Georgius (3), bp. of Laodicea
Georgius (3), bp. of Laodicea ad mare in Syria Prima (335–347), who took
part in the Trinitarian controversies of the 4th cent. At first an ardent admirer
of the teaching of Arius and associated with Eusebius of Nicomedia, he subsequently
became a semi-Arian, but seems ultimately to have united with the Anomoeans, whose
uncompromising opponent he had once been, and to have died professing their tenets
(Newman, Arians, pt. ii. p. 275). He was a native of Alexandria. In early
life he devoted himself with considerable distinction to the study of philosophy
(Philost. H. E. viii. 17). He was ordained presbyter by Alexander, bp. of
Alexandria (ib.; Eus. Vit. Const. iii. 62). Having gone to Antioch,
he endeavoured to mediate between Arius and the Catholic body. To the Arians he
shewed how, by a sophistical evasion based on
I. Cor. xi. 12 (τὰ
δὲ πάντα ἐκ τοῦ Θεοῦ), they might accept the orthodox test
Θεὸν ἐκ Θεοῦ (Socr. H. E. ii. 45; Athan.
de Synod. p. 887). The attempt at reconciliation completely failed, and resulted
in his deposition and excommunication by Alexander, on the ground of false doctrine
and of the open and habitual irregularities of his life (Athan. ib. p. 886;
Apol. ii. p. 728; de Fug. p. 718; Theod. H. E. ii. 9). Athanasius
styles him "the most wicked of all the Arians," reprobated even by his own party
(de Fug. 718). After his excommunication at Alexandria, he sought admission
among the clergy of Antioch, but was steadily rejected by Eustathius (Athan.
Hist. Arian. p. 812). On this he retired to Arethusa, where he acted as presbyter,
and, on the expulsion of Eustathius, was welcomed back to Antioch by the dominant
Arian faction. He was appointed bp. of Laodicea on the death of the Arian Theodotus
(Athan. de Synod. p. 886; Or. i. p. 290; Soz. H. E. vi. 25).
As bishop he took a leading part in the successive synods summoned by the Arian
faction against Athanasius. He was at the councils of Tyre and Jerusalem in 335
(Athan. Apol. ii. p. 728; Eus. Vit. Const. iv. 43), and that of the
Dedication at Antioch in 341 (Soz. H. E. iii. 5). Fear kept him from the
council of Sardica in 347, where the bishops unanimously deposed him and many others
as having been previously condemned by Alexander, and as holding Arian opinions
(Theod. H. E. iii. 9; Labbe, Concil. ii. 678; Athan. Apol.
ii. p. 765; de Fug. p. 718). Of this deposition George took no heed, and
in 358, when Eudoxius, the newly appointed bp. of Antioch, openly sided with Aetius
and the Anomoeans, George earnestly appealed to Macedonius of Constantinople and
other bishops, who were visiting Basil at Ancyra to consecrate a newly erected church,
to lose no time in summoning a council to condemn the Anomoean heresy and eject
Aetius. His letter is preserved by Sozomen (H. E. iv. 13; Labbe, Concil.
ii. 790). At Seleucia, in 359, when the semi-Arian party was split into two, George
headed the more numerous faction opposed to that of Acacius and Eudoxius, whom,
with their adherents, they deposed (Socr. H. E. ii. 40). On the expulsion
of Anianus from the see of Antioch, George was mainly responsible for the election
of Meletius, believing him to hold the same opinions as himself. He was speedily
undeceived, for on his first entry into Antioch Meletius startled his hearers by
an unequivocal declaration of the truth as laid down at Nicaea. Indignant at being
thus entrapped, George and his fellows lost no time in securing the deposition and
expulsion of a bishop of such uncompromising orthodoxy (Theod. H. E. ii.
31; Philost. H. E. v. 1; Socr. H. E. ii. 44; Soz. H. E. iv.
28). Gregory Nyssen mentions a letter by George relating to Arius (in Eunom.
i. 28), and Socrates quotes a panegyric composed by him on the Arian Eusebius of
Emesa, who was his intimate friend and resided with him at Laodicea after his expulsion
from Emesa and by whose intervention at Antioch he was restored to his see (Socr.
H. E. i. 24, ii. 9). He was also the author of some treatises against heresy,
especially that of the Manicheans (Theod. Haer. Fab. i. 28 ; Phot. Bibl.
c. 85; Niceph. H. E. vi. 32).
[E.V.]