Hierotheus, a writer
Hierotheus, a writer whose works are quoted by the Pseudo-Dionysius,
who styles him his teacher. Two long extracts are preserved in the de Divinis
Nominibus of the Pseudo-Dionysius (c. 2, §§ 9, 10; c. 4, §§ 15–17), and there
are incidental references to him elsewhere. In the first extract (c. 2, § 9 fin.)
his Theological Institutes (θεολογικαί στοιχειώσεις)
are cited; in the second his Amatory Hymns (ἐρωτικοι
ὕμνοι). His writings most probably belong to the school of Edessa, and
should be dated about the middle or end of 5th cent. In confirmation of this view
Dr. Westcott has noted a statement in Assemani (Biblioth. Orient. ii. 290,
291) that Stephen Bar-Sudaili, abbat of a monastery at Edessa, published a book
under the name of Hierotheus to support his own mystic doctrines. Assemani says
that this abbat held the doctrine of final restoration as taught by Origen, and
was abused for it by Xenaias and James of Sarug, bp. of Batnae (Bibl. Or.
i. 303 ii. 30–33; Ceillier, x. 641; Westcott on Dionys. Areop. in Contemporary
Rev. May, 1867). The mystical views in the works of Hierotheus and Dionysius
easily lend themselves to the support of that theory. According to Assemani (ii.
291), Bar-Sudaili wrote under the name of Hierotheus to prove "finem poenarum
aliquando futurum, nec impios in saeculum saeculorum puniendos fore, sed per ignem
purgandos; atque ita et malos daemones misericordiam consequuturos esse, et cuncta
in divinam naturam transmutanda, juxta illud Pauli, ut sit Deus omnia in omnibus."
In Mai's Spicilegium Romanum (iii. 704–707) will be found other fragments
of this writer, translated from some Arabic MSS. Their theology savours, however,
more of the 4th and 5th cents. than of the 1st. But see A. L. Frothingham,
Stephen Bar-Sudaili and the Book of Hierotheos (Leyden, 1886).
[G.T.S.]