- Gregory of Elvira
Gregory Bæticus (died about 392 was bishop of
Elvira , in the province ofBaetica ,Spain , from which he derived his surname.Life
Gregory is first met with as Bishop of Elvira (Illiberis) in 375; he is mentioned in the Luciferian "Libellus precum ad Imperatores" [
Migne , "Patrologia Latina ", XIII, 89 sq.] as the defender of theNicean creed , after BishopHosius of Cordova had given his assent inSirmium to the second Sirmian formulation of doctrine, in the year 357. He proved himself at any rate an ardent opponent ofArianism , stood for the Nicean creed at theCouncil of Rimini , and refused to enter into ecclesiatical intercourse with the Arian bishopsUrsacius and Valens. He took, in fact, the extreme view, in common with BishopLucifer of Calaris (Cagliari), that it was unlawful to make advances to bishops or priests who at any time had been associated with Arianism, or to hold any religious communion with them. This Luciferian party found adherents in Spain, and on the death of Lucifer (370 or 371) Gregory of Elvira became the head and front of the movement. Such at least is the mention found of him in the "Libellus precum" above referred to, as well as inSt. Jerome 's chronicle [Migne, P.L. XXVII, 659.] . However, the progress made in Spain was by no means considerable.He is venerated in Spain as a
saint , his feast being celebrated on24 April .Works
Gregory found time also for literary labours. St. Jerome says of him that he wrote, until a very ripe old age, a diversity of treatises composed in simple and ordinary language (mediocri sermone), and produced an excellent book (elegantem librum), "De Fide", which is said to be still extant [
De Viris Illustribus (Jerome) , c. 105.] The book "De Trinitate seu de Fide" (Rome, 1575), which was ascribed to Gregory Bæticus byAchilles Statius , its first editor, did not come from his pen, but was written in Spain at the end of the fourth century. On the other hand early historians of literature, e.g. Quesnel, and more recentlyMorin , have attributed to him the treatise "De Fide orthodoxa", which is directed against Arianism, and figures among the works ofSt. Ambrose [Migne, P.L., XVII, 549-568.] and ofVigilius of Thapsus [Migne, P.L., LXII, 466-468; 449-463.] .The same may be said of the first seven of the twelve books "De Trinitate", the authorship of which has been ascribed to Vigilius of Thapsus [Migne, P.L., LXII, 237-334.] . A few commentators have also sought to prove that Gregory Bæticus was the writer of the tractatus "De Libris Sacarum Scripturarum", published by
Batiffol (Paris, 1900) as the work ofOrigen . It has been impossible to ascertain the authorship in question.There is preserved a letter to him from
Eusebius of Vercelli [Migne, P.L., X, 713.] . As St. Jerome, in his "De Viris Illustribus", written in 392, does not mention Gregory as being dead, the supposition is that the latter was still living at the time. He must, however, have been then a very old man and cannot in any event have long survived the year 392.References
*Florio, De Sancto Gregorio Illiberitano, libelli de Fide auctore (Bologna, 1789)
*Morin, Les Nouveaus Tractatus Origenis et l'heritage litteraire de l'eveque espagnol, Gregoire d'Illiberis in Revue d'historie et de litterature relig. (1900, V, 145 sq.)
*Bardenhewer , "Patrologie", tr. Shahan (St. Louis, 1908), 415
*Gams , Kirchengeschichte vom Spanien (Ratisborn, 1864), II, 256 sq.
*Kruger , Lucifer, Bischof von Calaris, und das Schisma der Luciferianer (Leipzig, 1886), 76 sq.
*Leclerqu, L'Espagne chretienne (Parish, 1906), 130 sq.Notes
External links
*CathEncy|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07009a.htm|title=Gregory Bæticus
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