Saint Lucifer
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This is an article about a Catholic saint. For belief systems which are concerned with the biblical Lucifer, see Luciferianism.
Saint Lucifer | |
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Died | ~370 AD |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Feast | May 20 |
Saints Portal |
Lucifer or Lucifer Calaritanus (Italian: San Lucifero) (d. 370 or 371) was a bishop of Cagliari in Sardinia and Christian saint known for his passionate opposition to Arianism.
At the Council of Milan in 354 or 355 he defended Athanasius of Alexandria, and he opposed the Arians so powerfully that they had the Emperor Constantius II (an Arian sympathizer) confine Lucifer for three days in the palace. While in confinement, Saint Lucifer argued so strongly with the emperor that he was banished, first to Syria, then to Palestine and finally to Thebes, Egypt. While in exile, he wrote fiery letters to the emperor that put him in danger of martyrdom.
After the death of Constantius and the accession of Julian the Apostate, Lucifer was released in 362. However, he would not be reconciled to former Arians. He opposed the Bishop Meletius, who came to accept the Nicene creed (and for that was driven out by Arians). Though Meletius had the support of most of the Church of Antioch, Lucifer put his support behind the Eustathian party which had unflinchingly stood by the Nicene creed, and prolonged the schism between Meletians and Eustathians by consecrating a Eustathian, Paulinus, as bishop, without license, creating the schism of Meletius of Antioch.
He may have been excommunicated, as is hinted in the writings of Saint Ambrose and Saint Augustine and Saint Jerome, who refers to his followers as Luciferians, a sect that survived in scattered remnants into the early 5th century. Jerome, in his polemic Altercatio Luciferiani et orthodoxi ("Altercation of the Luciferian and the orthodox"), offers almost all that is known of Lucifer or the sect. Lucifer of Cagliari's chief writings, against Arianism and reconciliation with heresy, are Moriundum esse pro Dei filio, De non conveniendo cum haereticis, De regibus apostaticis, De non parcendo in Deum delinquentibus and the two books of De Athanasio.
A chapel in Cagliari's cathedral is dedicated to Saint Lucifer (San Lucifero). Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy, wife of Louis XVIII of France, is buried there.[1]
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Cross, F. L. ed. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. New York: Oxford UP, 1978.
- Englebert, Omer. The Lives of the Saints. Christopher and Anne Fremantle, trans. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1994. Nihil obstat, Imprimatur 1951.
- Diercks, G. F. ed. Luciferi Calaritani Opera quae supersunt, Turnhout: Brepols, 1978.
[edit] External links
- (Italian) San Lucifero
- Opera Omnia
- "Lucifer of Cagliari". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.