History Focus
September 10

   
               

A short focus on a person or event associated with this day in History.


 

Pope Celestine I -

( ? - 432)

Celestine was elected pope on September 10, 422. Celestine devoted great attention to local issues and at eliminating heretical Church doctrine. He died in 432 and was buried in the cemetery of Priscilla, near the basilica of San Silvestro. His traditional feast day is April 6.

Celestine was born in the Roman Campagna. He was archdeacon of the Roman church before his election to the papacy. During the 5th century, archdeacons represented the bishop at councils, and governed the diocese during the time between the death of a bishop and the election of a new one. Celestine was elected pope on September 10, 422. He reigned as pope until his death in 432. Saint Celestine was buried in the cemetery of Priscilla, near the basilica of San Silvestro. His traditional feast day is April 6.

Celestine devoted great attention to local issues. He also worked hard at eliminating heretical Church doctrine. He took vigorous action against the large Christian minority in Rome that continued to follow the teachings of the second antipope Novatian. The Novatianists espoused a rigorism in church discipline that expected strict ascetic behavior. They believed that after baptism there could be no forgiveness for grave sins. By confiscating the churches of Novatian's followers, Celestine forced them to worship in private houses. Celestine also restored the Julian basilica that had been damaged in 410 during the sack of Rome by Alaric I. He initiated the construction of the new basilica of Santa Sabina on the Aventine hill.

Celestine reiterated the claim of the papacy to oversee the entire Christian church. He insisted the right of the pope to hear appeals from any province. This brought Celestine into conflict with the bishops of Africa over the reinstatement of a priest whom they had excommunicated. He also censured the bishops of southern Gaul for ecclesiastical abuses that had come to his attention.

Celestine was successful in rooting out the leaders of Pelagianism in the West. Pelagianism was a rationalistic and naturalistic heretical doctrine concerning grace and morals. It emphasized human free will as the decisive element in human perfectibility and denied the need for divine grace and redemption. Celestine also sent Saint Germain of Auxerre to convert its adherents in Britain. In the East, he instructed the bishops of Illyria to treat the bishop of Thessalonica as his vicar.

Toward the end of his reign, Celestine took part in the christological debate between Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople, and Saint Cyril of Alexandria. Both theologians submitted their positions to Celestine for arbitration. Celestine misinterpreted this as an appeal to Rome from the Eastern (Byzantium) Church. Nestorius preached a variant of the orthodox doctrine concerning the nature of Jesus Christ. Nestorius claimed that in Christ a divine and a human Person acted as one, but did not join to compose the unity of a single individual. At a synod held in Rome in 430, Celestine condemned Nestorianism and called on Nestorius to recant or face excommunication. Meanwhile, Emperor Theodosius II called the council of Ephesus. Where in 431 Saint Cyril procured the condemnation of Nestorianism and the excommunication of Nestorius. His followers were persecuted and sought refuge in Persia, India, China, and Mongolia.

Sources: | On This Day | Compton’s Encyclopedia


© Phillip Bower