Porphyry Against The Christians (Review)
Porphyry Against The Christians (Review)
Porphyry Against The Christians (Review)
Michael B. Simmons
Journal of Early Christian Studies, Volume 16, Number 2, Summer 2008, pp.
263-265 (Review)
Access provided by University of Glasgow Library (15 Feb 2019 02:14 GMT)
BOOK REVIEWS 263
Robert M. Berchman
Porphyry Against the Christians
Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2005
Pp. x + 242.
Trolling in the deep and often murky waters of Porphyrian studies can be risky and
dangerous simply because many of the works of the disciple of Plotinus are either
lost or, as in the case of his anti-Christian literature, in deplorable, fragmentary
condition. To compound the latter problem one must keep in mind also that all
the fragments both of Porphyry’s Contra Christianos (C.C.) and Philosophia ex
oraculis (which contains some anti-Christian oracles) derive from the works of
his greatest enemies, the Christians. Scholars are still not in agreement as to how
many of Harnack’s fragments of the C.C., originally published in his Porphy-
rius Gegen die Christen, 15 Bücher, Zeugnisse, und Referate (Berlin, 1916), are
genuinely Porphyrian or whether they mainly come from the Apocriticus of the
fifth-century Macarius Magnes. And though A. D. Nock’s assessment of Porphyry’s
importance for an understanding of religion in the third century of the Roman
Empire still stands (“For the study of the paganism of the third century of our
era no writer is more important than Porphyry”; Classical Journal 56 [1960],
134), he is as controversial today as he ever has been.
Robert M. Berchman attempts to rectify this hermeneutical/text critical problem
by presenting us with a longer list of fragments than has ever been produced
(215 from 18 ancient writers) which are directly or indirectly related to the C.C.
Chapter 1 addresses the author, title, date, sources, and provenance of the C.C.
The biographical sketch is very weak, ignoring as it does Porphyry’s relationship
with Origen (Eus., h. e. 6.19) and the question whether Porphyry was a Christian
(Soc., h. e. 3.23 ), and including nothing about Eunapius’s testimony concern-
ing Porphyry (Vit. Phil. 455–57). Regrettably, it is only much later in the book,
namely Chapter 4 (113–17), which deals with Porphyry’s cultural background,
that the reader finds anything resembling a more substantial biographical sketch.
Biographical inaccuracies also appear, as, for example, when Berchman, referring
to a fragment of the Phil. or., asserts (50) that Porphyry “analyzed a vivication
of Hecate’s statue performed by Maximus in a subterranean temple at Ephesus.
This resulted in the immortal oracle from the goddess’s thighs.” Berchman con-
fuses this with the conversion of the emperor Julian at the temple of Hecate in
Ephesus when the neoplatonic Maximus conducted a theurgic initiation in the
year a.d. 351 (Eunap. VS 475 [LCL: Wright]). Also in Chapter 1 a number of
Porphyry’s works are generally grouped together without attempting to sort them
out chronologically vis-à-vis the development of the author’s thought or, more
importantly, critically re-evaluating the Wolff-Bidez hypothesis (though Berchman
seems to concur with its chronology by defining the Phil. or. as an early work
of Porphyry [see 44 and 47, and cf. 123 n. 2]).
The author claims that all of Porphyry’s superstitious and religious works were
written in the author’s pre-Plotinian period and that the ones which are more
philosophically mature were published after 260. There are errors here. Though
it has been established that Arnobius is responding to Porphyry (see my Arnobius
264 JOURNAL OF EARLY CHRISTIAN STUDIES
for his fragments would have greatly assisted the reader to understand why a
certain passage was selected and the reason(s) for which it should be included
in the C.C.
Finally, the individual fragments listed from an author’s works are often either
so concise and/or ambiguous that it cannot be precluded that they do not derive
from other works either by Porphyry or another pagan writer, e.g., Arnobius,
Adv. nat. (nos. 38, 41); Lactantius, Div. inst. (nos. 51, 52, 55, 58); and the
controversial Div. inst. 5.2 (no. 61), which Wilken, Digeser, and other scholars
have argued describes Porphyry.
Berchman does provide in his early chapters some important background to
the great transformation that was taking place in the Late Roman Empire that
will be beneficial to undergraduates, and he has provided an English translation
of all hitherto accepted fragments of the C.C. Nonetheless, his listing of an even
greater number of Porphyry’s fragments than ever before, which he attempts to base
on ill-supported theories, will undoubtedly cause scholars to ask whether he has
tried to do too much in this book. The result is that the slippery fish represented
by this aspect of Porphyrian studies falls back into now murkier waters.
Michael B. Simmons, Auburn University, Montgomery
Aaron P. Johnson
Ethnicity and Argument in Eusebius’ Praeparatio Evangelica
Oxford Early Christian Studies
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006
Pp. 261 + xvii. $95.