SAINT POPE ANICETUS
11th Pope (155-166)
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The Roman Pontiff who
succeeded Pius towards the year 157, and reigned till about 168. According to
Duchesne (Origins) the confusion of dates about this period is such that more
exact verification is impossible. While Anicetus was Pope, St. Polycarp, then
in extreme old age, came to confer with him (160-162) about the Paschal
controversy; Polycarp and others in the East celebrating the feast on the
fourteenth of the month of Nisan, no matter on what day of the week it fell;
whereas in Rome it was always observed on Sunday, and the day of the Lord's
death on Friday. The matter was discussed but nothing was decided. According
to Eusebius: "Polycarp could not persuade the Pope, nor the Pope,
Polycarp. The controversy was not ended but the bonds of charity were not
broken"; the Pope permitting the aged saint to celebrate on the day he
had been accustomed to in the Church of Smyrna. Hegesippus, the first
Christian historian whose writings are of great value, because he lived so
near the time of the Apostles, also came to Rome at this time. His visit is
recorded by most ecclesiastical authors as noteworthy, inasmuch as it calls
attention to the fact that many illustrious men repaired to Rome at that
period, thus emphasizing very early the supreme dignity and authority of the
Roman Pontiffs. Marcion, Marcellinus, Valentine, and Cordo were also at Rome,
disturbing the Church by their Manichæism. Anicetus suffered martyrdom in
161, but the dates vary between 16, 17, and 20 April.
Acta SS., 11 April; BUTLER,
Lives of the Saints, 17 April; MICHAUD, Biog. Univ.; JUNGMANN, Dissert. Hist.
Eccl.; MOBERLY in Dict. Christ. Biogr.
T.J. CAMPBELL
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