Severus of Antioch
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Christian leader Template:Oriental Orthodox sidebar Severus of Antioch (Template:Langx; Template:Langx),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> also known as Severus of Gaza,<ref>Evans (2000), p. 106</ref> or the Crown of Syrians<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (Template:Langx; Template:Langx), was the Patriarch of Antioch and head of the Syriac Orthodox Church from 512 until his death in 538. He is venerated as a saint in the Oriental Orthodox Church, and his feast day is 8 February.
Biography
Early life and education
Severus was born in the city of Sozopolis in Pisidia in Template:Circa 459,<ref name="Barsoum92">Barsoum (2003), p. 92</ref> or Template:Circa,<ref>Sources that state Severus' birth in circa 465: Gregory (1991), Menze (2012), Witakowski (2004), p. 115</ref> into an affluent Christian family, however, later Miaphysite sources would assert that his parents were pagan.<ref name="Witakowski">Witakowski (2004), pp. 115–116</ref> His father was a senator in the city,<ref name="Chapman">Chapman (1911)</ref> and his paternal grandfather,<ref name="Barsoum92" /> also named Severus,<ref name="NADMOSC">St. Severus of Antioch. Northeast American Diocese of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church</ref> was the Bishop of Sozopolis and had attended the Council of Ephesus in 431.<ref name= Chapman/> According to Severus' hagiography, he was named after his paternal grandfather as he had received a vision in which he was told, "the child who is for your son will strengthen Orthodoxy, and his name will be after your name".<ref name= NADMOSC/>
After his father's death,<ref name= Chapman/> in 485, Severus travelled to Alexandria in Egypt to study grammar, rhetoric,<ref>Menze (2012)</ref> and philosophy,<ref name="Witakowski" /> in both Greek and Latin.<ref name="Barsoum93">Barsoum (2003), p. 93</ref> At Alexandria, he met Zacharias of Mytilene, a fellow student and friend, who persuaded him to read the works of Gregory of Nazianzus, and Basil of Caesarea, in particular his correspondence with Libanius. According to Zacharias, whilst students at Alexandria, he and Severus discovered and destroyed a hoard of pagan idols at the neighbouring city of Menouthis.<ref name="Chapman"/>
In the autumn of 486,<ref name="Chapman"/> Severus travelled to Berytus in Phoenicia and studied law and philosophy at the law school,<ref name="Barsoum93" /> where he was later joined by Zacharias in 487.<ref name="Chapman"/> At Berytus, Severus and Zacharias led the expulsion of necromancers and enchanters from the city, and Severus began to dedicate his free time to studying the works of the Fathers of the Church. At this time, he joined a group of students led by a certain Evagrius who prayed together at the Church of the Resurrection every evening. Severus was convinced to be baptised, as he had not yet undergone baptism due to Pisidian custom in which men could not be baptised until they had grown a beard.<ref name="Chapman"/> In 488,<ref name="Witakowski" /> he was baptised at the Church of Saint Leontius at Tripolis with Evagrius as his sponsor.<ref name="Chapman"/>
Monkhood
Severus subsequently adopted an ascetic life whereby he rejected bathing and adopted fasting. He initially intended to return to Pisidia and practise law, however, after a pilgrimage to the Church of Saint Leontius in Tripolis, the head of John the Baptist at Emesa, and Jerusalem, he resolved to join Evagrius and become a monk.<ref name="Chapman"/> Severus entered the monastery of Peter the Iberian near Maiuma in Palestine, a prominent centre of non-Chalcedonianism, and remained there for several years.<ref name="Youssef">Youssef (2015), p. 228</ref> He later joined a monastic brotherhood in the desert near Eleutheropolis under the archimandrite Mamas.<ref name="Venables1">Venables (1911a)</ref> Severus practised asceticism in the desert until c. 500,<ref name="Youssef" /> at which time he became ill and was convinced to recover at the Monastery of Saint Romanus in Maiuma,<ref name="Torrance3" >Torrance (1998), p. 3</ref> where he was ordained a priest by Epiphanius, Bishop of Magydus.<ref name="Youssef" /> At Maiuma, Severus received his inheritance from his parents; he shared the property with his brothers, donated most of his share to the poor,<ref name="Torrance3" /> and constructed a monastery.<ref name="Barsoum93" />
On a walk outside the city, Severus came upon a hermit who left his cave to call out, "welcome to you Severus, teacher of Orthodoxy, and Patriarch of Antioch", despite never meeting Severus, the hermit thus prophesied Severus' ascension to the patriarchal throne.<ref name="NADMOSC"/> He remained at his monastery until 507/508, at which time Nephalius, a Chalcedonian monk, arrived at Maiuma and preached against Severus and other non-Chalcedonians.<ref name="Chapman"/> In 508, Nephalius wrote an apologia of the Council of Chalcedon,<ref name="Torrance4">Torrance (1998), p. 4</ref> to which Severus replied in his two Orationes ad Nephalium.<ref name="Youssef" /> In the same year, Patriarch Elias I of Jerusalem commissioned Nephalius to expel non-Chalcedonian monks from their monasteries in Palestine, and Severus was sent to Constantinople to complain to Emperor Anastasius I.<ref>Horn (2006), pp. 108–109</ref>
Severus travelled to Constantinople alongside 200 non-Chalcedonian monks,<ref name="Barsoum93" /> and gained favour with the emperor soon after his arrival.<ref name="Torrance4" /> Patriarch Macedonius II of Constantinople attempted to sway Anastasius to support the Council of Chalcedon and presented the emperor with a collection of edited excerpts from the works of Cyril of Alexandria, an important Father of the Church who had died prior to the council.<ref name="Torrance4" /> Severus, however, wrote Philalethes, and refuted Macedonius as the work of Cyril presented to the emperor was shown to be taken out of context.<ref name="Torrance4" /> At Constantinople, Severus became friends with Julian, Bishop of Halicarnassus.<ref name="Zissis" /> Under Severus' influence, in 510, Anastasius allowed non-Chalcedonians to retake their monasteries, and, in 510/511, the emperor issued a typos (edict) that adopted the non-Chalcedonian interpretation of the Henotikon as law.<ref name="Horn">Horn (2006), p. 110</ref> After Macedonius' deposition and his succession by Timothy I of Constantinople, a non-Chalcedonian, in August 511, Severus returned to his monastery in Palestine.<ref name="Chapman"/>
Patriarch of Antioch
In 512, Flavian II, Patriarch of Antioch, was deposed by Anastasius,<ref name="Horn" /> and a synod was held at Laodicea in Syria to elect a successor.<ref name="Witakowski" /> Severus was elected on 6 November and consecrated at the Great Church of Antioch on 16 November.<ref name="Allen" /> The consecration ceremony was attended by the bishops Dionysius of Tarsus, Nicias of Laodicea, Philoxenus of Mabbug, Peter of Beroea, Simeon of Chalcis, Marion of Sura, Eusebius of Gabbula, Silvanus of Urima, Sergius of Cyrrhus, John of Europus, Philoxenus of Doliche, and Iulianus of Salamias.<ref>Honigmann (1947), p. 157</ref> During the consecration ceremony, he affirmed the councils of Nicaea, Constantinople, and Ephesus, and the Henotikon.<ref name="Torrance5">Torrance (1998), p. 5</ref> Despite orders from Anastasius to not act or speak against the Council of Chalcedon,<ref>Horn (2006), p. 21</ref> Severus condemned the council, as well as Pope Leo's Tome, Nestorius, Eutyches, Diodorus of Tarsus, Theodore of Mopsuestia, Ibas of Edessa, Barsauma, and Cyrus and John of Aigai.<ref name="Torrance5"/> However, Severus could not be heard due to shouting and commotion, and he signed a declaration of faith at the ceremony's conclusion.<ref name="Allen">Allen & Hayward (2004), p. 12</ref>
Upon his consecration, Severus had the baths at the patriarchal palace destroyed and the cooks sent away, in keeping with his abstinence from luxurious bathing and eating.<ref name="Torrance5"/> He was accepted as Patriarch of Antioch by Patriarch Timothy I of Constantinople and Pope John II (III) of Alexandria, but Patriarch Elias I of Jerusalem and other bishops refused to acknowledge him.<ref name="Chapman"/> Couriers taking synodical letters from Severus to Jerusalem were expelled from the city by Sabbas the Sanctified and a crowd congregated at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and chanted, "anathema to Severus and his fellow communicants".<ref name="Evans">Evans (2000), p. 107</ref> Within Syria, Severus was popular amongst the population of the province of Syria Prima, which had largely adopted non-Chalcedonianism, whereas the province of Syria Secunda, which was home to a large Greek population who favoured Chalcedonianism, was hostile towards Severus.<ref name="Evans"/>
A synod was held at Tyre in Phoenicia in Template:Circa, at which the Council of Chalcedon and Leo's Tome was denounced, and Severus declared that the Henotikon had annulled the acts of the Council of Chalcedon.<ref name="Torrance5"/> Severus began to exchange letters with Sergius the Grammarian at this time as Sergius had written to Antoninus, Bishop of Aleppo, who had asked Severus to respond.<ref name="Youssef229" /> Sergius argued that the Synod of Tyre had made serious concessions to Chalcedonians,<ref name="Youssef229" /> to which Severus responded with a treatise against Sergius.<ref name="Barsoum93" /> As patriarch, Severus and Peter of Apamea, Archbishop of Apamea, were alleged to have hired Jewish mercenaries to kill 250 Chalcedonian pilgrims and leave their bodies unburied by the roadside.<ref name="Knezevich"/> Chalcedonians also claimed that the monasteries that the pilgrims had fled to were set alight and the monks that had protected them were also killed.<ref name="Knezevich"/> Between 514 and 518,<ref>Kazhdan (1991)</ref> John of Caesarea wrote an apologia of the Council of Chalcedon in response to Severus' Philalethes.<ref name="Youssef229">Youssef (2015), p. 229</ref> Severus wrote a treatise in defence of Philalethes, and began work on a reply to John of Caesarea.<ref name="Barsoum93" />
Exile and death
Following Anastasius' death and his succession by Emperor Justin I in July 518, the bishops of Syria Secunda travelled to Constantinople and clamoured for Severus' deposition.<ref>Venables (1911b)</ref> Justin I demanded Severus affirmed the Council of Chalcedon, to which he refused,<ref name="NADMOSC"/> and the emperor subsequently ordered Irenaeus, Count of the East, to arrest Severus and cut out his tongue.<ref name="Knezevich">Knezevich (1991)</ref> Theodora, wife of Justinian, Justin I's nephew and heir, discovered Justin I's orders and warned Severus.<ref name="NADMOSC"/> On 25 September 518,<ref name="Barsoum93" /> Severus fled Antioch by boat to Alexandria, where he was well received by Pope Timothy III of Alexandria and the city's inhabitants.<ref name="Knezevich"/> Severus' arrival in Egypt is celebrated by the Coptic Orthodox Church on 12 October.<ref>The Coming of Saint Severus, Patriarch of Antioch, to Egypt. Coptic Orthodox Church Network</ref> Despite his deposition, Severus did not cease to be seen as the legitimate Patriarch of Antioch by non-Chalcedonians.<ref>Arthur (2008), p. 102</ref>
During his exile in Egypt, Severus resided at the monastery of the Ennaton with Pope Timothy,<ref name="Zissis">Zissis (1987)</ref> and is known to have performed a number of miracles.<ref name="NADMOSC"/> He completed his three volume book,<ref name="Barsoum93" /> liber contra impium grammaticum, against John of Caesarea in Template:Circa.<ref name="Torrance5"/> In his exile, Julian of Halicarnassus also took up residence at the monastery of the Ennaton and exchanged letters with Severus on the topic of the body of Christ.<ref name="Chapman"/> Whereas Julian had adopted aphthartodocetism, which argued that the body of Christ was incorruptible, Severus argued that the body of Christ was corruptible until the resurrection.<ref name="Chapman"/> He wrote five treatises against Julian,<ref name="Zissis"/> who responded in peri aphtharsias and an apologia.<ref>Constantelos (1987)</ref> The non-Chalcedonian community was quickly divided between "Severians", followers of Severus, and aphthartodocetae,<ref name="Chapman"/> and divisions remained unresolved until 527.<ref name="Youssef229" /> The Severians were also known as the Pthartolatrae.<ref>Bates (1852), p. 137</ref>
Emperor Justinian, who succeeded his uncle Justin I in 527, held a three-day synod at the Palace of Hormisdas in the spring of 532 at Constantinople to restore unity to the church through dialogue between five Chalcedonians and five or more non-Chalcedonians.<ref name="Evans111">Evans (2000), p. 111</ref> The emperor invited Severus and promised immunity,<ref name="Torrance5"/> however, he chose not to attend on the grounds of age and as he was accused of corruption and bribery, which he vehemently denied.<ref>Arthur (2008), p. 108</ref> In Template:Circa, the non-Chalcedonian community faced further division with the separation of the Themistians from the Severians. Their leader, Themistius, a deacon at Alexandria, saw himself as defending the Severan view, nevertheless, a new sect was founded after himTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn advocating a more extreme belief of Christ's corruptibility.<ref>Frend (1991)</ref> At the invitation of Justinian, in the winter of 534/535,<ref>Torrance (1998), pp. 5–6</ref> Severus travelled to Constantinople alongside Peter of Apamea and the monk Zooras.<ref name="Roche">Roche (2003)</ref> At this time, Anthimus I of Constantinople, Archbishop of Trebizond, was consecrated Patriarch of Constantinople and refused to affirm the Council of Chalcedon.<ref name="Torrance6">Torrance (1998), p. 6</ref> Severus successfully convinced Anthimus I to adopt a position in line with himself and Pope Theodosius I of Alexandria.<ref name="Evans111"/>
Severus' fortunes were quickly overturned as Pope Agapetus I of Rome arrived at Constantinople in March 536.<ref name="Evans111"/> Agapetus swayed Justinian to adopt a firm Chalcedonian position and Anthimus I was replaced by Menas of Constantinople.<ref name="Torrance6" /> Menas held a synod from 2 May to 4 June,<ref name="Roche" /> at the conclusion of which Severus, Anthimus, Peter of Apamea, and Zooras were excommunicated.<ref>Bacchus (1913)</ref> On 6 August 536, Justinian issued an edict that charged Severus, Anthimus, Peter, and Zooras with Nestorianism and Eutychianism, banned Severus' books,<ref name="Torrance6" /> and banished them from the capital and all major cities.<ref name="Roche" /> Severus fled Constantinople with the aid of Empress Theodora and returned to Egypt.<ref name="Torrance6" /> He resided at the residence of Dorotheus in the city of Sakha until his death on 5 February 538.<ref>Evans (2000), p. 184</ref><ref name="Relocation">The Relocation of the Body of St. Severus, Patriarch of Antioch, Coptic Orthodox Church Network</ref> Dorotheus had Severus' body moved to the Zogag Monastery, and the relocation of his body is celebrated on 19 December.<ref name="Relocation" />
Manichaeism
Severus of Antioch's 123rd homily is famously anti-Manichaean. It has been lost in its original Greek version but a Syriac translation has been preserved. Parts of Severus' 123rd homily was translated and presented, together with the original Syriac text, by Kugener and Cumont.<ref>Kugener & Cumont, 1912</ref><ref>Baker-Brian 2011, 82</ref> In this work he mentions an unnamed book by Mani, which is possibly The Pragmateia, a Manichaean work now lost (this is however not certain; see doubts expressed in Baker-Brian 2011, 82-83). Although he opposed the Manichaeans, as he writes "From where did the Manichaeans, who are more wicked than any other, get the idea of introducing two principles, both uncreated and without beginning, that is good and evil, light and darkness, which they also call matter?",<ref>Gardner & Lieu 2004: 161</ref> his direct citations and explanations of Manichaean beliefs are considered a valuable source by Western scholarship, as the works he cites from are otherwise lost, and his citations of Manichaean texts are among the longest we possess.<ref>Kugener & Cumont 1912, 83f.</ref>
References
Bibliography
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite CE1913
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite DCBL
- Template:Cite DCBL
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
Further reading
Template:S-start Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:S-end
Template:Patriarchs of Antioch Template:Patriarchs of the Syriac Orthodox Church
- 465 births
- 538 deaths
- Oriental Orthodox saints
- Oriental Orthodox theology
- Church Fathers
- Syriac Orthodox Patriarchs of Antioch
- 5th-century Byzantine bishops
- 6th-century Byzantine bishops
- 6th-century Oriental Orthodox archbishops
- 6th-century Christian saints
- 6th-century Christian theologians
- People from Roman Syria
- Byzantine Anatolians
- Saints from Anatolia
- Ancient Christians involved in controversies
- Miracle workers
- 5th-century Christian saints
- 5th-century Christian theologians
- Byzantine jurists
- Patriarchs of Antioch
- 6th-century Byzantine writers
- 6th-century jurists
- Nature of Jesus Christ
- Syrian Christian saints
- Hymnographers