Christianity: Details about 'Pope Callistus I'

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Callixtus I
Birth name Callixtus, Callistus
Papacy began 217
Papacy ended 222
Predecessor Saint Zephyrinus
Successor Saint Urban I
Born ???
???
Died 222
???

Callixtus I (also Callistus I) was pope for a period of five years, from about 217 to about 222, during the reigns of the Roman Emperors Elagabalus and Alexander Severus.

The Acta of Callixtus are imaginary (CE "Pope St Callistus I").

His contemporary and enemy, the author of Philosophumena (probably the antipope Hippolytus) relates that when Callixtus, as a young slave was put in charge of a bank by his master, Carpophorus, he lost the money deposited by other Christians. Callixtus then fled from Rome, but was caught near Portus. According to the tale, Callixtus jumped overboard to avoid capture, but was rescued and taken back to his master. He was released at the request of the creditors, who hoped he might be



able to recover some of the money, but was rearrested for fighting in a synagogue when he tried to borrow or collect debts from some Jews. Denounced as a Christian, Callixtus was sentenced to work in the mines of Sardinia. Finally, he was released with other Christians at the request of Marcia, a mistress of Emperor Commodus. His health was so weakened that his fellow Christians sent him to Antium to recuperate and he was given a pension by Pope Victor I.

Callixtus was the deacon to whom Pope Zephyrinus (199-217) entrusted the burial chambers along the Appian Way, which had been completely lost and forgotten, until in 1849 they were rediscovered by the archaeologist Giovanni Battista de Rossi. In the 3rd century, nine Bishops of Rome were interred in the chamber of the Catacombs of San Callisto now called the Capella dei Papi.

When Callixtus followed Zephyrinus as Bishop of Rome, he established the practice of the absolution of all repented sins, for which Tertullian took him to task (De Pudicitia xxi). Hippolytus and Tertullian were especially upset by the pope's admitting to



communion those who had repented for murder, adultery, and fornication. In an apocryphal anecdote in the collection of imperial biographies called the Historia Augustae, the spot on which he had built an oratory was claimed by tavern keepers, but the Emperor decided that the worship of any god was better than a tavern. The story is the basis for dating the original structure of the present Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere.

The Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere was a titulus of which Callixtus was the patron. The 4th-century basilica of Ss Callixti et Iuliani (Callixtus and Pope Julius I) was rebuilt in the 12th century by Pope Innocent II and rededicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. The 8th-century Chiesa di San Callisto is close by, with its beginnings apparently as a shrine on the site of his martyrdom, which is attested in the 4th-century Deposition Martyri and so is likely to be historical. It is possible that Callixtus was martyred around 222, perhaps during a popular uprising, but the legend that he was thrown down a well has no historical foundation, though the church does contain an ancient well (Nyborg).

Callixtus is honored as a martyr in Todi, Italy, on August 14. He was buried in the cemetery of Calepodius on the Aurelian Way and his anniversary is given by the 4th-century Depositio Martirum (Callisti in viâ Aureliâ miliario III) and by the subsequent martyrologies on 14 October. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, his relics were translated in the 9th century to the predecessor of Santa Maria in Trastevere.

The Roman Catholic Church keeps the feast day of Pope Saint Callixtus I on October 14.

References

  • "Pope St. Callistus"
  • : the church


Preceded by:
Saint Zephyrinus
Pope
217–222
Succeeded by:
Saint Urban I
Calixt I

Kalixtus i. Kalixt I. Calixtus I Calixto I Kaliksto la 1-a Calixte Ier 교황 갈리스토 1세 Paus Kallixtus I Papa Callisto I קליקסטוס הראשון I. Calixtus pápa Paus Calixtus I カリストゥス1世 (ローマ教皇) Callistus I Papież Kalikst I Papa Calisto I Pyhä Calixtus I Calixtus I


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pope_Callistus_I". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.