- Eucharius
Infobox Saint
name= Saint Eucharius
birth_date=
death_date=~250 AD
feast_day=December 8
venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church
imagesize= 250px
caption= Tombs of Saints Eucharius and Valerius. St. Matthias Abbey, Trier.
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issues=Saint Eucharius is venerated as the first
bishop of Trier . He lived in the second half of thethird century . According to an ancient legend, he was one of the seventy-two disciples ofChrist , and was sent toGaul bySaint Peter as bishop, together with thedeacon Valerius and the subdeaconMaternus , to preach theGospel .They came to the
Rhine and to Elegia (Ehl ) inAlsace , where Maternus died. His two companions hastened back to St. Peter and begged him to restore the dead man to life. St. Peter gave his pastoral staff to Eucharius, and, upon being touched with it, Maternus, who had been in his grave for forty days, returned to life. TheGentiles were then converted in large numbers. After founding many churches the three companions went to Trier where the work of evangelization progressed so rapidly that Eucharius chose that city for his episcopal residence. Among other miracles related in the legend he raised a dead person to life. Anangel announced to him his approaching death and pointed out Valerius as his successor. Eucharius died on December 8, having been bishop for twenty-five years, and was interred in the church of St. John outside the city.Valerius was bishop for fifteen years and was succeeded by Maternus, who had in the meantime founded the dioceses of
Cologne andTongeren , being bishop altogether for forty years. The staff of St. Peter, with which he had been raised to life, was preserved at Cologne till the end of the tenth century when the upper half was presented to Trier, and was afterwards taken toPrague by Emperor Charles IV.Veneration and traditions
In the
Middle Ages it was believed that the pope used nocrozier , because St. Peter had sent his episcopal staff to St. Eucharius;Innocent III concurs in this opinion (De Sacrif. Missæ, I, 62). The same instance, however, is related of several other alleged disciples of St. Peter, and later criticism interprets the staff as the distinctive mark of an envoy, especially of amissionary . Missionaries in subsequent centuries, e. g.St. Boniface , were occasionally called ambassadors of St. Peter, the pope who sent them being the successor of Peter. Moreover, in medieval times the foundation of a diocese was often referred to as early a date as possible, in order thereby to increase its reputation, perhaps also its rights. Thus Paris gloried inDionysius Areopagita as its first bishop; similarly ancient origins were claimed by other Frankish dioceses. In time, especially through the ravages of the Normans, the more reliable earlier accounts were lost. When at a later period the lives of primitive holy founders, e. g. the saints of ancient Trier, came to be written anew, the gaps in tradition were filled out with various combinations and fanciful legends. In this way there originated in the monastery of St. Matthias near Trier the famous chronicle of Trier ("Gesta Treverorum ", ed. Waitz inMon. Germ. Hist.; script. , VIII, 111-174) in which there is a curious mixture of truth and error. It contains the account of the life of St. Eucharius given above. An amplification thereof, containing the lives of the three saints in question, is said to have been written by themonk Goldscher or Golscher, who lived in that monastery about the year 1130. From the "Gesta" the narrative passed unchallenged into numerous medieval works. Later criticism has detected many contradictions and inaccuracies in these ancient records, and it is almost universally believed at present that, with few exceptions, the first Christian missionaries came to Gaul, to which Trier then belonged, not earlier than about250 . FollowingHontheim ,Calmet and others, theBollandists , with Marx,Aloys Lütolf , and other historians refer these bishops of Trier to a period following 250, though not all of them consider this as fully established. The feast of St. Eucharius is celebrated on 8 December.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05594a.htm Eucharius] at the
Catholic Encyclopedia
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