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Saturday, June 28, 2014

Eternal faith and beliefs: Gregory III of Rome

Eternal faith and beliefs: Gregory III of Rome







Gregory III of Rome

Our father among saints Gregory
III
Pope of Rome (731-741),
a Syrian by birth, succeeded Pope Gregory II in March 731. He vigorously
opposed the iconoclastic controversy
in the Byzantine Empire.
He died on November
28
, 741. St. Gregory is remembered by the Church on December
10
.

Life

Gregory was
acclaimed
pope by the crowds at his predecessor's funeral.
He was the
last pope
to seek the Byzantine exarch's mandate. Gregory immediately appealed to
the Byzantine
Emperor Leo III to moderate his position on the iconoclastic
controversy. When
this elicited no response, Gregory called a synod in
November
731, denouncing iconoclasm and excommunicating destroyers of icons.
When a messenger carrying the decrees reached the emperor, the latter
decided
to bring the pope under control. This included appropriating papal
territories
and transferring ecclesiastical jurisdictions to the Patriarch
of Constantinople
.
Gregory's
support of
the empire led him to help contribute to the recapture of Ravenna
after it had fallen to the Lombards
in 733.
However, he also sought to fortify Rome and seek
alliance with opponents of the Lombard monarch Liutprand, king of the Lombards, and then from the
Franks. He sent embassies to
Charles Martel, who made no response, having his own priorities.
Gregory
promoted the
Church in northern Europe, such as the missions of Saint Boniface in
Germany
and Willibald in Bohemia. He also
bestowed palliums on
Egbert of York and Tatwine,Archbishop
of Canterbury
. He beautified Rome
and supported monasticism.

Source



Succession box:
Gregory III of Rome
Preceded by:

St Gregory II
Pope of Rome

731-741
Succeeded by:

St Zacharias

Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73).  Volume II: February.
The Lives of the Saints.  1866.

February
13
St.
Gregory II. Pope and Confessor

HE was born in Rome, to an affluent fortune, and being
educated in the palace of the popes, acquired great skill in the holy
scriptures and in ecclesiastical affairs, and attained to an eminent
degree of sanctity. Pope Sergius I. to whom he was very dear, ordained
him subdeacon. Under the succeeding popes, John the sixth and seventh,
Sisinnius, and Constantine, he was treasurer of the church, and
afterwards library keeper, and was charged with several important
commissions. The fifth general council had been held upon the affair of
the three chapters, in 553, in the reign of Justinian, and the sixth
against the Monothelites, in those of Constantine Pogonatus and Pope
Agatho, in 660. With a view of adding a supplement of new canons to
those of the aforesaid two councils, the bishops of the Greek church, to
the number of two hundred and eleven, held the council called
Quini-sext, in a hall of the imperial palace at Constantinople, named
Trullus, in 692, which laid a foundation of certain differences in
discipline between the Eastern and Western churches; for in the
thirteenth canon it was enacted, that a man who was before married
should be allowed to receive the holy orders of subdeacon, deacon, or
priest, without being obliged to leave his wife, though this was
forbidden to bishops. (can. 12.) It was also forbidden (can. 55.) to
fast on Saturdays, even in Lent. Pope Sergius I. refused to confirm this
council; and, in 695, the emperor Justinian II. surnamed Rhinotmetus,
who had succeeded his father, Constantine Pogonatus, in 685, was
dethroned for his cruelty, and his nose being slit, (from which
circumstances he received his surname,) banished into Chersonesus. First
Leontius, then Apsimarus Tiberius ascended the throne; but Justinian
recovered it in 705, and invited Pope Constantine into the East, hoping
to prevail upon him to confirm the council in Trullo. The pope was
received with great honour, and had with him our saint, who, in his
name, answered the questions put by the Greeks concerning the said
council. After their return to Rome, upon the death of Constantine,
Gregory was chosen pope, and ordained on the 19th of May, 715. The
emperor Justinian being detested both by the army and people, Bardanes,
who took the name of Philippicus, an Armenian, one of his generals,
revolted, took Constantinople, put him and his son Tiberius, only seven
years old, to death, and usurped the sovereignty in December, 711. In
Justinian II. was extinguished the family of Heraclius. Philippicus
abetted warmly the heresy of the Monothelites, and caused the sixth
council to be prescribed in a pretended synod at Constantinople. His
reign was very short; for Artemius, his secretary, who took the name of
Anastasius II., deposed him, and stepped into the throne on the 4th of
June, 713. By him the Monothelites were expelled; but, after a reign of
two years and seven months, seeing one Theodosius chosen emperor by the
army which had revolted in January, 716, he withdrew and took the
monastic habit at Thessalonica. The Eastern army having proclaimed Leo
III., surnamed the Isaurian, emperor on the 25th of March, 717,
Theodosius and his son embraced an ecclesiastical state, and lived in
peace among the clergy.
  1
  Pope Gregory signalized the beginning of his popedom by
deposing John VI. the Monothelite, false patriarch of Constantinople,
who had been nominated by Philippicus, and he promoted the election of
St. Germanus, who was translated to that dignity from Cyzicus, in 715.
With unwearied watchfulness and zeal he laid himself out in extirpating
heresies on all sides, and in settling a reformation of manners. Besides
an hospital for old men, he rebuilt the great monastery near the church
of St. Paul at Rome, and, after the death of his mother, in 718,
changed her house into the monastery of St. Agatha. The same year he
re-established the abbey of Mount Cassino, sending thither, from Rome,
the holy abbot St. Petronax to take upon him the government, one hundred
and forty years after it had been laid in ruins by the Lombards. This
holy abbot lived to see monastic discipline settled here in so
flourishing a manner, that in the same century Carloman, duke or prince
of the French, Rachis, king of the Lombards, St. Willebald, St.
Sturmius, first abbot of Fulda, and other eminent persons, fled to this
sanctuary. 1Our holy
pope commissioned zealous missionaries to preach the faith in Germany,
and consecrated St. Corbinian bishop of Frisingen, and St. Boniface
bishop of Mentz. Leo the Isaurian protected the catholic church during
the first ten years of his reign, and St. Gregory II. laid up among the
archives of his church several letters which he had received from him,
from the year 717 to 726, which proved afterwards authentic monuments of
his perfidy. For being infatuated by certain Jews, who had gained an
ascendant over him by certain pretended astrological predictions, in 726
he commanded holy images to be abolished, and enforced the execution of
his edicts of a cruel persecution. St. Germanus, and other orthodox
prelates in the East, endeavoured to reclaim him, refused to obey his
edicts, and addressed themselves to Pope Gregory. Our saint employed
long the arms of tears and entreaties; yet strenuously maintained the
people of Italy in their allegiance to their prince, as Anastasius
assures us. A rebellion was raised in Sicily, but soon quelled by the
death of Artemius, who had assumed the purple. The pope vigorously
opposed the mutineers, both here and in other parts of the West. When he
was informed that the army at Ravenna and Venice, making zeal a
pretence for rebellion, had created a new emperor, he effectually
opposed their attempt, and prevented the effect. Several disturbances
which were raised in Rome were pacified by his care. Nevertheless he by
letters encouraged the pastors of the church to resist the heresy which
the emperor endeavoured to establish by bloodshed and violence. The
tyrant sent orders to several of his officers, six or seven times, to
murder the pope: but he was so faithfully guarded by the Romans and
Lombards, that he escaped all their snares. St. Gregory II. held the
pontificate fifteen years, eight months, and twenty-three days, and died
in 731, on the 10th of February; but the Roman Martyrology consecrates
to his memory the 13th, which was probably the day on which his corpse
was deposited in the Vatican church.
  2

Note 1. Bulteau, Hist. Mon. d’Occid. t. 2.
l. 4. c. 2. p. 8. [back]








Rev. Alban
Butler (1711–73).  Volume III: March.

The Lives of the
Saints.  1866.

March 15
St.
Zachary, Pope and Confessor

HE succeeded Gregory III. in 741, and was a man of singular
meekness and goodness; and so far from any thought of revenge, that he
heaped benefits on those who had persecuted him before his promotion to
the pontificate. He loved the clergy and people of Rome to that degree,
that he hazarded his life for them on occasion of the troubles which
Italy fell into by the rebellion of the dukes of Spoletto and Benevento
against King Luitprand. Out of respect to his sanctity and dignity, that
king restored to the church of Rome all the places which belonged to
it, Ameria, Horta, Narni, Ossimo, Ancona, and the whole territory of
Sabina, and sent back the captives without ransom. The Lombards were
moved to tears at the devotion with which they heard him perform the
divine service. By a journey to Pavia, he obtained also of Luitprand,
though with some difficulty, peace for the territory of Ravenna, and the
restitution of the places which he had taken from the exarchate. The
zeal and prudence of this holy pope appeared in many wholesome
regulations, which he had made to reform or settle the discipline and
peace of several churches. St. Boniface, the apostle of Germany, wrote
to him against a certain priest, named Virgilius; that he laboured to
sow the seeds of discord between him and Odilo, duke of Bavaria, and
taught, besides other errors, that there were other men under the earth,
another sun and moon, and another world. 1 Pope
Zachary answered, that if he taught such an error he ought to be
deposed. This cannot be understood as a condemnation of the doctrine of
Antipodes, or the spherical figure of the earth, as some writers have
imagined by mistake. The error here spoken of is that of certain
heretics, who maintained that there was another race of men, who did not
descend from Adam, and were not redeemed by Christ. Nor did Zachary
pronounce any sentence in the case: for in the same letter he ordered
that Virgilius should be sent to Rome, that his doctrine might be
examined. It seems that he cleared himself: for we find this same
Virgilius soon after made bishop of Saltzburgh. 2 Certain
Venetian merchants having bought at Rome many slaves to sell to the
Moors in Africa, St. Zachary forbade such an iniquitous traffic, and,
paying the merchants their price, gave the slaves their liberty. He
adorned Rome with sacred buildings, and with great foundations in favour
of the poor and pilgrims, and gave every year a considerable sum to
furnish oil for the lamps in St. Peter’s church. He died in 752, in the
month of March, and is honoured in the Roman Martyrology on this day.
See his letters and the Pontificals, t. 6. Conc. also Fleury, l. 42. t.
9. p. 349.
  1

Note 1. Quod alius mondus et alii homines
sub terra sint, seu alius sol et luna. (Ep. 10. t. 6. Conc. p. 15. 21.
et Bibl. Patr. inter Epist. S. Bonif.) To imagine different worlds of
men upon earth, some not descending from Adam, nor redeemed by Christ,
is contrary to the holy scriptures, and therefore justly condemned as
erroneous, as Baronius observes. (add. ann. 784. n. 12.) [back]
Note 2. Many ancient philosophers thought
the earth flat, not spherical, and believed no Antipodes. Several
fathers adopted this vulgar error in philosophy, in which faith no way
interferes, as St. Austin, (1. 16. de Civ. Dei. c. 9.) Bede, (l. 4. de
Principiis Philos.) and Cosmas the Egyptian, surnamed Indicopleustes. It
is, however, a mistake to imagine, with Montfaucon, in his preface to
this last-mentioned author, that this was the general opinion of
Christian philosophers down to the fifteenth century. For the learned
Philophonus demonstrated before the modern discoveries, (de Mundi Creat.
l. 3. c. 13.) that the greater part of the fathers teach the world to
be a sphere, as Saint Basil, the two SS. Gregories, of Nazianzum and of
Nyssa, Saint Athanasius, &c. And several amongst them mention
Antipodes, as Saint Hilary, (in Ps. 2. n. 32.) Origen, (l. 2. de
princip. c. 3.) Saint Clement, pope, &c. [back]


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