Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria and doctor of the Church, An
| May 2nd, memorial | |
| Position: | Patriarch and Doctor of the Church |
| Death: | 373 |
| Patron: | is invoked as an aid against headaches |
| Attributes: | An older bishop with a longer beard and sometimes bald, a scroll of writing |
CURRICULUM VITAE
He came from Alexandria. As a deacon, he participated in the Council of Nicaea and persistently defended the faith against the Arian heresy. He became the Patriarch of Alexandria and experienced much violence and repeated exile. He used this to explain the faith in writing and to spread the true faith. The Arians tried in every way to depose him and falsely accused him many times. He spent over 17 years in exile out of the 45 years he was patriarch. He died at the age of 78.
CV FOR MEDITATION MISCONDUCTS
“PILLAR OF THE CHURCH” AND HEALER OF THE WOUNDS INJURED BY THE MISCONDUCTORS
He was born around 295, probably in Alexandria, the capital of Egypt. He also received the best education in this city. As a growing boy, he experienced the bloody persecutions of Christians by Diocletian and Galerius in 304 and 311, when the weak fell away, and heroic believers were martyred.
At a young age, he went to the desert, where he was for some time a disciple of St. Anthony the Hermit. It is possible that it was during this stay in the desert that he wrote his first writings: “Speech Against the Pagans” and “On the Incarnation of the Word.”
Around the year 316, the Alexandrian priest Arius began preaching his heretical doctrine, denying the divinity of Jesus Christ. Athanasius was then a deacon and secretary to Bishop Alexander. He apparently participated in a letter in which the bishop warned Pope Sylvester and the Eastern bishops about Arius’s growing heresies. Because of these heresies, the General Council of Nicaea was convened in 325, to which Athanasius, as bishop, attended and was among the most zealous defenders of orthodox doctrine. In the solemn profession of faith, the council emphasized that Jesus Christ is the only-begotten Son of God, who was born of the Father before all ages; true God from true God, begotten, uncreated, of one substance with the Father.
After the council, Athanasius became a very active fighter against Arianism.
After the death of Bishop Alexander, Athanasius was elected his successor in 328. At the time of his first visitation in the vast diocese, the schismatic Meletians wanted to seize his bishopric. Meletius was a bishop who had broken away from the Church because of its conciliatory attitude towards the weak, who had denied it during the persecution and later asked to be admitted to the Church again. The Meletians joined forces with the Arians against Athanasius. They went to Emperor Constantine with an accusation against him, but because Athanasius also appeared there, they were unsuccessful the first time. However, they did not give up; they convened a unilateral synod against him in Tire, where they accused and condemned him. Although he did not accept the verdict at first, the emperor finally sent Athanasius into exile in Trier to secure peace. In 337, when the emperor died, Athanasius was able to return.
The opponents then asked Pope Julius I to intervene against Athanasius. Still, they did not wait for a response and elected Gregory of Cappadocia in his place, whom they helped to settle in the city the following year. Bloody riots broke out, and Athanasius, leaving Alexandria, protested in a circular letter against the violence to which his bishopric had fallen. Summoned by Pope Julius, he was in Rome, and the synod there in 340 confirmed his rights to the episcopal see of Alexandria. However, Gregory refused to accept this decision, and Athanasius therefore worked in Rome for the time being, where he preached the ideals of monastic life as he had learned them from St. Anthony the Hermit, whom he respected and wrote his biography.
In 343, he was recognized at the synod in Sardica (in present-day Sofia), and there, too, he was recognized, while his opponent, Gregory, was excommunicated. However, Athanasius was only able to return in 346, the year after Gregory’s death. For the next ten years, he zealously devoted himself to the pastoral work in his diocese, which experienced great prosperity. However, after the deaths of the emperor and Pope Julius, who had been Athanasius’ protectors, the united enemies again accused Athanasius of being their successors. Pope Liberius considered them unfounded, but Emperor Constantius forced Athanasius’s condemnation at two more synods in 354 and 355, and on his orders, Athanasius was attacked during the evening service on 8 February 356, but his protectors helped him escape. For six years, he hid among the monks and devout believers in Egypt. From that time came his defense addressed to the emperor, “Apologia ad Constantinum” and “Apologia de fuga sua,” in which he describes the violence in Alexandria, as well as the “Historia Arianorum.“
He was called the “Pillar of the Church”, and in some places, “the Great” was added to his name. He was great in his loyalty, perseverance, and love. He had compassion for the suffering and the unfortunate; he knew how to conquer the hearts of his listeners; and he traveled a lot, both for reasons of apostolic zeal and of persecution. Once, while escaping from his pursuers on the Nile, he saw his enemies in a larger and faster rowboat. He calculated that he would not escape, so he turned his boat against them downstream. He soon met them, but since they did not know him personally and could not even suspect that the one they were pursuing would have the courage to sail against them, they shouted to him from their boat: “Do you know Bishop Athanasius?” “I do,” he answered truthfully. “And didn’t he row upstream here a while ago?” – “He rowed as if his life depended on it.” – “And is it far from here?” – “That’s not it!” – “So can we catch up with him if we hurry?” – “Certainly!” Then the order to speed up was given, and Athanasius let himself be carried away by the current in the opposite direction. The Lord watched over his faithful servant, and the faithful people greatly valued their devoted and zealous shepherd.
The next emperor was Julian the Apostate from November 361, and although he was an implacable enemy of Christianity, he allowed the exiled bishops to return. However, he expected that internal strife among Christians would intensify and the Church would be weakened. He miscalculated with Athanasius, who, already in the spring of 362, organized a significant synod on serious dogmatic and disciplinary issues and revived religious life in the diocese. He also won many important people to the faith. The emperor, therefore, ordered the Egyptian governor to remove Athanasius from Egypt. However, he managed to escape to the Theban Desert.
In 363, Julian’s death made room on the imperial throne for the Catholic Jovian, and Athanasius was able to return for a year. Then Valens, who was sympathetic to the Arians, became emperor and sent all returnees back into exile. Athanasius hid again near Alexandria to benefit his diocese from underground. Finally, in February 366, he returned to his seat with the emperor’s permission. He was already over 70 years old, but he continued to administer his diocese undisturbed for another 7 years. He left behind many different writings. In addition to the three-volume dogmatic work “Orations Against the Arians”, he also wrote ascetic writings on monastic life and virginity, about 4 theological letters on the Divinity of the Holy Spirit, and, in his last years, commentaries on the Psalms. He also wrote several circular letters and encyclicals on vital issues of the church at that time.
RESOLUTION, PRAYER
