Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Sisinnius is chosen to succeed Atticus. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXVI.—Sisinnius is chosen to succeed
Atticus.
After the decease of Atticus,
there arose a strong contest about the election of a successor, some
proposing one person, and some another. One party, they say, was urgent
in favor of a presbyter named Philip; another wished to promote Proclus
who was also a presbyter; but the general desire of the people was that
the bishopric should be conferred on Sisinnius. This person was also a
presbyter but held no ecclesiastical office within the city, having
been appointed to the sacred ministry in a church at Elæa, a
village in the suburbs of Constantinople. This village is situated
across the harbor from the city, and in it from an ancient custom the
whole population annually assembled for the celebration of our
Saviour’s ascension. All of the laity were warmly attached to the
man because he was famous for his piety, and especially because he was
diligent in the care of the poor even ‘beyond his
power.’986
The earnestness of the laity thus prevailed, and Sisinnius was ordained
on the twenty-eighth day of February, under the following consulate,
which was the twelfth of Theodosius, and the second of Valentinian.987
The presbyter Philip was so chagrined at the preference of another to
himself, that he even introduced the subject into his Christian
History,988
988See Introd. p. 12. Photius, Biblioth. chap.
35, mentions Philip’s attack on Sisinnius and assigns the reason
for it as jealousy, because Philip and Sisinnius both being of the same
rank in the clergy, the latter was made archbishop of
Constantinople.
|
making some very censorious remarks, both about the person ordained and
those who had ordained him, and much more severely on the laity. But he
said such things as I cannot by any means commit to writing. Since I do
not approve of his unadvised action in committing them to writing, I do
not deem it unseasonable, however, to give some notice here of him and
of his works.
E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|