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Pope St. Fabian
(FABIANUS)
Pope (236-250), the extraordinary circumstances of whose election is related
by Eusebius (Hist. Eccl., VI, 29). After the death of Anterus he had come to
Rome, with some others, from his farm and was in the city when the new election
began. While the names of several illustrious and noble persons were being
considered, a dove suddenly descended upon the head of Fabian, of whom no one
had even thought. To the assembled brethren the sight recalled the Gospel scene
of the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Saviour of mankind, and so, divinely
inspired, as it were, they chose Fabian with joyous unanimity and placed him in
the Chair of Peter. During his reign of fourteen years there was a lull in the
storm of persecution. Little is known of his pontificate. The Liber
Pontificalis
says that he divided Rome into seven districts, each supervised by
a deacon, and appointed seven subdeacons, to collect, in conjunction with other
notaries, the acta
of the martyrs, i.e. the reports of the court-proceedings
on the occasion of their trials (cf. Eus., VI, 43). There is a tradition that he
instituted the four minor orders. Under him considerable work was done in the
catacombs. He caused the body of Pope St. Pontianus to be exhumed, in Sardinia,
and transferred to the catacomb of St. Callistus at Rome. Later accounts, more
or less trustworthy, attribute to him the consecration (245) of seven bishops as
missionaries to Gaul, among them St. Denys of Paris (Greg. of Tours, Hist.
Francor., I, 28, 31). St. Cyprian mentions (Ep., 59) the condemnation by Fabian
for heresy of a certain Privatus (Bishop of Lambaesa) in Africa. The famous
Origen did not hesitate to defend, before Fabian, the orthodoxy of his teaching
(Eus. Hist. Eccl., VI, 34). Fabian died a martyr (20 Jan., 250) at the beginning
of the Decian persecution, and was buried in the Crypt of the Popes in the
catacomb of St. Callistus, where in recent times (1850) De Rossi discovered his
Greek epitaph (Roma Sotterranea II, 59): Fabian, bishop and martyr.
The
decretals ascribed to him in Pseudo-Isidore are apocryphal.
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