Hierarch6th century

Saint Anastasius I Patriarch of Antioch

Sixth century; reposed 599

Also known as Anastasius the Sinaite of Antioch · أنسطاسيوس الأنطاكي

Patriarch of Antioch who served twice, being deposed and later restored amid the imperial religious controversies of the sixth century. He reposed in 599.

Feast Day
April 20
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Anastasius the First, Patriarch of Antioch, Confessor

Life

Saint Anastasius I was Patriarch of Antioch during the sixth century, a churchman remembered for his learning, his firmness in doctrine, and the long exile he endured for refusing to bend the faith to imperial pressure. He governed the see of Antioch in two distinct periods, separated by some twenty-three years of banishment.

Evagrius Scholasticus, a contemporary, described him as a man most accomplished in divine learning and strict in his adherence to principle, accessible yet dignified, willing to engage serious matters while meeting trivial ones with disciplined silence. The Church commemorates him as a hierarch and confessor on April 20.

Timeline5 momentsReadHide
  1. c. 561Elected Patriarch of AntiochAnastasius ascends the patriarchal throne of Antioch during the reign of Emperor Justinian.
  2. 565Opposes the imperial edict on incorruptibilityHe resists Justinian's support for the Aphthartodocetae, holding that the Lord's body was subject to the natural and blameless passions.
  3. 570Deposed and exiledEmperor Justin II deposes Anastasius and sends him into exile, installing Gregory of Antioch in his place.
  4. 593Restored to AntiochThrough the intercession of Pope Gregory the Great with Emperor Maurice, Anastasius is reinstated to his see after roughly twenty-three years.
  5. c. 599ReposeAnastasius reposes after a second patriarchate of some six years; sources differ on the manner of his death.

Contributions & Legacy

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Patriarchate and the Aphthartodocetism Controversy

Anastasius came to the patriarchal throne of Antioch around 561, in the reign of the Emperor Justinian. His tenure was quickly marked by conflict over the nature of the body of Christ. Justinian, in his later years, lent his support to the Aphthartodocetae, who held that the body of the Lord was incorruptible and impassible even before the Resurrection.

Anastasius resisted this teaching firmly, declaring that the body of the Lord was corruptible in respect of the natural and blameless passions, in keeping with apostolic tradition. His opposition aroused the enmity of the imperial court, and the controversy set the course for the long trial of his episcopate.

Deposition and Exile

After Justinian's death the Emperor Justin II carried through the intention to remove Anastasius from his see. In 570 the patriarch was deposed and sent into exile, and Gregory of Antioch was installed in his place. By tradition the charges brought against him included the lavish spending of church funds and disrespectful speech toward the emperor; one account relates that Anastasius had answered that his expenditures were meant to keep the see's property from being seized by the crown.

His banishment lasted roughly twenty-three years. During this period Pope Gregory the Great, while still serving as papal representative at Constantinople, sent letters of consolation to the exile, and the two maintained a friendship and correspondence that would later bear on Anastasius's restoration.

Restoration and Later Years

Anastasius owed his return chiefly to papal intercession. Pope Gregory the Great pressed the Emperor Maurice on his behalf, urging either his reinstatement at Antioch or his transfer to Rome; the emperor chose to restore him to his own see. Anastasius resumed the patriarchate in 593 and held it until his repose.

Gregory's surviving letters indicate that he hoped Anastasius would oppose more vigorously the claim of the patriarch of Constantinople to the title of 'Ecumenical' patriarch. Anastasius, however, judged the matter not worth disturbing. He reposed around 599; sources differ as to the manner of his death, some pointing to a violent end and others to a natural repose.

Writings

Anastasius was a productive theological author, and during his exile in particular he wrote extensively against heresy. Several of his works survive in Latin translation. The breadth and method of his argumentation led later writers to regard him as a precursor of the scholastic approach to theology.

Companions & Contemporaries1 figureShowHide
Friend and correspondent who secured Anastasius's restoration to the see of Antioch through the Emperor Maurice.
Pope Gregory the Great (Gregory the Dialogist)
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Browse other saints who share his calling and place.

Notes

Reposed 599. Distinct from St Anastasius of Sinai (OS-1029).

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese (antiochian.org)