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Post by Elizabeth on Feb 18, 2019 15:39:51 GMT
St. Flavian (449) -Bishop, Patriarch, Martyr
Feast Day February 18th
St. Flavian was patriarch of Constantinople, and he was hated by the Emperor Theodosius II's chancellor, partly because he would not give Church money to the Emperor. In 448, St. Flavian held a synod that condemned the abbot Eutyches for denying that Jesus Christ had two distinct natures, a denial that was the beginning of the Monophysite heresy. Eutyches then appealed to Pope Leo I, but the pope sustained the decision and wrote his "Leo's Tome" to St. Flavian, a letter expounding the orthodox position on the matter. The emperor called another council at Ephesus in 449, which St. Leo later called a "robber synod." Conducted in open violence, it unjustly deposed St. Flavian and Eusebius, Eutyches' accuser in 448. St. Flavian was beaten so severely that he dies days later in his place of exile. In 451, the Council of Chalcedon vindicated St. Flavian, reinstated Eusebius and exiled the bishop of Alexandria, who had supported the heresy. St. Pulcheria had St. Flavian's body brought back to Constantinople and buried with those of his predecessors.
(Taken from Saints Calendar and 16-Month Planner by Tan)
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