13
August 236 A.D. Remains of Hippolytus the Anti-Pope
The believers from the City of Rome were solemn.
Under persecution, many Christians had been killed at various times.
"Witnesses," they called these martyrs. The bodies of two witnesses
who died in exile had come home on this day, August 13, 236.*
When Maximinus Thrax was Roman
emperor, he exiled Pontianus and Hippolytus to the island of Sardinia where
they probably slaved in the mines. There they died, but now their remains had
been brought back for a decent burial. Pontianus, who had been Bishop of Rome
until his exile, was laid in the tomb of Callistus, an earlier Bishop of Rome
(they would come to be known as popes, from the Italian for
"father"). Hippolytus, who had also been a bishop in or near Rome,
was buried somewhere along the Tiburtine Road.
Of the two, Hippolytus' story is
more interesting because we know next to nothing about Pontianus. Hippolytus
was the most important theologian of the Roman Church up to that time, although
his work was shelved for centuries afterward because it was written in Greek
which the people of the West forgot how to read. One of his books was against
heresy. In it he explained what the Gnostics (who believed they were saved by
secret knowledge) and other groups taught and showed where they went wrong.
This would be enough to make
Hippolytus worth remembering. But above all that, his case is often cited in
arguments regarding the authority of the Roman Church and its claim that popes
are infallible when speaking ex cathedra.
To begin with, Hippolytus was a
"great-grandson" of St. John the Apostle. That is, we can trace his
line of apostolic succession directly to John. He was commissioned by St.
Irenaeus, who was commissioned by Polycarp, who was commissioned by (or at
least personally knew) St. John himself. So there can be no question about his
legitimacy as a bishop.
From the fourth century on, the
Roman Church venerated Hippolytus as a saint. Even popes have acknowledged him
as a saint. Yet he was also the first antipope (one "illegally"
elected at the same time).
How could this be? Hippolytus
spoke out strongly against the wrongdoing, cruelty and doctrinal errors of the
bishops of Rome. This struck a responsive chord with the Roman population, who
elected him Bishop of Rome in opposition to Bishop Callistus. Hippolytus
continued in opposition to the bishops of Rome until he went into exile. While
in exile, there are indications that he was reconciled with Pontianus.
Hippolytus was an expert on
heresy. The fact that he insisted that some of the popes of his day were
heretics was a strong reason that many scholars could not agree when the
Vatican Council declared the popes infallible in 1870.
In the sixteenth century,
workmen digging near an ancient church on the Tiburtine Road uncovered a marble
statue. This was of a bishop seated in a chair, wearing a pallium (a cloth that
symbolizes full episcopal authority). Pope Pius IV declared it to be Saint
Hippolytus. Carved on the back of the chair were a list of Hippolytus'
writings.
*Although the day seems fairly
secure, the year is open to question.
Bibliography
1. Aland, Kurt. Saints and Sinners; men and ideas in the early church.
Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1970.
2. The Ante-Nicene fathers: translations of the writings of the fathers
down to A.D. 325. Edited by Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson.
American reprint of the Edinburgh edition. Revised and chronologically
arranged, with brief prefaces and occasional notes, by A. Cleveland Coxe. New
York : Scribner's, 1926.
3. Durant, Will. Caesar and Christ. New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1944; especially at pp. 617-18.
4. Hippolytus. The Apostolic tradition of Hippolytus, translated into
English with introduction and notes by Burton Scott Easton.
Cambridge [Eng.] The University press, 1934.
5. Kirsch, J. P. "St. Hippolytus of Rome." Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Appleton, 1914.
6. Rostovtzeff, M. Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire. Oxford:
Clarendon, 1926.
7. Various church histories, web articles, and histories of the popes.
Last update June,
2007
No comments:
Post a Comment