St. Cyril of Alexandria
Feastday: June 27
St. Cyril of Alexandria, Bishop and Doctor of the Church (June 27) Cyril was born at Alexandria, Egypt. He was nephew of the patriarch of that city, Theophilus. Cyril received a classical and theological education at Alexandria and was ordained by his uncle. He accompanied Theophilus to Constantinople in 403 and was present at the Synod of the Oak that deposed John Chrysostom, whom he believed guilty of the charges against him. He succeeded his uncle Theophilus as patriarch of Alexandria
on Theophilus' death in 412, but only after a riot between Cyril's
supporters and the followers of his rival Timotheus. Cyril at once began
a series of attacks against the Novatians, whose churches he closed;
the Jews, whom he drove from the city; and governor Orestes, with whom
he disagreed about some of his actions. In 430 Cyril became embroiled
with Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople, who was preaching that Mary was not the Mother of God since Christ
was Divine and not human, and consequently she should not have the word
theotokos (God-bearer) applied to her. He persuaded Pope Celestine I to
convoke a synod at Rome, which condemned Nestorius, and then did the same at his own synod
in Alexandria. Celestine directed Cyril to depose Nestorius, and in
431, Cyril presided over the third General Council at Ephesus, attended
by some two hundred bishops, which condemned all the tenets of Nestorius
and his followers before the arrival of Archbishop John of Antioch
and forty-two followers who believed Nestorius was innocent. When they
found what had been done, they held a council of their own and deposed
Cyril. Emperor Theodosius II arrested both Cyril and Nestorius but
released Cyril on the arrival of Papal Legates who confirmed the
council's actions against Nestorius and declared Cyril innocent of all
charges. Two years later, Archbishop
John, representing the moderate Antiochene bishops, and Cyril reached
an agreement and joined in the condemnation, and Nestorius was forced
into exile. During the rest of his life, Cyril wrote treatises that
clarified the doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation and that
helped prevent Nestorianism and Pelagianism from taking long-term deep
root in the Christian
community. He was the most brilliant theologian of the Alexandrian
tradition. His writings are characterized by accurate thinking, precise
exposition, and great reasoning skills. Among his writings are
commentaries on John, Luke, and the Pentateuch, treatises on dogmatic
theology, and Apologia against Julian the Apostate, and letters and
sermons. He was declared a doctor of the Church by Pope Leo XIII in 1882. His feast day is June 27th.
No comments:
Post a Comment