Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
John the Faster
(o nesteutés, jejunator)
Patriarch of Constantinople (John IV, 582-595), famous chiefly through his
assumption of the title cumenical patriarch
; d. 2 September, 595. He was
brought up (apparently also born) at Constantinople. Under the Patriarch John
III (Scholasticus, 565-577) he was deacon at the Hagia Sophia church; then he
became sakellarios (an official who acts as patriarchal vicar for monasteries).
He had little learning, but was so famous for his ascetical life that he was
already called the Faster
. Under Eutychius I (restored to the patriarchate
when John III died, 577-582) he became an important person among the clergy of
the city. At Eutychius's death he was made patriarch by the Emperor Tiberius II
(578-582). Under the next emperor, Maurice (582-602), he was still a favourite
at court. There is little to tell of his life besides the great question of the
title. He is said to have been tolerant towards the Monophysites; but he
persuaded Maurice to have a certain wizard, Paulinus, burnt. He had always a
great reputation for asceticism and charity to the poor.
The dispute about the title was this: it was not new in John IV's time; till
then the Bishop of Constantinople had commonly been called archiepískopos daì
patriárches, but at various times he (and other patriarchs) had been addressed
as oikoumenikòs patriárches. H. Gelzer (Der Streit um den Titel des
ökumenischen Patriarchen) thinks that it became usual in the time of the Acacian
schism (484-519). The first known use of it applied to Constantinople is in a
letter from the monks of Antioch to John II (518-520) in 518. Before that the
Patriarch of Alexandria had been so called by one of his bishops at the Robber
Synod of Ephesus (in the year 449; Gelzer, op. cit., p. 568). Since 518 the
whole combination, archiepískopos kaì oikoumenikòs patriárches, is not
uncommonly used in addresses to the Byzantine patriarchs. But they had not
called themselves so before John IV. There is a real difference between these
two uses of a title. In addresses to other people, particularly superiors, one
may always allow a margin for compliment - especially in Byzantine times. But when
a man uses a title himself he sets up a formal claim to it. In 588 John the
Faster held a synod at Constantinople to examine certain charges against Gregory,
Patriarch of Antioch (in this fact already one sees a sign of the growing
ambition of Constantinople. By what right could Constantinople discuss the
affairs of Antioch?). The Acts of this synod appear to have been sent to Rome;
and Pope Pelagius II (579-590) saw in them that John was described as
archbishop and cumenical patriarch
. It may be that this was the first time
that the use of the title was noticed at Rome; it appears, in any case, to be
the first time it was used officially as a title claimed - not merely a vague
compliment. Pelagius protested against the novelty and forbade his legate at
Constantinople to communicate with John. His letter is not extant. We know of it
from Gregory's letters later (Epp., V, xliii, in P. L., LXXVII, 771).
St. Gregory I (599-604), who succeeded Pelagius II, was at first on good
terms with John IV. He had known him at Constantinople while he had been legate
(apocrisiarius) there (578-584), and had sent him notice of his succession as
pope in a friendly letter (Epp., I, iv, in P. L., LXXVII, 447). It has been
thought that the John to whom he dedicates his Regula pastoralis
is John of
Constantinople (others think it to be John of Ravenna, Bardenhewer, Patrology
,
tr Shahan, St. Louis, 1908, p. 652). But in 593 this affair of the new and
arrogant title provoked a serious dispute. It should be noticed that Gregory was
still old-fashioned enough to cling to the theory of three patriarchates only,
although officially he accepted the five (Fortescue, Orthodox Eastern Church
,
p. 44). He was therefore not well-disposed towards Constantinople as a
patriarchate at all. That it should claim to be the universal one seemed to him
unheard-of insolence. John had cruelly scourged two priests accused of heresy.
They appealed to the pope. In the correspondence that ensued John assumed this
title of cumenical patriarch in almost every line
of his letter (Epp., V,
xviii, in P. L., LXXVII, 738). Gregory protested vehemently against it in a long
correspondence addressed first to John, then to the Emperor Maurice, the Empress
Constantina, and others. He argues that if one patriarch is called universal
the title is thereby taken from the others
(Epp., V, xviii, ibid., 740). It is
a special effrontery for the Byzantine bishop, whose existence as a patriarch at
all is new and still uncertain (Rome had refused to accept the third canon of
the First Council of Constantinople and the twenty-eighth canon of Chalcedon),
to assume such a title as this. It further argues independence of any superior;
whereas, says Gregory, who doubts that the Church of Constantinople is subject
to the Apostolic See?
(Epp., IX, xii, ibid., 957); and again: I know of no
bishop who is not subject to the Apostolic See
(ibid.).
The pope expressly disclaims the name universal
for any bishop, including
himself. He says that the Council of Chalcedon had wanted to give it to Leo I,
but he had refused it (Epp., V, xviii, ibid., 740, xx, 747, etc.). This idea
rests on a misconception (Hefele-Leclercq, Histoire des Conciles
, II, Paris,
1908, pp. 834-5), but his reason for resenting the title in any bishop is
obvious throughout his letters. He understood it as an exclusion of all the
others [privative quoad omnes alios] so that he who calls himself cumenic, that
is, universal, thinks all other patriarchs and bishops to be private persons and
himself the only pastor of the inhabited earth
(so Horace Giustiniani at the
Council of Florence; Hergenröther, Photius
, I, 184). For this reason Gregory
does not spare his language in denouncing it. It is diabolical arrogance
(Epp.,
V, xx, in P. L., XXVII, 746, xxi, 750, etc.); he who so calls himself is
antichrist. Opposed to it Gregory assumed the title borne ever since by his
successors. He refuted the name 'universal' and first of all began to write
himself 'servant of the servants of God' at the beginning of his letters, with
sufficient humility, leaving to all his successors this hereditary evidence of
his meekness
(Johannes Diaconus, Vita S. Gregorii
, II, i, in P. L., LXV, 87).
Nevertheless the patriarchs of Constantinople kept their cumenical
title till
it became part of their official style. The Orthodox patriarch subscribes
himself still Archbishop of Constantinople, New Rome, and cumenical Patriarch
.
But it is noticeable that even Photius (d. 891) never dared use the word when
writing to Rome. The Catholic Church has never admitted it. It became a symbol
of Byzantine arrogance and the Byzantine schism. In 1024 the Emperor Basil II
(963-1025) tried to persuade Pope John XIX (1024-1033) to acknowledge it. The
pope seems to have been ready to do so, but an outburst of indignation
throughout the West and a stern letter from Abbot William of Dijon made him
think better of it (Fortescue, Orthodox Eastern Church
, p. 167). Later again,
at the time of the final schism, Pope Leo IX writes to Michael Cærularius of
Constantinople (in 1053): How lamentable and detestable is the sacrilegious
usurpation by which you everywhere boast yourself to be the Universal Patriarch
(op. cit., p. 182). No Catholic bishop since then has ever dared assume this
title.
With regard to the issue, one should note first that Gregory knew no Greek.
He saw the words only in a Latin version: Patriarcha universalis, in which they
certainly sound more scandalous than in Greek. How he understood them is plain
from his letters. They seem to mean that all jurisdiction comes from one bishop,
that all other bishops are only his vicars and delegates. Catholic theology does
not affirm this of the pope or anyone. Diocesan bishops have ordinary, not
delegate, jurisdiction; they receive their authority immediately from Christ,
though they may use it only in the communion of the Roman See. It is the whole
difference between diocesan ordinaries and vicars Apostolic. All bishops are not
Apostolic vicars of the pope. Nor has any pope ever assumed the title universal
bishop
, though occasionally they have been so called in complimentary addresses
from other persons. The accusation, then, that Gregory's successors have usurped
the title that he so resented is false.
Whether John IV or other patriarchs of Constantinople really meant to advance
so arrogant a claim is another question. Oikoumenikòs patriárches in Greek is
susceptible of a milder interpretation. E Oikoumènes chóra was long a name for
the civilized, cultivated land of the Greeks, as opposed to the wild country of
the barbarians. It was then often used for the Roman Empire. It is at least
probable that the clause upèr tês oikouménes in the Greek Intercession of the
Byzantine Liturgy means the empire
(Fortescue, Liturgy of St. Chrysostom
,
London, 1908, p. 106). It may be, then that oikoumenikòs patriárches meant no
more than imperial patriarch
, as the Greeks of Constantinople told Anastasius
Bibliothecarius of the time of Photius (see his statement in Gelzer, op. cit., p.
572). Kattenbusch (Konfessionskunde, I, 116) thinks it should be translated
Reichspatriarch. Even so it is still false. The Patriarch of Constantinople had
no sort of claim over the whole empire. The most that can be allowed is that if
ecumenical
means only imperial
, and if imperial
means only of the
imperial court
, the title (in this case equal to court patriarch
) is no worse
than a foolish example of vanity. But even in Greek this interpretation is by no
means obvious. In Greek, too, an cumenical synod
is one that has authority
for the whole Church; the cumenic doctors
(St. Basil, St. Gregory of
Nazianzus, St. John Chrysostom) are those whose teaching must be followed by all.
Pichler's comparison with the form catholic bishop
(Geschichte der
kirchlichen Trennung
, II, Munich, 1865, pp. 647 sq.) is absurd. The humblest
member of the Church is (in any language) a Catholic; in no language could he be
called cumenical.
Another dispute between John and Gregory was about some relics, especially
the head of St. Paul, that the Court of Constantinople wanted the pope to send
to them. Gregory would not part with them; eventually he sent part of St. Paul's
chains. The works in Migne attributed to John the Faster [a treatise on
Confession (P. G., LXXXVIII, 1889-1918), a shorter work on the same subject
(ibid., 1919-1932), Of Penance, Temperance, and Virginity
(ibid., 1937-1978)]
are not authentic. No authentic works of his are extant. He has often been
confused with a certain Cappadocian monk, John the Faster, who came to
Constantinople about the year 1100. The patriarch, at his death, left no
property but a cloak, a blanket, and a praying-stool, which the emperor kept as
relics. The Orthodox Church has canonized him and keeps his feast on 2 September.
One of his clergy, PROTINOS, wrote his life soon after his death. Fragments of this are preserved in the Acts of the Second Council of Nicæa, for which see MANSI, XIII, 80-85; LEQUIEN, Oriens Christianus, I (Paris, 1740), 226; GEDEON, Patriarchikoì Pìnakes (Constantinople, 1890), 232-36; HERGENRÖTHER, Photius, I (Ratisbon, 1867), 178-90; GRISAR, Oekumenischer Patriarch und Diener der Diener Gottes in Zeitschrift für kath. Theologie, IV (Innsbruck, 1880), 468-523; GELZER, Der Streit um den Titel des ökumenischen Patriarchen in Jahrbücher für prot. Theologie, XIII (1887), 549-584; KATTENBUSCH, Konfessionskunde, I (Freiburg im Br., 1892), 111-17.
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