POPE ANENCLETUS
3RD Pope (76-88)
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Whether he was the same as
Cletus, who is also called Anencletus as well as Anacletus, has been the
subject of endless discussion. Irenaeus, Eusebius, Augustine, Optatus, use
both names indifferently as of one person. Tertullian omits him altogether. To
add to the confusion, the order is different. Thus Irenaeus has Linus,
Anacletus, Clement; whereas Augustine and Optatus put Clement before Anacletus.
On the other hand, the " Catalogus Liberianus", the "Carmen
contra Marcionem" and the "Liber Pontificalis", all most
respectable for their antiquity, make Cletus and Anacletus distinct from each
other; while the "Catalogus Felicianus" even sets the latter down as
a Greek, the former as a Roman. Among the moderns, Hergenroether (Hist. de
l'église, I 542, note) pronounces for their identity. So also the Bollandist
De Smedt (Dissert. vii, 1). Dëllinger (Christenth. u K., 315) declares that
"they are, without doubt, the same person"and that "the
'Catalogue of Liberius' merits little confidence before 230." Duchesne,
" Origines chretiennes ", ranges himself on that side also but
Jungmann (Dissert. Hist. Eccl., I, 123) leaves the question in doubt. The
chronology is, of course, in consequence of all this, very undetermined, but
Duchesne, in his "Origines", says "we are far from the day when
the years, months, and days of the Pontifical Catalogue can be given with any
guarantee of exactness. But is it necessary to be exact about popes of whom we
know so little? We can accept the list of Irenaeus, Linus, Anacletus, Clement
Evaristus, Alexander, Xystus, Telesphorus, Hyginus, Pius, and Anicetus.
Anicetus reigned certainly in 154. That is all we can say with assurance about
primitive pontifical chronology." That he ordained a certain number of
priests is nearly all we have of positive record about him, but we know he
died a martyr, perhaps about 91.
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