- Theodotus of Antioch
Theodotus, patriarch of
Antioch (??–429 ), in A.D. 420 [(Clinton, F. R. ii. 552)] succeeded Alexander, [After the deposition ofMeletius of Antioch in 361, theMeletian Schism saw at least four groups lay claim to the see of Antioch. Alexander was the last of the "Meletian" group. SeeList of Patriarchs of Antioch .] under whom the long-standingschism at Antioch had been healed, and followed his lead in replacing the honoured name ofChrysostom on thediptych s of the church. He is described byTheodoret , at one time one of hispresbyter s, as "the pearl of temperance," "adorned with a splendid life and a knowledge of the divine dogmas". [(Theod. H. E. v. 38; Ep. 83 ad Dioscor.)]Joannes Moschus relates anecdotes illustrative of his meekness when treated rudely by his clergy, and his kindness on a journey in insisting on one of his presbyters exchanging his horse for the patriarch's litter. [(Mosch. Prat. Spir. c. 33)] By his gentleness he brought back theApollinarian s to the church without rigidly insisting on their formal renouncement of their errors. [(Theod. H. E. v. 38)] On the real character ofPelagius 's teaching becoming known in the East and the consequent withdrawal of the testimony previously given by the synods of Jerusalem and Caesarea to his orthodoxy, Theodotus presided at the final synod held atAntioch (mentioned only by Mercator andPhotius , in whose textTheophilus of Alexandria has by an evident error taken Theodotus' place) at which Pelagius was condemned and expelled from Jerusalem and the other holy sites, and he joined withPraylius of Jerusalem in the synodical letters to Rome, stating what had been done. The most probable date of this synod is that given by Hefele: A.D. 424. [(Marius Mercator, ed. Garnier, Paris, 1673, Commonitor. c. 3, p. 14; Dissert. de Synodis, p. 207; Phot. Cod. 54)] When in 424 Alexander, founder of the order of theAcoemetae , visited Antioch, Theodotus refused to receive him as being suspected of heretical views. His feeling was not shared by the Antiochenes, who, ever eager after novelty, deserted their own churches and crowded to listen to Alexander's fervid eloquence. [(Fleury, H. E. livre xxv. c. 27)] Theodotus took part in the ordination of Sisinnius aspatriarch of Constantinople , in February426 , and united in the synodical letter addressed by the bishops then assembled to the bishops ofPamphylia against the Massalianheresy . [(Socr. H. E. vii. 26; Phot. Cod. 52)] He died in429 . [(cf. Theodoret's Epistle to Diosc. and his H. E. v. 40)] [Tillem. t. xii. note 2, Theod. Mops.; Theophan. Chron. p. 72; Le Quien, Or. Christ. ii. 720; Cave, Hist. Lit. i. 405.]References
*This article contains text from
Henry Wace andWilliam C. Piercy 's "Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A.D., with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies". This work (published 1911) is now in thepublic domain .
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