Commemorated on July 3
Saint Anatolius, Patriarch of Constantinople, was born at Alexandria
in the second half of the fourth century, at a time when many
representatives of illustrious Byzantine families ardently strove to
serve the Church of Christ armed with Greek philosophic wisdom. Having
studied philosophy, St Anatolius was ordained a deacon by St Cyril of
Alexandria (January 18). Anatolius was present at the Third Ecumenical
Council at Ephesus in the year 431 (September 9), at which the holy
Fathers condemned the false teaching of Nestorius.
St Anatolius
remained a deacon at Alexandria and after the death of St Cyril (+ 444),
when the See of Constantinople was occupied by Dioscorus, a supporter
of the heresy being spread by Eutyches, which said that the Divine
nature in Christ had fully swallowed up and absorbed His human nature.
This false teaching undermined the very basis of the Church’s teaching
about the salvation and redemption of humankind [trans. note: Since
“what is not assumed is not saved”, if Christ has only a Divine nature
and not a human nature, then the salvation of humankind, and even the
Incarnation of Christ would be rendered heretically docetic]. In the
year 449 Dioscorus and his followers convened a heretical “Robber
Council” at Ephesus, having received also the support of the emperor.
The great advocate of Orthodoxy, St Flavian, the Patriarch of
Constantinople, was deposed.
Elected to the See of Constantinople,
St Anatolius zealously set about restoring the purity of Orthodoxy. In
450, at a local Council in Constantinople, St Anatolius condemned the
heresy of Eutyches and Dioscorus. Having died in exile, the confessor
Flavian was numbered among the saints and his relics were transferred to
the capital.
In the following year, 451, with the active
participation of Patriarch Anatolius, the Fourth Ecumenical Council was
convened at Chalcedon. The Fathers of the Chalcedon Council affirmed the
dogma about the worship of the Lord Jesus Christ, “perfect in divinity
and perfect in humanity, true God and true man, made known in two
natures without mingling, without change, indivisibly, inseparably”
(Greek: “asynkhutos, atreptos, adiairetos, akhoristos”).
After a life of constant struggle against heresy and for truth, Patriarch Anatolius died in the year 458.
Among
the canons enacted was the 28th Canon of the Fourth Ecumenical Council
stating that the See of Constantinople is equal to the throne of Old
Rome. The churches of Asia Minor, Greece and the Black Sea region, and
all new churches that might arise in these regions were placed under the
jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Constantinople, in accord with the
28th Canon.
St Anatolius also made a large contribution to the
literary treasury of the Orthodox Church. He composed liturgical hymns
for Sundays, for certain Feasts of the Lord (the Nativity and the
Theophany of Christ), for the martyrs ( St Panteleimon the Healer, St
George the Victory-Bearer, St Demetrius of Thessalonica). In the service
books they are designated simply as “Anatolian” verses.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!)
ROCOR’s Archbishop of Canada talks threat of nuclear war with Alex Jones
(+VIDEO)
-
Most importantly, the hierarch calls on Christians to pray for peace and an
end to the war.
15 hours ago
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