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| To the bishops of the Pontic Diocese. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Letter
CCLII.3114
To the bishops of the Pontic Diocese.3115
3115 In the title the
word διοίκησις
is used in its oldest ecclesiastical sense of a patriarchal
jurisdiction commensurate with the civil diocese, which contained
several provinces. cf. the IXth Canon of Chalcedon,
which gives an appeal from the metropolitan, the head of the
province, to the exarch of the “diocese.”
“The title exarch is here applied to the primate of a group
of provincial churches, as it had been used by Ibas, bishop of
Edema, at his trial in 448; alluding to the ‘Eastern
Council’ which had resisted the council of Ephesus, and
condemned Cyril, he said, ‘I followed my exarch,’
meaning John of Antioch (Mansi vii. 237; compare Evagrius iv. 11,
using ‘patriarchs’ and ‘exarchs’
synonymously). Reference is here made not to all such
prelates, but to the bishops of Ephesus, Cæsarea in
Cappadocia, and Heraclea, if, as seems possible, the see
of Heraclea still nominally retained its old relation to the
bishop of Thrace.” Bright, Canons of the First Four
Gen. Councils, pp. 156, 157.
The Pontic diocese was one of
Constantine’s thirteen civil divisions. |
The honours of martyrs
ought to be very eagerly coveted by all who rest their hopes on the
Lord, and more especially by you who seek after virtue. By your
disposition towards the great and good among your fellow servants you
are shewing your affection to our common Lord. Moreover, a
special reason for this is to be found in the tie, as it were, of
blood, which binds the life of exact discipline to those who have been
made perfect through endurance. Since then Eupsychius and Damas
and their company are most illustrious among martyrs, and their memory
is yearly kept in our city and all the neighbourhood, the Church,
calling on you by my voice, reminds you to keep up your ancient custom
of paying a visit. A great and good work lies before you among
the people, who desire to be edified by you, and are anxious for the
reward dependent on the honour paid to the martyrs. Receive,
therefore, my supplications, and consent of your kindness to give at
the cost of small trouble to yourselves a great boon to me.3116
3116
cf. p. 184, n. cf.
Proleg. Eupsychius, a noble bridegroom of Cæsarea,
was martyred under Julian for his share in the demolition of the
temple of Fortune. Soz. v. 11. cf. Greg.
Naz., Ep. ad Bas. lviii. September 7 was the day
of the feast at Cæsarea. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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