Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Nectarius
(Nechtarios), Patriarch of Constantinople, (381-397), died 27 Sept, 397,
eleventh bishop of that city since Metrophanes, and may be counted its first
patriarch. He came frorn Tarsus of a senatorial family and was praetor at
Constantinople at the time of the second general council (381). When St. Gregory
Nazianzen resigned his occupation of that see the people called for Nectarius to
succeed him and their choice as ratified by the Council (Socrates, H.E.
, V),
before August, 381. Sozomen (H.E., VII, 8) adds that Nectorius, about to return
to Tarsus, asked Diodorus, Bishop of Tarsus, if he could carry any letters for
him. Diodorus, who saw that his visitor was the most suitable person to become
Bishop of Constantinoble, persuaded Meletius, Bishop of Antioch, to add his name
to the list of candidates presented by the council to the emperor. The emperor
then to every one's surprise, chose Nectarius, who was not yet baptized, and in
neophyte's robe he was consecrated bishop. Tillemont (Mémoires, IX, 486) doubts
this story. Soon after Nectarius' election the Council passed the famous third
canon giving Constantinople rank immediately after Rome. A man of no very great
power, Nectarius had an uneventful reign with which St. Gregory was not
altogether pleased (Ep.
88, 91, 151, etc; Tillemont, op. cit., IX, 488).
Suspected of concessions to the Novarians (Socrates, V, 10; Sozomen, VII, I2),
he made none to the Arians, who in 388 burnt his house (Socrates, V, 13).
Palsamon says that in 394 he held a synod at Constantinople which decreed that
no bishop should be deposed without the consent of several other bishops of the
same province (Harduin, I, 955). The most important event, however, is that,
according to Socrates (V, 19) and Sozomen (VII, 16), as a result of a public
scandal Nectarius abolished the discipline of public penance and the office of
penitentiary hitherto held by a priest of his diocese. The incident is important
for the history of Penance. Nectarius preached a sermon about the martyr
Theodore still extant (P.G. XXXIX, 1821-40, Nilles Kalendarium manuale
, II,
96-100). He was succeeded by St. John Chrysostom and appears as St. Nectarius in
the Orthodox Menaion for 11 October (Nilles, op. cit. I, 300; Acta SS
. May, II,
421).
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