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St. Eusebius
Bishop of Vercelli, b. in Sardinia c. 283; d. at Vercelli, Piedmont, 1 August, 371. He was made lector in Rome, where he lived some time, probably as a member or head of a religious community (Spreitzenhofer, Die Entwickelung des alten Mönchtums in Italien, Vienna, 1894, 14 sq.), Later he came to Vercelle, the present Vercelli, and in 340 was unanimously elected bishop of that city by the clergy and the people. He received episcopal consecration at the hands of Pope Julius I on 15 December, of the same year. According to the testimony of St. Ambrose (Ep. lxiii, Ad Vercellenses) he was the first bishop of the West who united monastic with clerical life. He led with the clergy of his city a common life modelled upon that of the Eastern cenobites (St. Ambrose, Ep. lxxxi and Serm. lxxxix). For this reason the Canons Regular of St. Augustine honour him along with St. Augustine as their founder (Proprium Canon. Reg., 16 December).
In 364 Pope Liberius sent Eusebius and Bishop Lucifer to Cagliari to the
Emperor Constantius, who was then at Arles in Gaul, for the purpose of inducing
the emperor to convoke a council which should put an end to the dissentions
between the Arians and the orthodox. The synod was held in Milan in 355. At
first Eusebius refused to attend it because he foresaw that the Arian bishops,
who were supported by the emperor, would not accept the decrees of the Nicene
council and would insist upon the condemnation of St. Athanasius. Being pressed
by the emperor and the bishops to appear at the synod, he came to Milan, but was
not admitted to the synod until the document condemning St. Athanasius had been
drawn up and was awaiting the signature of the bishops. Eusebius vehemently
protested against the unjust condemnation of St. Athanasius and, despite the
threats of the emperor, refused to attach his signature to the document. As a
result he was sent into exile, first to Scythopolis in Syria, where the Arian
bishop Patrophilus, whom Eusebius calls his jailer, (Baronius, Annal., ad ann.
356, n. 97), treated him very cruelly; then to Cappodocia, and lastly to Thebaid.
On the accession of the Emperor Julian, the exiled bishops were allowed to
return to their sees, in 362. Eusebius, however, and his brother-exile Lucifer
did not at once return to Italy. Acting either by force of their former legatine
faculties or, as is more probable, having received new legatine faculties from
Pope Liberius, they remained in the Orient for some time, helping to restore
peace in the Church. Eusebius went to Alexandria to consult with St. Athanasius
about convoking the synod which in 362 was held there under their joint
presidency. Besides declaring the Divinity of the Holy Ghost and the orthodox
doctrine concerning the Incarnation, the synod agreed to deal mildly with the
repentant apostate bishops, but to impose severe penalties upon the leaders of
several of Arianizing factions. At its close Eusebius went to Antioch to
reconcile the Eustathians and the Meletians. The Eustathians were adherents of
the bishop St. Eustatius, who was deposed and exiled by the Arians in 331. Since
Meletius' election in 361 was brought about chiefly by the Arians, the
Eustathians would not recognize him, although he solemnly proclamed his orthodox
faith from the ambo after his episcopal consecration. The Alexandrian synod had
desired that Eusebius should reconcile the Eustathians with Bishop Meletius, by
purging his election of whatever might have been irregular in it, but Eusebius,
upon arriving at Antioch found that his brother-legate Lucifer had consecrated
Paulinus, the leader of the Eustathians, as Bishop of Antioch, and thus
unwittingly had frustrated the pacific design. Unable to reconcile the factions
at Antioch, he visited other Churches of the Orient in the interest of the
orthodox faith, and finally passed through Illyricum into Italy. Having arrived
at Vercelli in 363, he assisted the zealous St. Hilary of Poitiers in the
suppression of Arianism in the Western Church, and was one of the chief
opponents of the Arian Bishop Auxientius of Milan. The church honours him as a
martyr and celebrates his feast as a semi-double on 16 December. In the Journal
of Theological Studies
(1900), I, 302-99, E.A. Burn attributes to Eusebius the
Quicumque
. (SEE ATHANSIAN CREED)
Three short letters of Eusebius are printed in Migne, P.L., XII, 947-54 and X,
713-14. St. Jerome (De vir. ill., c. lvi, and Ep. li, n. 2) ascribes to him a
Latin translation of a commentary on the Psalms, written originally in Greek by
Eusebius of Cæsarea; but this work has been lost. There is preserved in the
cathedral at Vercelli the Codex Vercellensis
, the earliest manuscript of the
old Latin Gospels (codex a), which is generally believed to have been written by
Eusebius. It was published by Irico (Milan 1748) and Bianchini (Rome, 1749), and
is reprinted in Migne, P.L. XII, 9-948; a new edition was brought out by
Belsheim (Christiania, 1894). Krüger (Lucifer, Bischof von Calaris, Leipzig,
1886, 118-30) ascribes to Eusebius a baptismal oration by Caspari (Quellen sur
Gesch, Des Taufsymbols, Christiania, 1869, II, 132-40). The confession of faith
Des. Trinitate confessio
, P.L., XII, 959-968, sometimes ascribed to Eusebius
is spurious.
BUTLER, Lives of the Saints, 15 Dec.; BARING-GOULD, Lives of the Saints, 15 Dec.; DAVIES, in Dict. Christ. Biogr.; St. Jerome, De viris illustribus, xcvi; FERRERIUS, Vita s, Eusebii episcopi Vercellensis (Vercelli, 1609); UGHELLI, Italia Sacra (Venice 1719), IV, 749-61; BARONIUS, Annalesad ann. 355-371; MORIN inRevue Benedictine (Maredsous, 1890), VII, 567-73; SAVIO, Gli antichi vescovi d'Italia (Piedmonte) (Turin, 1899), 412-20, 514-54; BARDENHEWER, Patrologie, Shahan Tr. (Freiburg im Br.; St. Louis, 1903), 417-18.
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