Hosius of Corduba
Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Infobox Christian leader Hosius of Corduba (Template:Circa–359), also known as Hosius the Confessor, Osius or Ossius, was a bishop of Corduba (now Córdoba, Spain) and an important and prominent advocate for Homoousion Christianity during the period when the Arian controversy divided early Christianity.
He probably presided at the First Council of Nicaea and also presided at the Council of Serdica.<ref name="Jurgens1970">Template:Cite book</ref>
After Lactantius, he was the closest Christian advisor to Emperor Constantine the Great and guided the content of public utterances, such as Constantine's Oration to the Saints, addressed to the assembled bishops.<ref name=Leclerq>Template:Cite web</ref>
He is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church and Oriental churches, with the title of confessor of the faith, being commemorated with a feast day on 27 August.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Life
He was born in Corduba in Hispania, a province of the Roman Empire.<ref name="Dudley2007">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Schaff1885">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Payne1980">Template:Cite book</ref> Elected to the see of Corduba about 295, he narrowly escaped martyrdom during the persecution of Maximian.
In 300 or 301 he attended the provincial Synod of Elvira<ref name=Myers>Template:Cite web</ref> (his name appearing second in the list of those present), and upheld its severe canons concerning such points of discipline as questions concerning clerical marriage, and the treatment of those who had abjured their faith during the recent persecutions.<ref name="EB1911">{{#if: |
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}}{{#ifeq: ||}}</ref> The Council appears to have had Novatianist tendencies and held a strict view that refused readmission to those baptized Christians who had denied their faith or performed the formalities of a ritual sacrifice to the pagan gods under pressures of persecution.<ref name=Wace/>
In 313 he appeared at the court of Constantine the Great, being mentioned by name in a constitution directed by the emperor to Caecilianus of Carthage in that year.<ref name="EB1911"/>
Hosius is not listed among the attendees of the Synod of Arles of 314, but may have been in attendance upon the emperor, who was engaged in his first war with Licinius in Pannonia.<ref name=Wace/> As early as 320 or 321 Alexander, Bishop of Alexandria, convoked a council at Alexandria at which more than one hundred bishops from Egypt and Libya anathematized Arius, his deacon.<ref name=Leclerq/> In autumn 324 Hosius was the bearer of Constantine's letter to Bishop Alexander and Arius, in which he urged them to reconcile. After the Synod in Alexandria, Hosius led another synod in Antioch probably on the occasion of the election of Eustathius, after the death of Philogonius on November 324. In this synod, bishops supporting Arius were suspended and a general synod was announced which would be held in Ancyra. Emperor Constantine eventually moved the convocation to the First Council of Nicaea which opened on 20 May 325. Hosius probably presided over it, as his name appears first on the list of participants. Hosius ostensibly supported Alexander of Alexandria against Arius. After the council, Hosius returned to his diocese in Spain.<ref name=Myers/>
For nearly 50 years Hosius was one of the foremost bishops of his time. He was held in universal esteem and exercised great influence.<ref name=Wace>Template:Cite web</ref> After Constantine's death in 337, Eusebius of Nicomedia, an Arian and friend of the Imperial family, was named to the see of Constantinople. In his new role as patriarch, Eusebius and his supporters brought pressure to bear upon Constantius II to expel Athanasius of Alexandria, a staunch anti-Arian, for a second time from his diocese. Eusebius urged the emperor to have Hosius, a supporter of Athanasius, summoned to Milan, where the Bishop of Cordoba declined to condemn Athanasius. Hosius so impressed the emperor that he was authorized to return home.
Hosius had a prominent role to play at the Council of Serdica, which began in the summer, or, at latest, in the autumn of 343, proved by the fact that he was the first to sign the Acts of this council.<ref name="Myers" />
Continued pressure from Eusebius led to Constantius' writing a letter demanding whether Hosius alone was going to remain obstinate in his support of Athanasius. In reply, Hosius sent his courageous letter of protest against imperial interference in Church affairs (353), preserved by Athanasius<ref>Athanasius, Historia Arianorum, 42-45.</ref> which led to Hosius' exile in 355 to Sirmium, an imperial center in Pannonia (in modern Serbia). From his exile he wrote to Constantius II his only extant composition: "God gives you the empire; He entrusts ecclesiastical power to us".<ref>Quoted by Pope Gregory XVI in Commissum Divinitus, Papal Encyclicals Online, issued on 17 May 1835, accessed on 1 March 2025</ref> This letter has been "not unjustly characterized" by the French historian Louis-Sébastien Le Nain de Tillemont as displaying gravity, dignity, gentleness, wisdom, generosity and in fact all the qualities of a great soul and a great bishop.<ref name="EB1911"/>
Subjected to continual pressure from the Eusebian party, Hosius signed the homoean formula adopted by the Third Council of Sirmium in 357,<ref>Philostorgius, in Photius, Epitome of the Ecclesiastical History of Philostorgius, iv.3.</ref> which involved communion with the homoeans (Acacians) but not the condemnation of Athanasius. He was then permitted to return to his Hispanic diocese, where he died in 359.<ref name="EB1911"/>
There is a letter from Pope Liberius to him from Template:Circa.
References
Further reading
- V. C. de Clercq, Ossius of Cordova. A contribution to the history of the Constantinian period (Washington, 1954).
- Template:Citation
- Louis-Sébastien Le Nain de Tillemont, Mémoires, VII. 300-321 (1700)
- Karl Josef von Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, vol. i.
- Henry Melvill Gwatkin, Studies of Arianism (Cambridge, 1882, 2nd ed., 1900)
- A. W. W. Dale, The Synod of Elvira (London, 1882)
- article s.v. in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopädie (3rd ed., 1900), with bibliography.
- Catholic Encyclopedia
External links
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- Pages with broken file links
- 359 deaths
- 3rd-century bishops in Hispania
- 4th-century bishops in Hispania
- Ancient Roman centenarians
- Spanish men centenarians
- Bishops of Córdoba
- 4th-century writers in Latin
- Letter writers in Latin
- Year of birth uncertain
- Participants in the First Council of Nicaea
- 256 births