ST. CYRIL OF JERUSALEM - CLICK LINK OR PICTURE
From the church historians, and his works
collected by Dom Touttée in his excellent edition of them at Paris 
A.D. 386.
CYRIL was born at, or
near the city of Jerusalem Jerusalem 
  The beginning of his episcopacy was
remarkable for a prodigy by which God was pleased to honour the instrument of
our redemption. It is related by Socrates, 3 Philostorgius, 4 the chronicle of
Alexandria, &c. St. Cyril, an eye-witness, wrote immediately to the emperor
Constantius, an exact account of this miraculous phenomenon: and his letter is
quoted as a voucher for it by Sozomen, 5 Theophanes, 6 Eutychius, 7 John of
Nice, 8 Glycas, and others. Dr. Cave has inserted it at length in his life of
St. Cyril. 9 The relation he there gives of the miracle is as follows: “On the
nones (or 7th) of May, about the third hour (or nine in the morning) a vast
luminous body, in the form of a cross, appeared in the heavens, just over the
holy Golgotha, reaching as far as the holy mount of Olivet, (that is, almost
two English miles in length,) seen not by one or two persons, but clearly and
evidently by the whole city. This was not, as maybe thought, a momentary
transient phenomenon: for it continued several hours together visible to our
eyes, and brighter than the sun; the light of which would have eclipsed it, had
not this been stronger. The whole city, struck with a reverential fear,
tempered with joy, ran immediately to the church, young and old, Christians and
heathens, citizens and strangers, all with one voice giving praise to our Lord
Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, the worker of miracles; finding by
experience the truth of the Christian doctrine, to which the heavens bear
witness.” He concludes his letter with wishes that the emperor may always
glorify the holy and consubstantial Trinity. 10 Philostorgius and the
Alexandrian chronicle affirm, that this cross of light was encircled with a
large rainbow. 11 The Greek church commemorates this miracle on the 7th of May.
  Some time after this memorable event,
a difference happened between our saint and Acacius, archbishop of Cæsarea,
first a warm Semi-Arian, afterwards a thorough Arian. It began on the subject
of metropolitical jurisdiction, which Acacius unjustly claimed over the church  of Jerusalem Jerusalem Antioch ,
and thence removed to Tarsus Constantinople , in 381, he
joined with the other bishops in condemning the Semi-Arians and Macedonians.
And the orthodox bishops assembled in the same city, in 382, writing to Pope
Damasus and to the western bishops, gave a most ample testimony to his faith,
declaring, “That the most reverend and beloved of God, Cyril, bishop of
Jerusalem, had been canonically elected by the bishops of the province, and had
suffered many persecutions for the faith.” 14 Upon the death of Constantius, in
361, Julian the apostate, partly out of aversion to his uncle, and partly in
hopes to see the Christian sects and the orthodox more at variance, suffered
all the banished bishops to return to their churches. Thus did God make use of
the malice of his enemy to restore St. Cyril to his see. He shortly after made
him an eye-witness to the miraculous manifestation of his power, by which he
covered his blaspheming enemies with confusion. The following most authentic
history of that remarkable event is gathered from the original records, and
vindicated against the exceptions of certain sceptics by Tillemont, 15 and by
our most learned Mr. Warburton in his Julian.
  In vain had the most furious tyrants exerted
the utmost cruelty, and bent the whole power which the empire of the world put
into their hands to extirpate, if it had been possible, the Christian name. The
faith increased under axes, and the blood of martyrs was a fruitful seed, which
multiplied the Church over all nations. The experience of how weak and
ineffectual a means brute force was to this purpose, moved the emperor Julian,
the most implacable, the most crafty, and the most dangerous instrument which
the devil ever employed in that design, to shift his ground, and change his
artillery and manner of assault. He affected a show of great moderation, and in
words disclaimed open persecution; but he sought by every foul and indirect
means to undermine the faith, and sap the foundations of the Christian
religion. For this purpose he had recourse to every base art of falsehood and
dissimulation, in which he was the most complete master. He had played off the
round of his machines to no purpose, and seemed reduced to this last expedient
of the pacific kind, the discrediting the Christian religion by bringing the
scandal of imposture upon its divine author. This he attempted to do by a
project of rebuilding the Jewish temple, which, if he could have compassed, it
would have sufficiently answered his wicked design; Christ and the prophet
Daniel having in express terms foretold not only its destruction, which was
effected by the Romans under Titus, but its final ruin and desolation.
  The Jewish religion was a temporary
dispensation, intended by its divine author, God himself, to prefigure one more
complete and perfect, and prepare men to embrace it. It not only essentially
required bloody sacrifices, but enjoined a fixed and certain place for them to
be performed in; this was the temple at Jerusalem Jerusalem 
  After this he assembled the chief
among the Jews, and asked them why they offered no bloody sacrifices, since
they were prescribed by their law? They replied, that they could not offer any
but in the temple, which then lay in ruins. Whereupon he commanded them to repair
to Jerusalem 
  Till then the foundations and some
ruins of the walls of the temple subsisted, as appears from St. Cyril: 25 and
Eusebius says, 26 the inhabitants still carried away the stones for their
private buildings. These ruins the Jews first demolished with their own hands,
thus concurring to the accomplishment of our Saviour’s prediction. Then they
began to dig the new foundation, in which work many thousands were employed.
But what they had thrown up in the day was, by repeated earthquakes, the night
following cast back again into the trench. “And when Alypius the next day
earnestly pressed on the work, with the assistance of the governor of the
province, there issued,” says Ammianus, “such horrible balls of fire out of the
earth near the foundations, 27 which rendered the place, from time to time,
inaccessible to the scorched and blasted workmen. And the victorious element
continuing in this manner obstinately and resolutely bent as it were to drive
them to a distance, Alypius thought proper to give over the enterprise.” 28
This is also recorded by the Christian authors, who, besides the earthquakes
and fiery eruption, mention storms, tempests, and whirlwinds, lightning,
crosses impressed on the bodies and garments of the assistants, and a flaming
cross in the heavens, surrounded with a luminous circle. The order whereof
seems to have been as follows: this judgment of the Almighty was ushered in by
storms and whirlwinds, by which prodigious heaps of lime and sand, and other
loose materials were carried away.” 29 After these followed lightning, the
usual consequence of collision of clouds in tempests. Its effects were, first
the destroying the more solid materials, and melting down the iron instruments;
30 and secondly, the impressing shining crosses on the bodies and garments of
the assistants without distinction, in which there was something that in art
and elegance exceeded all painting or embroidery; which when the infidels
perceived, they endeavoured, but in vain, to wash them out. 31 In the third
place came the earthquake, which cast out the stones of the old foundations,
and shook the earth into the trench or cavity dug for the new; besides
overthrowing the adjoining buildings and porticos wherein were lodged great
numbers of Jews designed for the work, who were all either crushed to death, or
at least maimed or wounded. The number of the killed or hurt was increased by
the fiery eruption in the fourth place, attended both with storms and tempest
above, and with an earthquake below. 32 From this eruption, many fled to a
neighbouring church for shelter, but could not obtain entrance; whether on
account of its being closed by a secret invisible hand, as the fathers state
the case, or at least by a special providence, through the entrance into the
oratory being choked up by a frighted crowd, all pressing to be foremost.
“This, however,” says St. Gregory Nazianzen, 33 “is invariably affirmed and
believed by all, that as they strove to force their way in by violence, the
Fire, which burst from the foundations of the temple, met and stopt them, and
one part it burnt and destroyed, and another it desperately maimed, leaving
them a living monument of God’s commination and wrath against sinners.” This
eruption was frequently renewed till it overcame the rashness of the most
obdurate, to use the words of Socrates; for it continued to be repeated as
often as the projectors ventured to renew their attempt, till it had fairly
tired them out. Lastly, on the same evening there appeared over Jerusalem  a lucid cross, shining very bright, as large as
that in the reign of Constantine 
  This miraculous event, with all its
circumstances, is related by the writers of that age; by St. Gregory Nazianzen
in the year immediately following it; by St. Chrysostom, in several parts of
his works, who says that it happened not twenty years before, appeals to eye-witnesses
still living and young, and to the present condition of those foundations, “of
which,” says he, “we are all witnesses;” by St. Ambrose in his fortieth
epistle, written in 388; Rufinus, who had long lived upon the spot; Theodoret,
who lived in the neighbourhood in Syria; Philostorgius, the Arian; Sozomen, who
says many were alive when he wrote who had it from eye-witnesses, and mentions
the visible marks still subsisting; Socrates, &c. The testimony of the
heathens corroborate this evidence; as that of Ammianus Marcellinus above
quoted, a nobleman of the first rank, who then lived in the court of Julian at
Antioch and in an office of distinction, and who probably wrote his account
from the letter of Alypius to his master at the time when the miracle happened.
Libanus, another pagan friend and admirer of Julian, both in the history of his
own life, and in his funeral oration on Julian’s death, mentions these
earthquakes in Palestine temple  of Daphne Constantine Sodom 
  St. Cyril adored the divine power in
this miracle, of which he had occular demonstration. Orosius says that Julian
had destined him to slaughter after his Persian expedition, but the death of
the tyrant prevented his martyrdom. He was again driven from his see by the
Arian emperor, Valens, in 367, but recovered it in 378, when Gratian, mounting
the throne, commanded the churches to be restored to those who were in
communion with Pope Damasus. He found his flock miserably divided by heresies
and schisms under the late wolves to whom they had fallen a prey: but he
continued his labours and tears among them. In 381 he assisted at the general
council of Constantinople , in which he
condemned the Semi-Arians and Macedonians, whose heresy he had always opposed,
though he had sometimes joined their prelates against the Arians before their
separation from the Church, as we have seen above; and as St. Hilary, St.
Meletius, and many others had done. He had governed his church eight years in peace
from the death of Valens, when, in 386, he passed to a glorious immortality, in
the seventieth year of his age. He is honoured by the Greeks and Latins on this
day, which was that of his death.              
Note 1. Cat. 5. 10. 14. 
Note 2. See Fleury Mœurs des Chrétiens, p.
42. 
Note 3. B. 2. c. 28. 
Note 4. Ib. 3. c. 26. 
Note 5. Ib. 5. c. 5. 
Note 6. Ad. an. 353. 
Note 7. Annal. p. 475. 
Note 8. Auctar. Combefis. t. 2. p. 382. 
Note 9. T. 2. p. 344. 
Note 10. [Greek]. This is an argument of his
firm adherence to the Nicene faith, and that by the praises which he bestows on
an Arian emperor in this piece, he meant not to flatter him in his heterodox
sentiments; they being only compliments of course in an address to an eastern
emperor, and his own sovereign. 
Note 11. Certain moderns imagine that the
luminous crosses which appeared in the air in the reigns of Constantine and
Constantius, were merely natural solar halos; and that under Julian, which
appeared in the night, a lunar halo, or circle of colours, usually red, round
those celestial bodies. But in opposition to this hypothesis we must observe,
that those natural phenomena do not ordinarily appear in the figure of a cross,
but of a ring or circle, as both experience and the natural cause show. We
ought also to take notice, that this prodigy appeared thrice in the same
century, and always on extraordinary occasions, in which many circumstances
rendered a miraculous manifestation of the divine power highly credible.
Moreover, how will these secretaries and confidents of the intrigues of nature,
as Mr. Warburton styles them, account for the inscription, In this conquer,
which was formed in bright letters round the cross, which appeared in the air
to Constantine and his whole army, as that emperor himself affirmed upon oath,
and as Eusebius assures us from his testimony, and that of other eye-witnesses.
(l. 1. de Vit. Const. c. 28. olim 22.) Fabricius very absurdly pretends that
[Greek] may here signify an emblem, not an inscription. Mr. Jortin, after
taking much pains on this subject, is obliged to confess (vol. 3. p. 6) that,
“After all, it seems more natural to interpret [Greek] of a writing than of a
picture. “It is an ugly circumstance,” says this author, “and I wish we could
fairly get rid of it.” Those who can explain the scripture account of the
passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea 
by a natural strong wind, and an extraordinary ebbing of the waters, can find
no knot too hard for them. To deny a supernatural interposition they can
swallow contradictions, and build hypothesis far more wonderful than the
greatest miracles. 
Note 12. Sozomen indeed says, (b. 4. c. 24.)
that Acacius fought for Arianism, Cyril for Semi-Arianism: but this is
altogether a mistake. For Acacius himself was at that time a Semi-Arian, and in
341, in the council of Antioch Paris 
Note 13. Sozom. b. 4. c. 24. 
Note 14. Apud Theod. Hist. b. 5. c. 9. 
Note 15. Tillem. t. 7. p. 400. 
Note 16. Hom. 6. adv. Judæ. t. 1. p. 646.
ed. Ben. 
Note 17. Amm. Marcell. l. 3. c. 1. 
Note 18. Ep. 25. p. 152. 
Note 19. Soz. l. 5. c. 22. 
Note 20. It was about this time that the
Jews demolished the great church  of Alexandria , two more at Damascus 
Note 21. Naz. Or. 4. adv. Julian. 
Note 22. Dan. ix. 27. 
Note 23. Matt. xxiv. 2. 
Note 24. Rufin. Hist. l. 10. c. 37. 
Note 25. Catech. 15. n. 15. 
Note 26. Dem. Evang. l. 8. p. 406. 
Note 27. Out of the very foundations
themselves, according to St. Chrysostom, Sozomen, and Theodoret. 
Note 28. Hocque modo elemento destinatius
repellente. Amm. Marcel. l. xxiii. c. 1. A very emphatical expression in the
mouth of a pagan. He seems by it to ascribe sense to the element, by which he
discovers the finger of God visibly defeating the obstinacy of the undertaking,
and a renewal of the eruption so often till it overcame the rashness of the
most obstinate. 
Note 29. Theod. Hist. l. 3. c. 20. 
Note 30. Soc. lib. 3. c. 20. 
Note 31. St. Greg. Naz. Or. 4. adv. Julian.
Theodoret indeed says that these crosses were shaded with a dark colour: but
this without any real contradiction to St. Gregory’s relation of the matter,
because, like the phosphorus, they were of a darkish hue by day, and lucid by
night. 
Note 32. St. Greg. Naz. Or. 9. 
Note 33. Or. 4, adv. Julian. 
Note 34. This learned author demonstrates,
lib. 2. ch. 4. that the exceptions of Mr. Basnage are founded on glaring
mistakes and misrepresentations of his authorities. 
Note 35. See Warburton, p. 88. 

 
 
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