POPE AGAPETUS
57TH Pope (535-536)
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Reigned 535-536. Date of
birth uncertain; died 22 April, 536. He was the son of Gordianus, a Roman
priest who had been slain during the riots in the days of Pope Symmachus. His
first official act was to burn in the presence of the assembled clergy the
anathema which Boniface II (q.v.) had pronounced against the latter's rival
Dioscurus and had ordered to be preserved in the Roman archives. He confirmed
the decrees of the council held at Carthage, after the liberation of Africa
from the Vandal yoke, according to which converts from Arianism were declared
ineligible to Holy Orders and those already ordained were merely admitted to
lay communion. He accepted an appeal from Contumeliosus, Bishop of Riez, whom
a council at Marseilles had condemned for immorality, and he ordered St.
Caesarius of Aries to grant the accused a new trial before papal delegates.
Meanwhile Belisarius, after the very easy conquest of Sicily, was preparing
for an invasion of Italy. The Gothic king, Theodehad as a last resort, begged
the aged pontiff to proceed to Constantinople and bring his personal influence
to bear on the Emperor Justinian. To defray the costs of the embassy Agapetus
was compelled to pledge the sacred vessels of the Church of Rome. He set out
in midwinter with five bishops and an imposing retinue. In February, 536, he
appeared in the capital of the East and was received with all the honours
befitting the head of the Catholic Church. As he no doubt had foreseen, the
ostensible object of his visit was doomed to failure. Justinian could not be
swerved from his resolve to re-establish the rights of the Empire in Italy.
But from the ecclesiastical standpoint, the visit of the Pope in
Constantinople issued in a triumph scarcely less memorable than the campaigns
of Belisarius. The then occupant of the Byzantine See was a certain Anthimus,
who without the authority of the canons had left his episcopal see of
Trebizond to join the crypto-Monophysites who, in conjunction with the Empress
Theodora were then intriguing to undermine the authority of the Council of
Chalcedon.. Against the protests of the orthodox, the Empress finally seated
Anthimus in the patriarcilal chair. No sooner had the Pope arrived than the
most prominent of the clergy entered charges against the new patriarch as an
intruder and a heretic. Agapetus ordered him to make a written profession of
faith and to return to his forsaken see; upon his refusal, he declined to have
any relations with him. This vexed the Emperor, who had been deceived by his
wife as to the orthodoxy of her favorite, and he went so far as to threaten
the Pope with banishment. Agapetus replied with spirit: "With eager
longing have I come to gaze upon the Most Christian Emperor Justinian. In his
place I find a Diocletian, whose threats, however, terrify me not." This
intrepid language made Justinian pause; and being finally convinced that
Anthimus was unsound in faith, he made no objection to the Pope's exercising
the plenitude of his powers in deposing and suspending the intruder and, for
the first time in the history of the Church, personally consecrating his
legally elected successor, Mennas. This memorable exercise of the papal
prerogative was not soon forgotten by the Orientals, who, together with the
Latins, venerate him as a saint. In order to clear himself of every suspicion
of abetting heresy, Justinian delivered to the Pope a written confession of
faith, which the latter accepted with the judicious proviso that
"although he could not admit in a layman the right of teaching religion,
yet he observed with pleasure that the zeal of the Emperor was in perfect
accord with the decisions of the Fathers". Shortly afterwards Agapetus
fell ill and died, after a glorious reign of ten months. His remains were
brought in a leaden coffin to Rome and deposited in St. Peter's. His memory is
kept on 20 September, the day of his deposition. The Greeks commemorate him on
22 April, the day of his death.
Liber Pontificalis (ed.
Duchesne), I, 287-289; Cleus in Acta SS., Sept., VI, 163-179; Artaud de Montor,
Lives of the Popes (New York, 1867), I, 123, 124.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
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