Oenomaus of Gadara

Oenomaus of Gadara

Oenomaus (or Oinomaus, Greek: Οἱνόμαος; 2nd century) of Gadara, was a Pagan[1] Cynic philosopher. He is known principally for the long extracts of a work attacking oracles, which have been preserved among the writings of Eusebius of Caesarea.

Contents

Life

Oenomaus was a native of Gadara, which was then a partially Hellenized community in northern Palestine. He is one of four philosophers listed in the Chronicle of Jerome, as flourishing in the 3rd year of Hadrian's reign (119 AD).

It has been suggested that Oenomaus is identical to the philosopher Abnimos ha-Gardi, who is mentioned several times in the Talmud and Midrash as the pagan friend of Rabbi Meir.[2] Although this is not impossible, there is nothing in the Jewish stories to provide a convincing link to Oenomaus.[3]

Works

According to the Suda, Oenomaus wrote the following works:[4]

  • On Cynicism
  • Republic
  • On philosophy according to Homer
  • On Crates and Diogenes and other subjects.

The Emperor Julian also mentions that Oenomaus wrote tragedies.[5] This list, however, does not included the work which is best known to us, namely, his attack on the oracles, which is sometimes entitled Against the Oracle (Greek: Κατα χρηστηρίων), but the proper title seems to have been Detection of Deceivers (Greek: Γοήτων Φωρά, Latin: Detectio Praestigiatorum).

Detection of Deceivers

Long extracts of this work are preserved by Eusebius.[6] Oenomaus was provoked to write this work having himself been deceived by an oracle.[7] In the extracts available to us, Oenomaus attacks the various legendary accounts of the oracles (especially the Oracle at Delphi), launching a facetious attack on the supposed god (Apollo) behind the oracular pronouncements:

In so great a danger all were looking to you, and you were both their informant of the future, and their adviser as to present action. And while they believed you trustworthy, you were sure that they were fools; and that the present opportunity was convenient for drawing on the simpletons, and driving them headlong, not only to the schools of sophistry at Delphi and Dodona, but also to the seats of divination by barley and by wheat-flour, and to the ventriloquists.[8]

His scorn culminates in an attack on the quackery which he sees behind the pronouncements:

And it seems to me that you are no better than the so-called marvel-mongers, nay not even than the rest of the quacks and sophists. At them, however, I do not wonder, that they abandon men for pay; but I do wonder at you, the god, and at mankind, that they pay to be abandoned.[9]

Naturally, not everyone in the Roman world was impressed Oenomaus' thoughts; the Emperor Julian accused him of impiety:

Let not the Cynic be shameless or impudent after the fashion of Oenomaus, a scorner of all things divine and human: rather let him be, like Diogenes, reverent towards the divine.[10]

Oenomaus, like most Cynics, was not an atheist, but he did view the gods as being unconcerned with human affairs. One of his targets was the Stoics who held that Fate governs everything and yet admitted human liberty in how we respond to Fate:

For surely the most ridiculous of all things is this, the mixture and combination of the two notions, that there is something in men's own power, and that there is nevertheless a fixed chain of causation.[11]

This apparent contradiction was at the heart of Oenomaus's attack on oracles, since Apollo at Delphi, far from being able to do his own will, would be compelled by Fate to make his pronouncements. More importantly, oracular pronouncements, according to Oenomaus, if true, remove free-will from human beings.

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0015_0_15022.html OENOMAUS OF GADARA°
  2. ^ Œnomaus of Gadara at JewishEncyclopedia.com
  3. ^ Donald R. Dudley, (1937), A History of Cynicism, p. 162. Methuen
  4. ^ Suda, Oinomaos
  5. ^ Julian, Oration, vii.
  6. ^ Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, book v. 18-36; book vi. 7.
  7. ^ Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, book v. 22.
  8. ^ Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, book v. 25.
  9. ^ Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, book v. 29.
  10. ^ Julian, Oration, vi.
  11. ^ Eusebius, Praeparatio Evangelica, book vi. 7.

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