题引发,在选举新主教时最为明显。那么为什么我们找不到这种紧张关系的证据呢?也许他是一个足够成功的人事管理人员,没有重大的爆发,或者无论有什么问题,他都不需要把它们写给其他人,从而消除了记录记忆中的任何痕迹。我们的大部分信息都是通过主教的视角过滤出来的,只有在419年罗马长老写给拉文纳的一封支持博尼法斯的信中,我们才从这一时期的神职人员那里听到了任何消息。在给德森提乌斯的信中,长老们的礼仪功能的证据,也许无意中帮助我们理解了这种紧张关系。长老与民众紧密相连,而我们从其他地方知道,执事与主教的关系更为密切。正是长老们在控制教会成员界限方面的祭司或圣礼功能,导致了他们与财政和行政权力强大的执事之间的冲突。
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来源期刊
Studies in Late Antiquity
Studies in Late Antiquity Arts and Humanities-Classics
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0.90
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11
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