13
August 286 A.D. Remembering
Hippolytus; Martyr, “Anti-Pope” &
Expert on Heresy
Editors.
“Saint Hippolytus of Rome.” Encyclopedia Britannica. 22 Mar 2013. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/266682/Saint-Hippolytus-of-Rome. Accessed 14 Aug 2014.
Saint Hippolytus of Rome, (born c. 170—died c.
235, Sardinia; Western feast day August 13, Eastern feast day January
30), Christian martyr who was also the first antipope (217/218–235).
Hippolytus was a leader of the Roman church during the pontificate (c. 199–217) of St. Zephyrinus,
whom he attacked as being a modalist (one who conceives
that the entire Trinity
dwells in Christ and who maintains that the names Father and Son are only
different designations for the same subject). Hippolytus, rather, was a
champion of the Logos doctrine that distinguished the persons of the Trinity.
He conceived of God as a unit who, while indivisible, was plural. In ethics he
was conservative—being scandalized when Calixtus (successor of Zephyrinus) took
measures to extend absolution to graver sins such as adultery—and he regarded
the church as a society composed exclusively of the just.
Although
Hippolytus’ reputation as a scholar and his literary talent were assets to his
cause, the church chose Calixtus
for the papacy when Zephyrinus died. In disgust, Hippolytus withdrew from the Roman
community and headed a dissident group that consecrated
him. He reigned in opposition to the succeeding pontificates of Saints Urban I
(222–230) and Pontian
(230–235), with whom he was exiled to the mines of Sardinia in 235 during the persecution of Christians by the Roman emperor Maximinus. There he became reconciled with Pontian and exhorted his supporters to
unite with Rome. Before dying as martyrs, both resigned to allow for a
successor, St. Anterus
(235–236), thus ending the schism. Pope St. Fabian (236–250) had their corpses brought to Rome for solemn
burial.
Rather than an original
theologian, Hippolytus was a laborious, learned compiler whose writings were
often marred by an embittered, controversial tone. The West soon forgot him
because he was a schismatic and because he wrote in Greek. His most important
work is considered to be Philosophumena
(one part of a larger work called Refutation
of All Heresies), which seeks to show that the various Christian
heresies are traceable to false pagan philosophies. The church order, known as
the Apostolic Tradition (extant only in
later versions; Eng. trans. by G. Dix, 1937), is now generally attributed to
him and illuminates the rites and liturgies in use at Rome in the early 3rd
century ad.
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