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Amphilochius of Iconium
A Christian bishop of the fourth century, son of a Cappadocian family of
distinction, b. perhaps at Cæsarea, c. 339 or 340; d. probably some time between
394 and 403. His father was an eminent lawyer, and his mother Livia remarkable
for gentleness and wisdom. He was probably first cousin to Gregory of Nazianzus,
and was brought up in the peculiarly religious atmosphere of the Christian
aristocracy of his native province. He studied for the bar, practised at
Constantinople, but soon retired to lead a religious life in the vicinity of his
friend and relative, the theologian
of Nazianzus. He was soon drawn within the
circle of St. Basil's influence, and seems to have been for a while a member of
the Christian City of the Poor
that Basil had built at Cæsarea. Early in 374
he was bishop of the important see of Iconium, probably placed there by Basil,
whom he continued to aid in Cappadocian ecclesiastical affairs until Basil's
death (379). Thenceforth he remained in close relations with Gregory of
Nazianzus, and accompanied him to the Synod of Constantinople (381), where St.
Jerome met and conversed with him (De Vir. Ill., c. 133). In the history of
theology he occupies a place of prominence for his defence of the divinity of
the Holy Spirit against the Macedonians (q.v.). It was to him that St. Basil
dedicated his work On the Holy Spirit
. He wrote a similar work, now lost. We
know, however, that he read it to St. Jerome on the occasion of their meeting at
Constantinople. His attitude towards Arianism is illustrated by the well-known
anecdote concerning his audience with Theodosius and his son Arcadius. When the
Emperor rebuked him for ignoring the presence of his son, he reminded him that
the Lord of the universe abhorreth those who are ungrateful towards His Son,
their Saviour and Benefactor. He was very energetic against the Messalians, and
contributed to the extirpation of that heresy. His contemporaries rated him very
high as a theologian and a scholarly writer. Not to speak of his admirers and
friends already mentioned, St. Jerome says (Ep. 70) of the Cappadocian triad
(Basil, Gregory, and Amphilochius) that they cram their books with the lessons
and sentences of the philosophers to such an extent that you cannot tell which
you ought to admire most in them, their secular erudition or their scriptural
knowledge
. In the next generation Theodoret described him in very flattering
terms (Hist. Eccl., IV, x; V, xvi), and he is quoted by councils as late as 787.
His only genuine extant work is, according to Bardenhewer (Patrologie, p. 249),
the Epistola Synodica
, a letter against the Macedonian heresy in the name of
the bishops of Lycaonia, and probably addressed to the bishops of Lycia
(Goldhorn, S. Basil., Opp. Sel. Dogm., 630-635). The spurious Iambics to
Seleucus
offer an early and important catalogue of the canonical writings;
other spurious fragments, current under his name, are taken from scriptural
discourses, dogmatic letters and controversial writings (P.G., XXXIX, 13-130).
FESSLER-JUNGMANN, Instit. Patrolog., I, 600-604; LIGHTFOOT in Dict. of Christ. Biogr., I, 103-107.
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