Porphyrius, bp. of Gaza
Porphyrius (5), bp. of Gaza,
a.d. 395–420. According to his biographer Mark, he was born at Thessalonica
c. 352, of a good family. His parents were Christians, and took care
to have him instructed in the Scriptures as well as in secular learning. When
about 25 he retired to the desert of Scete in Egypt, which, at the end of 5
years, he left for Jerusalem, and passed another 5 years in a cavern near the
Jordan. A painful disease, brought on by his austerities, compelled him to revisit
Jerusalem, where he made the acquaintance of Mark, who became his devoted disciple
and companion. By Porphyry's desire Mark visited Thessalonica, and turned the
proceeds of Porphyry's share of his paternal property into money, the whole
of which, on his return, Porphyry distributed to the poor and to various monasteries,
supporting himself by manual labour. About his 40th year he. reluctantly received
ordination from John, bp. of Jerusalem, who committed to his guardianship the
sacred relic of the True Cross. After a presbyterate of three years, in 395
on the death of Aeneas he with still greater reluctance became bp. of Gaza,
being consecrated by John of Caesarea, who had sent for him on the pretext of
consulting him on some scriptural difficulty. The people of Gaza were then almost
all pagan, and the position of a zealous Christian bishop was one of no small
difficulty and even danger. The cessation of a severe drought at the beginning
of the 2nd year of his episcopate, Jan. 326, was attributed to his prayers and
those of the Christians, and caused the conversion of a number of the inhabitants.
This was succeeded by other conversions, arousing great exasperation among the
heathen population, which vented itself in a severe persecution. Porphyry endured
their ill-treatment with the utmost meekness. At the same time he despatched
his deacon Mark and his minister Borocas to Constantinople, who, through the
powerful advocacy of Chrysostom, obtained the emperor's order to destroy the
idols and close the temples. This was carried out by an imperial commissioner,
who, however, it was asserted, was bribed to spare the principal idol named
Marnas, and to wink at the entrance of the worshippers into the temple by a
secret passage. To these events Jerome refers in a letter to Laeta (Hieron.
H.E.. vii. p. 54). The idolaters still remained the dominant section,
and were able to shut out Christians from all lucrative offices and to molest
them in the enjoyment of their property. Porphyry took this so much to heart
that he exhorted his metropolitan, John of Caesarea, to allow him to resign.
John consoled him, and went with him to Constantinople to obtain an order for
the demolition not of the idols alone, but of the temples themselves, arriving
Jan. 7, 401. Chrysostom was then high in the empress Eudoxia's favour, and their
suit was successful. The bishops reached Majuma, the port of Gaza, on May 1,
and were followed in ten days by a commissioner named Cynegius, accompanied
by the governor and a general officer with a large body of troops, by whom the
imperial orders for the destruction of the temples were executed. In ten days
the whole were burnt, and finally the magnificent temple of Marnas, and on the
ground it occupied the foundations of a cruciform church were laid according
to a plan furnished by Eudoxia, who also supplied the funds for its erection.
The church was 5 years building, and was dedicated by Porphyry on Easter Day,
405 or 406, being called "Eudoxiana" after its foundress. Jerome refers to its
erection (Hieron. in Esaiam, xvii. 1. vii. t. v. p. 86). The heathen
population, irritated at the destruction of their sacred buildings and at the
spread of Christianity in Gaza, raised a tumult, in which several Christians
were killed, and Porphyry himself barely escaped with his life. We may certainly
identify him with one of the two bishops of his name who attended the anti-Pelagian
synod at Diospolis in 415 (Aug. in Julian. lib. i. c. 15). He died Feb.
26, 419 or 420. He is said to have been indefatigable in instructing the people
of Gaza in a simple and popular style, based entirely on Holy Scripture. Migne,
Patr. Lat. xlv. pp. 1211 ff.; Ceiller, Aut. eccl. vi. 329; Tillem.
Mém. eccl. x. pp. 703–716.
[E.V.]