Pope
Anastasius I was among the first to condemn the works of Origen. Elected to the papacy in 399, Anastasius was a Roman by birth, and little is known of his early life. In 400, he arranged a council to consider the writings of Origen, after receiving a letter from
Patriarch Theophilus of
Alexandria expressing strong
doubt about Origen's fidelity to
Christian teaching. The council condemned Origen's work as heterodox, and Rufinus of Aquiliea wrote to the pope to defend his translation of Origen's First Principles, which
St. Jerome had attacked. Anastasius upheld the council's decision. He also urged the church in North
Africa to continue its struggle against Donatism. He died in 401 and was buried in the cemetary of Pontian.
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