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Pope St. Marcellus I
His date of birth unknown; elected pope in May or June, 308; died in 309. For
some time after the death of Marcellinus in 304 the Diocletian persecution
continued with unabated severity. After the abdication of Diocletian in 305, and
the accession in Rome of Maxentius to the throne of the Caesars in October of
the following year, the Christians of the capital again enjoyed comparative
peace. Nevertheless, nearly two years passed before a new Bishop of Rome was
elected. Then in 308, according to the Catalogus Liberianus
, Pope Marcellus
first entered on his office: Fuit temporibus Maxenti a cons. X et Maximiano
usque post consulatum X et septimum
(Liber Pontif.
, ed. Duchesne, I, 6-7).
This abbreviated notice is to be read: A cons. Maximiano Herculio X et
Maximiano Galerio VII [308] usque post cons. Maxim. Herc. X et Maxim. Galer. VII
[309]
(cf. de Rossi, Inscriptiones christ. urbis Romæ
, I, 30). At Rome,
Marcellus found the Church in the greatest confusion. The meeting-places and
some of the burial-places of the faithful had been confiscated, and the ordinary
life and activity of the Church was interrupted. Added to this were the
dissensions within the Church itself, caused by the large number of weaker
members who had fallen away during the long period of active persecution and
later, under the leadership of an apostate, violently demanded that they should
be readmitted to communion without doing penance. According to the Liber
Pontificalis
Marcellus divided the territorial administration of the Church
into twenty-five districts (tituli), appointing over each a presbyter, who saw
to the preparation of the catechumens for baptism and directed the performance
of public penances. The presbyter was also made responsible for the burial of
the dead and for the celebrations commemorating the deaths of the martyrs. The
pope also had a new burial-place, the Cmeterium Novell on the Via Salaria
(opposite the Catacomb of St. Priscilla), laid out. The Liber Pontificalis
(ed.
Duchesne, I, 164) says: Hic fecit cymiterium Novellae via Salaria et XXV
titulos in urbe Roma constituit quasi dicesis propter baptismum et pnitentiam
multorum qui convertebantur ex paganis et propter sepulturas Inartyrum
. At the
beginning of the seventh century there were probably twenty-five titular
churches in Rome; even granting that, perhaps, the compiler of the Liber
Pontificalis
referred this number to the time of Marcellus, there is still a
clear historical tradition in support of his declaration that the ecclesiastical
administration in Rome was reorganized by this pope after the great persecution.
The work of the pope was, however, quickly interrupted by the controversies
to which the question of the readmittance of the lapsi into the Church gave rise.
As to this, we gather some light from the poetic tribute composed by Damasus in
memory of his predecessor and placed over his grave (De Rossi, Inscr. christ.
urbis Romæ
, II, 62, 103, 138; cf. Idem, Roma sotterranea
, II, 204-5). Damasus
relates that the truth-loving leader of the Roman Church was looked upon as a
wicked enemy by all the lapsed, because he insisted that they should perform the
prescribed penance for their guilt. As a result serious conflicts arose, some of
which ended in bloodshed, and every bond of peace was broken. At the head of
this band of the unfaithful and rebellious stood an apostate who had denied the
Faith even before the outbreak of persecution. The tyrannical Maxentius had the
pope seized and sent into exile. This took place at the end of 308 or the
beginning of 309 according to the passages cited above from the Catalogus
Liberianus
, which gives the length of the pontificate as no more than one year,
six (or seven) months, and twenty days. Marcellus died shortly after leaving
Rome, and was venerated as a saint. His feast-day was 16 January, according to
the Depositio episcoporum
of the Chronography
of 354 and every other Roman
authority. Nevertheless, it is not known whether this is the date of his death
or that of the burial of his remains, after these had been brought back from the
unknown quarter to which he had been exiled. He was buried in the catacomb of St.
Priscilla where his grave is mentioned by the itineraries to the graves of the
Roman martyrs as existing in the basilica of St. Silvester (De Rossi, Roma
sotterranea
, I, 176)
A fifth-century Passio Marcelli
, which is included in the legendary account
of the martyrdom of St. Cyriacus (cf. Acta Sanct., Jan., II, 369) and is
followed by the Liber Pontificalis
, gives a different account of the end of
Marcellus. According to this version, the pope was required by Maxentius, who
was enraged at his reorganization of the Church, to lay aside his episcopal
dignity and make an offering to the gods. On his refusal, he was condemned to
work as a slave at a station on the public highway (catabulum). At the end of
nine months he was set free by the clergy; but a matron named Lucina having had
her house on the Via Lata consecrated by him as titulus Marcelli
he was again
condemned to the work of attending to the horses brought into the station, in
which menial occupation he died. All this is probably legendary, the reference
to the restoration of ecclesiastical activity by Marcellus alone having an
historical basis. The tradition related in the verses of Damasus seems much more
worthy of belief. The feast of St. Marcellus, whose name is to this day borne by
the church at Rome mentioned in the above legend, is still celebrated on 16
January. There still remains to be mentioned Mommsen's peculiar view that
Marcellus was not really a bishop, but a simple Roman presbyter to whom was
committed the ecclesiastical administration during the latter part of the period
of vacancy of the papal chair. According to this view, 16 January was really the
date of Marcellunus's death, the next occupant of the chair being Eusebius
(Neues Archiv, 1896, XXI, 350-3). This hypothesis has, however, found no support.
Liber Pontif., ed. DUCHESNE, I, 164-6; cf. Introduction, xcix-c; Acta SS., Jan., II, 369; LANGEN, Gesch. der röm. Kirche, I, 379 sqq.; ALLARD, Hist. des persécutions, V, 122-4; DUCHESNE, Hist. ancienne de l'Eglise, II, 95-7.
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