- Onesimus
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This article is about the biblical figure. For other uses, see Onesimus (disambiguation).
Saint Onesimus Holy Disciple Onesimus
Bishop of ByzantiumBorn unknown Died ca. 68 AD[2]
Rome (then Roman province)Honored in Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
LutheranismFeast February 16 (Gregorian calendar), February 28, (Julian calendar) Saint Onesimus (d. ca. 68 AD) (Greek: Ὀνήσιμος, meaning "useful," also called Onesimus of Byzantium and The Holy Apostle Onesimus in some Eastern Orthodox churches) was a slave to Philemon of Colossae, a man of Christian faith. Eventually, Onesimus transgressed against Philemon and fled to the site of Paul the Apostle's imprisonment (most probably Rome or Caesarea) to escape punishment for a theft he was said to have committed,[3] there, he heard the Gospel from Paul and converted to Christianity. Paul, having earlier converted Philemon to Christianity, reconciled the two and wrote a letter to Philemon (which today exists in the New Testament as the Epistle to Philemon [4]). The letter read (in part):
“ I appeal to you for my child, Onesimus, whose father I became in my imprisonment. (Formerly he was useless to you, but now he is indeed useful to you and to me.) I am sending him back to you, sending my very heart. I would have been glad to keep him with me, in order that he might serve me on your behalf during my imprisonment for the gospel, but I preferred to do nothing without your consent in order that your goodness might not be by compulsion but of your own accord. For this is perhaps why he was parted from you for a while, that you might have him back forever, no longer as a slave, as a beloved brother—especially to me, but how much more to you, both in the flesh and in the Lord. ” —Paul of Tarsus to Philemon, Epistle to Philemon 1:10-16 (ESV)
Due to this epistle from Paul, Philemon indeed accepted Onesimus as a brother and freed him of slavery[citation needed]. Although it is doubted by some authorities, it may well be that this Onesimus was the same one consecrated a bishop by the Apostles and accepted the episcopal throne in Ephesus following the Apostle Timothy. During the reign of Roman emperor Domitian and the persecution of Trajan, Onesimus was imprisoned in Rome and martyred by stoning (although some sources claim that he was beheaded[5]).
He is regarded as a saint by several Christian churches, including the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, which commemorates him and Philemon on February 15.
See also
- The attitude of Paul is one of the arguments in the debate about Christianity and slavery.
References
- ^ Colossians chapter 4
- ^ "Onesimus". Official site of the Ecumenic Patriarchate of Constantinople. http://www.ec-patr.org/list/index.php?lang=en&id=3. Retrieved Apr, 2, 2011.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
External links
- The Epistle of Ignatius to the Ephesians, which mentions the bishop Onesimus.
Preceded by
Stachys the ApostleBishop of Byzantium
54–68Succeeded by
Polycarpus I of ByzantiumBishops of Byzantium and Patriarchs of Constantinople Bishops of Byzantium
(to 330 AD)Saint Andrew · Stachys · Onesimus · Polycarpus I · Plutarch · Sedecion · Diogenes · Eleutherius · Felix · Polycarpus II · Athenodorus · Euzois · Laurence · Alypius · Pertinax · Olympianus · Marcus I · Philadelphus · Cyriacus I · Castinus · Eugenius I · Titus · Dometius · Rufinus · Probus · Metrophanes · AlexanderArchbishops of Constantinople
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Byzantine period (451–1453 AD)Anatolius · Gennadius I · Acacius · Fravitta · Euphemius · Macedonius II · Timothy I · John II · Epiphanius · Anthimus I · Menas · Eutychius · John III · John IV · Cyriacus II · Thomas I · Sergius I · Pyrrhus · Paul II · Peter · Thomas II · John V · Constantine I · Theodore I · George I · Paul III · Callinicus I · Cyrus · John VI · Germanus I · Anastasius · Constantine II · Nicetas I · Paul IV · Tarasius · Nicephorus I · Theodotus I · Antony I · John VII · Methodius I · Ignatius · Photius I · Stephen I · Antony II · Nicholas I · Εuthymius I · Stephen II · Tryphon · Theophylact · Polyeuctus · Βasil I · Αntony III · Nicholas II · Sisinnius II · Sergius II · Eustathius · Alexius · Michael I · Constantine III · John VIII · Cosmas I · Eustratius · Nicholas III · John IX · Leon · Michael II · Cosmas II · Nicholas IV · Theodotus II · Neophytus I · Constantine IV · Luke · Michael III · Chariton · Theodosius I · Basil II · Nicetas II · Leontius · Dositheus · George II · John X · Michael IV† · Theodore II† · Maximus II† · Μanuel I† · Germanus II† · Methodius II† · Manuel II† · Arsenius† · Nicephorus II† · Germanus III · Joseph I · John XI · Gregory II · Athanasius I · John XII · Nephon I · John XIII · Gerasimus I · Isaias · John XIV · Isidore I · Callistus I · Philotheus · Macarius · Nilus · Antony IV · Callistus II · Matthew I · Euthymius II · Joseph II · Metrophanes II · Gregory III · Athanasius IIPatriarchs of Constantinople
Ottoman period (1453–1923 AD)Gennadius II · Isidore II · Joasaph I · Sophronius I · Mark II · Symeon I · Dionysius I · Raphael I · Maximus III · Nephon II · Maximus IV · Joachim I · Pachomius I · Theoleptus I · Jeremias I · Joannicius I · Dionysius II · Joasaph II · Metrophanes III · Jeremias II · Pachomius II · Theoleptus II · Matthew II · Gabriel I · Theophanes I · Meletius I · Neophytus II · Raphael II · Cyril I · Timothy II · Gregory IV · Anthimus II · Cyril II · Athanasius III · Neophytus III · Parthenius I · Parthenius II · Joannicius II · Cyril III · Paisius I · Parthenius III · Gabriel II · Parthenius IV · Dionysius III · Clement · Methodius III · Dionysius IV · Gerasimus II · Athanasius IV · James · Callinicus II · Neophytus IV · Gabriel III · Neophytus V · Cyprianus · Athanasius V · Cyril IV · Cosmas III · Jeremias III · Callinicus III‡ · Paisius II · Serapheim I · Neophytus VI · Cyril V · Callinicus IV (III) · Serapheim II · Joannicius III · Samuel · Meletius II · Theodosius II · Sophronius II · Gabriel IV · Procopius · Neophytus VII · Gerasimus III · Gregory V · Callinicus V (IV) · Jeremias IV · Cyril VI · Eugenius II · Anthimus III · Chrysanthus · Agathangelus · Constantius I · Constantius II · Gregory VI · Anthimus IV · Anthimus V · Germanus IV · Meletius III · Anthimus VI · Cyril VII · Joachim II · Sophronius III · Joachim III · Joachim IV · Dionysius V · Neophytus VIII · Anthimus VII · Constantine V · Germanus V · Meletius IVPatriarchs of Constantinople
Modern period (since 1923 AD)Gregory VII · Constantine VI · Basil III · Photius II · Benjamin · Maximus V · Athenagoras · Demetrius · Bartholomew† in exile at Nicaea ‡ sometimes not counted among the patriarchsCategories:- 90s deaths
- Eastern Orthodox saints
- Christian slaves and freedmen
- Christian martyrs of the Roman era
- Saints from Anatolia
- Anatolian Roman Catholic saints
- 1st-century bishops
- Paul the Apostle
- New Testament people
- Roman-era Byzantines
- People celebrated in the Lutheran liturgical calendar
- 1st-century Christian martyr saints
- 1st-century Romans
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