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Pope St. Felix III
(Reigned 483-492). Born of a Roman senatorial family and said to have been an ancestor of Saint Gregory the Great. Nothing certain is known of Felix, till he succeeded St. Simplicitus in the Chair of Peter (483). At that time the Church was still in the midst of her long conflict with the Eutychian heresy. In the preceding year, the Emperor Zeno, at the suggestion of Acacius, the perfidious Patriarch of Constantinoble, had issued an edict known as the Hereticon or Act of Union, in which he declared that no symbol of faith, other than that of Nice, with the additions of 381, should be received. The edict was intended as a bond of reconciliation between Catholics and Eutychians, but it caused greater conflicts than ever, and split the Church of the East into three or four parties. As the Catholics everywhere spurned the edict, the emperor had driven the Patriarchs of Antioch and Alexandria from their sees. Peter the Tanner, a notorious heretic, had again intruded himself into the See of Antioch, and Peter Mongus, who was to be the real source of trouble during the pontificate of Felix, had seized that of Alexandria. In his first synod Felix excommunicated Peter the Tanner, who was likewise condemned by Acacius in a synod of Constantinoble. In 484, Felix also excommunicated Peter Mongus - an act, which brought about a schism between East and West, that was not healed for thirty-five years. This Peter, being a time-server and of a crafty deposition, ingratiated himself with the emperor and Acacius by subscribing to the Henoticon, and was thereupon, to the displeasure of many of the bishops, admitted to communion by Acacius.
Felix, having convened a synod, sent legates to the emperor and Acacius, with
the request that they should expel Peter Mongus from Alexandria and that Acacius
himself should come to Rome to explain his conduct. The legates were detained
and imprisoned; then urged by threats and promises, they held communion with the
heretics by distinctly uttering the name of Peter in the readings of the sacred
diptychs. When their treason was made known at Rome by Simeon, one of the
Acaemeti
monks, Felix convened a synod of seventy-seven bishops in the Lateran
Basilica, in which Acacius as well as the papal legates were also excommunicated.
Supported by the emperor Acacius disregarded the excommunication, removed the
pope's name from the sacred diptychs, and remained in the see till his death,
which took place one or two years later. His successor Phravitas, sent
messengers to Fe!ix, assuring him that he would not hold communion with Peter,
but, the pope learning that this was a deception, the schism continued. Peter,
having died in the meantime Ethymus who succeeded Phravitas, also sought
communion with Rome, but the pope refused, as Euthymius would not remove the
names of his two predecessors from the sacred diptychs. The schism, known as the
Acacian Schism was not finally healed till 518 in the reign of Justinian. In
Africa the Arian Vandals, Genseric and his son Huneric had been persecuting the
Church for more than 50 years and had driven many Catholics into exile. When
peace was restored, numbers of those who through fear had fallen into heresy and
had been rebaptized by the Arians desired to return to the Church. On being
repulsed by those who had remained firm, they appealed to Felix who convened a
synod in 487, and sent a letter to the bishops of Africa, expounding the
conditions under which they were to be received back. Felix died in 492, having
reigned eight years, eleven months and twenty-three days.
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