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Pope St. Zosimus
(Reigned 417-18).
Year of birth unknown; died 27 December, 418. After the death of Pope Innocent I on 12 March, 417, Zosimus was elected his successor.
According to the Liber Pontificalis
Zosimus was a Greek and his father's
name was Abram. Harnack (Sitzungsberichte der Berliner Akademie, 1904, 1050)
wished to deduce from this name that the family was of Jewish origin, but the
statements of the Liber Pontificalis
in respect to the families of the popes
of this period cannot always be regarded as exact (Duchesne, Histoire ancienne
de l'église
, 111, 228, note).
Nothing is known of the life of Zosimus before his elevation to the papal see. His consecration as Bishop of Rome took place on 18 March, 417. The festival was attended by Patroclus, Bishop of Arles, who had been raised to that see in place of Bishop Hero, who had been forcibly and unjustly removed by the imperial general Constantine. Patroclus gained the confidence of the new pope at once; as early as 22 March he received a papal letter which conferred upon him the rights of a metropolitan over all the bishops of the Gallic provinces of Viennensis and Narbonensis I and II. In addition he was made a kind of papal vicar for the whole of Gaul, no Gallic ecclesiastic being permitted to journey to Rome without bringing with him a certificate of identity from Patroclus.
In the year 400 Arles had been substituted for Trier as the residence of the
chief government official of the civil Diocese of Gaul, the Prefectus Praetorio
Galliarum
. Patroclus, who enjoyed the support of the commander Constantine,
used this opportunity to procure for himself the position of supremacy above
mentioned, by winning over Zosimus to his ideas. The bishops of Vienne, Narbonne,
and Marseilles regarded this elevation of the See of Arles as an infringement of
their rights, and raised objections which occasioned several letters from
Zosimus. The dispute, however, was not settled until the pontificate of Pope Leo
I (see AIX). Not long after the election of Zosimus the Pelagian Coelestius, who
had been condemned by the preceding pope, Innocent I, came to Rome to justify
himself before the new pope, having been expelled from Constantinople. In the
summer of 417 Zosimus held a meeting of the Roman clergy in the Basilica of St.
Clement before which Coelestius appeared. The propositions drawn up by the
deacon Paulinus of Milan, on account of which Coelestius had been condemned at
Carthage in 411, were laid before him. Coelestius refused to condemn these
propositions, at the same time declaring in general that he accepted the
doctrine expounded in the letters of Pope Innocent and making a confession of
faith which was approved. The pope was won over by the shrewdly calculated
conduct of Coelestius, and said that it was not certain whether the heretic had
really maintained the false doctrine rejected by Innocent, and that therefore he
considered the action of the African bishops against Coelestius too hasty. He
wrote at once in this sense to the bishops of the African province, and called
upon those who had anything to bring against Coelestius to appear at Rome within
two months. Soon after this Zosimus received from Pelagius also an artfully
expressed confession of faith, together with a new treatise by the heretic on
free will. The pope held a new synod of the Roman clergy, before which both
these writings were read. The skilfully chosen expressions of Pelagius concealed
the heretical contents; the assembly held the statements to be orthodox, and
Zosimus again wrote to the African bishops defending Pelagius and reproving his
accusers, among whom were the Gallic bishops Hero and Lazarus. Archbishop
Aurelius of Carthage quickly called a synod, which sent a letter to Zosimus in
which it was proved that the pope had been deceived by the heretics. In his
answer Zosimus declared that he had settled nothing definitely, and wished to
settle nothing without consulting the African bishops. After the new synodal
letter of the African council of 1 May, 418, to the pope, and after the steps
taken by the Emperor Honorius against the Pelagians, Zosimus recognized the true
character of the heretics. He now issued his Tractoria
, in which Pelagianism
and its authors were condemned. Thus, finally, the occupant of the Apostolic See
at the right moment maintained with all authority the traditional dogma of the
Church, and protected the truth of the Church against error.
Shortly after this Zosimus became involved in a dispute with the African bishops in regard to the right of appeal to the Roman See clerics who had been condemned by their bishops. When the priest Apiarius of Sicca had been excommunicated by his bishop on account of his crimes he appealed directly to the pope, without regard to the regular course of appeal in Africa which was exactly prescribed. The pope at once accepted the appeal, and sent legates with letters to Africa to investigate the matter. A wiser course would have been to have first referred Apiarius to the ordinary course of appeal in Africa itself. Zosimus next made the further mistake of basing his action on a reputed canon of the Council of Nicaea, which was in reality a canon of the Council of Sardica. In the Roman manuscripts the canons of Sardica followed those of Nicaea immediately, without an independent title, while the African manuscripts contained only the genuine canons of Nicaea, so that the canon appealed to by Zosimus was not contained in the African copies of the Nicene canons. Thus a serious disagreement arose over this appeal, which continued after the death of Zosimus.
Besides the writings of the pope already mentioned, there are extant other
letters to the bishops of the Byzantine province in Africa, in regard to a
deposed bishop, and to the bishops of Gaul and Spain in respect to
Priscillianism and ordination to the different grades of the clergy. The Liber
Pontificalis
attributes to Zosimus a Decree on the wearing of the maniple by
deacons and on the dedication of Easter candles in the country parishes; also a
Decree forbidding clerics to visit taverns. Zosimus was buried in the sepulchral
Church of St. Laurence in Agro Verano (cf. De Rossi, Bulletino di arch.
christ.
, 1881, 91 sqq.).
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, I, 225; JAFFE, Regesta Rom. Pont., 2nd ed., I, 49 sqq.; DUCHESNE, Hist. ancienne de l'eglise, III, 227 sqq.; IDEM, Fastes episcopaux de l'ancienne Gaule, I (Paris, 1891), 93 sqq.; GRISAR, Geschichte Roms und der Päpste im Mittelalter, I, 285 sq., 288 sq.; LANGEN, Geschichte der römischen Kirche, I (Bonn, 1881), 742 sqq.; HEFELE, Konziliengeschichte, II, 114 sqq., 120 sqq.
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