Lucius (11)
Lucius (11), the third Arian intruded into
the see of Alexandria, an Alexandrian by birth,
ordained presbyter by George. After the
murder of that prelate Lucius seems to have
been regarded as head of the Arians of Alexandria;
but Socrates's statement (iii. 4), that
he was at that time ordained bishop,
is corrected by Sozomen (vi. 5) and earlier
authorities. At the accession of Jovian, according
to the Chronicon Acephalum,
a Maffeian fragment, four leading Arian bishops
put him forward to address the new emperor at
Antioch, hoping to divert Jovian's favour
from Athanasius. Records of these interviews
are annexed to Athanasius's epistle to
Jovian, and appear to have been read by
Sozomen, who summarizes the complaints
urged against the great hero of orthodoxy.
The records are vivid and graphic. Lucius,
Bernicianus, and other Arians presented
themselves to Jovian at one of the city gates
when he was riding into the country. He asked
their business. They said they were "Christians
from Alexandria," and wanted a bishop. He
answered, "I have ordered your former bishop,
Athanasius, to be put in possession." They
rejoined that Athanasius had
for years been under accusation and sentence
of banishment. A soldier interrupted them
by telling the emperor that they were the "refuse" of "that unhallowed George."
Jovian spurred his horse and rode away.
Lucius does not reappear until
367, when, having been consecrated, says
Tillemont (vi. 582), "either at Antioch, or at some other place
out of Egypt," he attempted to possess himself
of the bishopric, and entered Alexandria
by night on Sept. 23, and "remained in a
small house," next the precinct of the cathedral.
In the morning he went to the house
where his mother still lived; his presence
excited general indignation, and the people
beset the house. The prefect Latianus and
the dux Trajanus sent officers to expel him,
who reported that to do so publicly would
imperil his life, whereupon Tatianus and
Trajanus, with a large force, went to the
house, and brought him out at 1 p.m. on
Sept. 24. On Sept. 25 he was conducted out
of Egypt (Chron. Praevium and
Acephalum). Athanasius died on May
2, 373, being succeeded by Peter; but the
prefect Palladius
attacked the church, and Peter was either
imprisoned or went into hiding. Euzoius, the
old Arian bp. of Antioch, easily obtained from
Valens an order to install Lucius. Accordingly
Lucius appeared in Alexandria, escorted,
as Peter said in his encyclical letter (Theod.
iv. 25), not by monks and clergy and laity,
but by Euzoius, and the imperial treasurer
Magnus, at the head of a large body of soldiers;
while the pagan populace intimated
their friendly feeling towards the Arian bishop
by hailing him as one who did not worship the
Son of God and who must have been sent to
Alexandria by the favour of Serapis. Lucius
surrounded himself with pagan guards, and
caused some of the orthodox to be beaten,
others to be imprisoned, exiled, or pillaged, for
refusing his communion, these severities being
actually carried out by Magnus and Palladius
as representing the secular power. Gregory of
Nazianzus calls him a second Arius, and lays
to his charge the sacrileges and barbarities of
the new Arian persecution (Orat. xxv. 12, 13).
He took an active part in the attack on the
monks of Egypt; finding them immovably
attached to the Nicene faith, he advised that
their chief "abbats," the two Macarii, should
be banished to a little pagan island; but when
the holy men converted its inhabitants, the
Alexandrian people made a vehement demonstration
against Lucius, and he sent the exiles
back to their cells (Neale, Hist. Alex. i. 203).
When the Arian supremacy came to an end
at the death of Valens, in 378, Lucius was
finally ejected, and repaired to Constantinople,
but the Arians of Alexandria still regarded
him as their bishop (Socr. v. 3). He lived for
a time at Constantinople, and contributed to
the Arian force which gave such trouble to
Gregory of Nazianzus, during his residence in
the capital as bishop of the few Catholics,
from the beginning of 379. In Nov. 380 the
Arian bp. Demophilus was expelled, and
Lucius went with him. Theodoret (iv. 21)
confounds Lucius with another Arian prelate
of that name, also a persecutor, who usurped
the see of Samosata (Tillem. vi. 593).
[W.B.]