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Pope St. Celestine I
Nothing is known of his early history except that he was a Roman and that his father's name was Priscus. He is said to have lived for a time at Milan with St. Ambrose; the first notice, however, concerning him that is known is in a document of St. Innocent I, in the year 416, where he is spoken of as Celestine the Deacon. In 418 St. Augustine wrote to him (Epist., lxii) in very reverential language. He succeeded St. Boniface I as pope, 10 Sept., 422 (according to Tillemont, though the Bollandists say 3 Nov.), and died 26 July, 432, having reigned nine years, ten months, and sixteen days. In spite of the troublous times at Rome, he was elected without any opposition, as is learned from a letter of St. Augustine (Epist., cclxi), written to him shortly after his elevation, in which the great doctor begs his assistance in composing his difficulties with Antonius, Bishop of Fessula in Africa. A strong friendship seems to have existed between Celestine and Augustine, and after the death of the latter in 430, Celestine wrote a long letter to the bishops of Gaul on the sanctity, learning and zeal of the holy doctor, and forbade all attacks upon his memory on the part of the Semipelagians, who under the leadership of the famous ascetic, John Cassian, were then beginning to gain influence. Though his lot was cast in stormy times, for the Manichaeans, Donatists, Noviatians, and Pelagians were troubling the peace of the Church, while the barbarian hordes were beginning their inroads into the heart of the empire, Celestine's firm but gentle character enabled him to meet successfully all the exigencies of his position. We see him everywhere upholding the rights of the Church and the dignity of his office. In this he was aided by Placidia, who, in the name of her youthful son, Valentinian III, banished from Rome the Manichaeans and other heretics who were disturbing the peace. Celestine not only excluded Coelestius, the companion and chief disciple of Pelagius, from Italy, but procured the further condemnation of the sect from the Council of Ephesus, while through his instrumentality St. Germanus of Auxerre and St. Lupus of Troyes, who had been sent to Britain in 429, the native land of Pelagius, by the Gallic bishops, succeeded in extirpating the error from its native soil.
A firm upholder of the ancient canons, we find Celestine writing to the
bishops of Illyria, bidding them observe the canons and their old allegiance to
the Bishop of Thessalonica, the papal vicar, without whom they are not to
consecrate any bishop or hold any council. He also writes to the Bishops of
Vienne and Narbonne, whom he warns to keep the ancient canons, and, in
accordance with the warning of his predecessor, to resist the pretensions of the
See of Arles. Moreover they must not refuse to admit to penance those who desire
it at the moment of death; bishops, too, must not dress as monks, and severe
action is to be taken against a certain Daniel, a monk from the Orient who had
been the cause of serious disorders in the Church of Gaul. To the Bishops of
Apulia and Calabria he writes that the clergy must not remain ignorant of the
canons, neither are the laity to be advanced to the episcopate over the heads of
the clergy, nor is the popular will, no matter how strong, to be humoured in
this matter - populus docendus non sequendus. Moreover he threatens severe
penalties for future transgressors. In upholding the rights of the Roman Church
to hear and decide appeals from all quarters, he came for a time into conflict
with the great Church of Africa (see Apiarius). The African bishops, however,
through manifesting some warmth, never called into question the Divine supremacy
of the Holy See, their very language and actions expressed its fullest
recognition; their complaints were directed rather against the sometimes
indiscreet use of the papal prerogative. The last years of the pontificate of
Celestine were taken up with the struggle in the East over the heresy of
Nestorius (see Nestorius; Cyril of Alexandria; Ephesus, Council of). Nestorius
who had become Bishop of Constantinople in 428 at first gave great satisfaction,
as we learn from a letter addressed to him by Celestine. He soon aroused
suspicions of his orthodoxy by receiving kindly the Pelagians banished from Rome
by the pope, and shortly after, rumours of his heretical teaching concerning the
twofold personality of Christ reaching Rome, Celestine commissioned Cyril,
Bishop of Alexandria, to investigate and make a report. Cyril having found
Nestorius openly professing his heresy sent a full account to Celestine, who in
a Roman synod (430), having solemnly condemned the errors of Nestorius, now
ordered Cyril in his name to proceed against Nestorius, who was to be
excommunicated and deposed unless within ten days he should have made in writing
a solemn retractation of his errors. In letters written the same day to
Nestorius, to the clergy and people of Constantinople, and to John of Antioch,
Juvenal of Jerusalem, Rufus of Thessalonica, and Flavian of Philippi, Celestine
announces the sentence passed upon Nestorius and the commission given to Cyril
to execute it. At the same time he restored all who had been excommunicated or
deprived by Nestorius. Cyril forwarded the papal sentence and his own anathema
to Nestorius. The emperor now summoned a general council to meet at Ephesus. To
this council Celestine sent as legates, Arcadius, and Projectus, bishops, and
Philippus, a priest, who were to act in conjunction with Cyril. However, they
were not to mix in discussion but were to judge the opinions of the others.
Celestine in all his letters assumes his own decision as final, Cyril and the
council, compelled by the sacred canons and the letters of Our Most Holy Father,
Celestine, Bishop of the Roman Church.
The last official act of Celestine, the sending of St. Patrick to Ireland,
perhaps surpasses all the rest in its far-reaching consequences for good. He had
already sent (431) Palladius as bishop to the Scots [i.e. Irish] believing in
Christ.
But Palladius son abandoned Ireland and died the year following in
Britain. St. Patrick, who had previously been refused, now received the
long-coveted commission only a few days before the death of Celestine, who thus
becomes a sharer in the conversion of the race that in the next few centuries
was to accomplish such vast works by its countless missionaries and scholars in
the conversion and civilization of the barbarian world. In the local affairs of
the Roman Church, Celestine manifested great zeal. He restored and embellished
the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere, which had suffered from the Gothic
pillage of Rome, also the church of St. Sabina, besides decorating the Cemetery
of St. Priscilla with paintings of the Council Ephesus. The precise date of his
death is uncertain. His feast is kept in the Latin Church on 6 April, the day on
which his body was placed in the Catacombs of St. Priscilla whence it was
transferred in 820 by Pope St. Paschal I to the church of Sta Prassede, though
the cathedral of Mantua likewise claims his relics. In the Greek Church where he
is highly honoured for his condemnation of Nestorius, his feast falls on 8 April.
The extant writings of St. Celestine consist of sixteen letters, the contents
of many of which have been indicated above, and a fragment of a discourse on
Nestorianism delivered in the Roman Synod of 430. The Capitula Coelestini
, the
ten decisions on the subject of grace which have played such a part in the
history of Augustinianism, are no longer attributed to his authorship. For
centuries they were affixed as an integral part to his letter to the Bishops of
Gaul, but at present are considered as most probably the work of St. Prosper of
Aquitaine. Anastasius Bibliothecarius attributes to him several other
constitutions but with little authority. Doubtful also is the statement of the
Liber Pontificalis
that Celestine added the Introit to the Mass.
Sancti Celestini Epistolae et Decreta, P.L., L; Acta ss., X; Hefele, History of the Councils, II, III; Duchesne, Liber Pontificalis, I; Grisar, Geschichte Roms und der Papste im Mittelalter (Freiburg im Br., 1898), I; Cardinal de Noris, Historia Pelagiana; Tillemont, Memoires pour servir a l' histoire ecclesiastique, XIV; Natalis Alexander, Historia Ecclesiastica, ed. Roncaglia-Mansi, IX; Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum Amplissima Collectio, IV; Rivington, The Roman Primacy.
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