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Evodius
The first Bishop of Antioch after St. Peter. Eusebius mentions him thus in
his History
: And Evodius having been established the first [bishop] of the
Antiochians, Ignatius flourished at this time
(III, 22). The time referred to
is that of Clement of Rome and Trajan, of whom Eusebius has just spoken. Harnack
has shown (after discarding an earlier theory of his own) Eusebius possessed a
list of the bishops of Antioch which did not give their dates, and that he was
obliged to synchronize them roughly with the popes. It seems certain that he
took the three episcopal lists of Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch from the
Chronography
which Julius Africanus published in 221. The Chronicle of
Eusebius
is lost; but in Jerome's translation of it we find in three successive
years the three entries
- that Peter, having founded the Church of Antioch, is sent to Rome, where he perseveres as bishop for 25 years;
- that Mark, the interpreter of Peter, preaches Christ in Egypt and Alexandria; and
- that Evodius is ordained first Bishop of Antioch.
This last year is given as Claudius III by the Codex Freherianus, but by the
fifth-century Bodleian Codex (not used in Schoene's edition) and the rest as
Claudius IV (A.D. 44). The Armenian translation has Claudius II. We have no
mention of Evodius earlier than that by Africanus; but the latter is confirmed
by his contemporary, Origen, who calls Ignatius the second bishop after Peter
(Hom. IV, in Luc., III, 938A). It is curious that the ordination of Evodius
should not have been given in the Chronography
in the same year as the
founding of the Antiochian Church by Peter, and Hort supposed that the three
entries must have belonged to a single year in Eusebius. But the evidence is not
in favour of this simplification. The year of the accession of Ignatius, that is
of the death of Evodius, was unknown to Eusebius, for he merely places it in the
Chronicle
together with the death of Peter and the accession of Linus at Rome
(Nero 14-68), while in the History
he mentions it at the beginning of Trajan's
reign.
The fame of Ignatius has caused later writers, such as Athanasius and
Chrysostom, to speak of him as though he were the immediate successor of the
Apostles. Jerome (De viris ill., 16) and Socrates (H.E. VI, 8) call him the
third
bishop after St. Peter, but this is only because they illogically
include Peter among his own successors. Theodoret and Pseudo-Ignatius represent
Ignatius as consecrated by Peter. The difficulty which thus arose about Evodius
was solved in the Apostolic Constitutions by stating that Evodius was ordained
by Peter and Ignatius by Paul. The Byzantine chronographer, John Malalas (X,
252), relates that as Peter went to Rome, and passed through the great city of
Antioch, it happened that Evodus (sic), the bishop and patriarch, died, and
Ignatius succeeded him, he attributes to Evodius the invention of the name
Christian. Salmon does not seem to be justified in supposing that Malalas
ascribes any of this information to Theophilus, the second century Bishop of
Antioch. We may be sure that Evodius is an historical personage, and really the
predecessor of St. Ignatius. But the dates of his ordination and death are quite
uncertain. No early witness makes him a martyr.
The Greeks commemorate together Evodus
and Onesiphorus (II Tim., i, 16) as
of the seventy disciples and as martyrs on 29 April, and also on 7 September.
Evodius was unknown to the earlier Western martyrologies the Hieronymian, and
those of Bede and Florus; but Ado introduced him into the so-called
Martyrologium Romanum parvum
(which he forged not long before 860) and into
his own work, on 6 May. His source was Pseudo-Ignatius, whom he quotes in the
Libellus de fest. Apost.
, prefixed to the martyrology proper. From him the
notice came to Usuard and the rest, and to the present Roman Martyrology.
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