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17 November 2020

St. Dionysius the Great of Alexandria Novrmber 17

 St. Dionysius the Great of Alexandria


Feastday: November 17

Birth: 190

Death: 265



Image of St. Dionysius the Great of AlexandriaDIONYSIUS of Alexandria, Born in 190 A.D. as Dionysius the Great, I was Archbishop of Alexandria. I died in 265 A.D., 17 Nov.


This article is about the Bishop and Pope of Alexandria. For the topographical poet (sometimes known as Dionysius of Alexandria), see Dionysius Periegetes.

Saint Dionysius the Great was the 14th Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria from 28 December 248 until his death on 22 March 264. Most information known about him comes from his large surviving correspondence. Only one original letter survives to this day; the remaining letters are excerpted in the works of Eusebius.


Called "the Great" by Eusebius, Basil of Caesarea and others, he was characterized by the Catholic Encyclopedia as "undoubtedly, after St. Cyprian, the most eminent bishop of the third century... like St. Cyprian, less a great theologian than a great administrator."[2]



Early life

Dionysius was born to a wealthy polytheistic family sometime in the late 2nd, or early 3rd century. He spent most of his life reading books and carefully studying the traditions of polytheists. He converted to Christianity at a mature age and discussed his conversion experience with Philemon, a presbyter of Pope Sixtus II.[2] Dionysius converted to Christianity when he received a vision sent from God; in it he was commanded to vigorously study the heresies facing the Christian Church so that he could refute them through doctrinal study. After his conversion, he joined the Catechetical School of Alexandria and was a student of Origen and Pope Heraclas. He eventually became leader of the school and presbyter of the Christian church, succeeding Pope Heraclas in 231. Later he became Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria & Patriarch of the See of St. Mark in 248 after the death of Pope Heraclas.[2]


Work as Bishop of Alexandria

Dionysius was more an able administrator than a great theologian.[2] Information on his work as Bishop of Alexandria is found in Dionysius' correspondence with other bishops and clergymen of the third century Christian Church. Dionysius’ correspondences included interpretations on the Gospel of Luke, the Gospel of John and the Book of Revelation.


During 249, a major persecution was carried out in Alexandria by a polytheist mob, and hundreds were assaulted, stoned, burned or cut down on account of their refusal to deny their faith. Dionysius managed to survive this persecution and the civil war that followed. In January 250 the new emperor Decius issued a decree of legal persecution. Out of fear many Christians denied their faith by offering a token polytheist sacrifice, while others attempted to obtain false documents affirming their sacrifice. Others who refused to sacrifice faced public ridicule and shame among their family and friends, and, if found by the authorities, brutal torture and execution. Many fled from the city into the desert, where most succumbed to exposure, hunger, thirst, or attacks by bandits or wild animals.[3]


Dionysius himself was pursued by the prefect Aurelius Appius Sabinus, who had sent out an assassin to murder him on sight. Dionysius spent three days in hiding before departing on the fourth night of the Decian decree with his servants and other loyal brethren. After a brush with a group of soldiers, he managed to escape with two of his followers, and set up a residence in the Libyan desert until the end of the persecution the following year.[3]


He supported Pope Cornelius in the controversy of 251, arising when Novatian, a learned presbyter of the Church at Rome, set up a schismatic church with a rigorist position on the readmittance of Christians who had apostasized during the persecution. In opposition to Novatian's teaching, Dionysius ordered that the Eucharist should be refused to no one who asked it at the hour of death, even those who had previously lapsed.[4]


In 252 an outbreak of plague ravaged Alexandria, and Dionysius, along with other priests and deacons, took it upon themselves to assist the sick and dying.[3]


The persecutions subsided somewhat under Trebonianus Gallus, but were renewed under Valerian who replaced Gallus. Dionysius was imprisoned and then exiled. When Gallienus, took over the empire he released all the believers who were in prison and brought back those in exile. Gallienus wrote to Dionysius and the bishops a letter to assure their safety in opening the churches.[5]


Prophetic exegesis

About AD 255 a dispute arose concerning the millennialist views taught in Refutation of Allegorists by Nepos, a bishop in Egypt, which insisted on the interpretation of Revelation Chapter 20 as denoting a literal "millennium of bodily luxury" on earth. Because he was taught by Origen, Dionysius succeeded through his oral and written efforts in checking this Egyptian revival of millennialism. He offered some critical grounds to reject the Book of Revelation, such as an alleged difference in style and diction from John's Gospel and Epistles. Dionysius main position was to claim it was not written by John: " 'I could not venture to reject the book, as many brethren hold it in high esteem,' " yet he ascribed it to another John - some "holy and inspired man" - but not the apostle John.[6]


His impact was felt in later years concerning the canonicity of the Apocalypse, causing much dialogue in the church, lingering in the East for several centuries. Thus it was that certain leaders began to retreat from millennialism in precisely the same quantity as philosophical theology became influential.[7]


Legacy

Basil of Caesarea writes to Pope Damasus I about aid sent by Dionysius, to the church at Caesarea. This correspondence is cited by Pope Pius IX in his encyclical Praedecessores Nostros (On Aid For Ireland) of 25 March 1847.[8]

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War November 17

 Martyred in the Spanish Civil War

Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Eusebio Roldán Vielva

• Blessed Josefa Gironés Arteta

• Blessed Lorenza Díaz Bolaños


Saint Alphaeus of Palestine November 17

 Saint Alphaeus of Palestine

Profile

Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

beheaded c.302 in Palestine

Saint Zacchaeus of Palestine November 17

 Saint Zacchaeus of Palestine

Profile

Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

beheaded c.302 in Palestine

Saint Namasius of Vienne November 17

Saint Namasius of Vienne

Also known as

Naamat, Namaise, Namacio, Namat, Namatius


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France.


Died

c.599


Saint Eugene of Florence November 17

 Saint Eugene of Florence

Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Ambrose of Milan. Deacon in Florence, Italy, working with Saint Zenobius of Florence.


Died

422

Saint Hugh of Novara November 17

 Saint Hugh of Novara

Also known as

• Hugo of Nucaria

• Hugo of Noaria

• Ugo, Hugh


Additional Memorial

16 August in Novara, Sicily


Profile

Cistercian Benedictine monk. Spiritual student of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux. Served as first abbot at the abbey in Novara, Sicily.


Born

French


Died

c.1170 of natural causes


Patronage

Bovara, Sicily

Saint Thomas Hioji Nishi Rokuzaemon Novmeber 17

 Saint Thomas Hioji Nishi Rokuzaemon

Also known as

Father Thomas of Saint Hyacinth


Profile

Dominican missionary priest, first Formosa and then Japan. Tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Tokugawa Yemitsu.


Born

1590 in Hirado, Nagasaki, Japan


Died

17 November 1634 in Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

18 October 1987 by Pope John Paul II

Saint Lazarus Zographos November 17

 Saint Lazarus Zographos

Also known as

Lazarus the Painter


Profile

Monk at Constantinople. Skilled painter of icons. Opposed the Iconoclasts under emperor Theophilus. He defended sacred images, and restored those that were defaced by Iconoclasts. For his work he was arrested and tortured. When the Iconoclasts fell from power, Lazarus was released and given a prominent place in the new regime, eventually becoming ambassador to Rome.


Died

867 of natural causes


Name Meaning

the painter = zographos

Saint Victoria of Cordoba November 17

 Saint Victoria of Cordoba



Profile

Sister of Saint Acisclus. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian. After their deaths, their home was turned into a church. They have an office in the Mozabic Liturgy, and devotion to them is widespread throughout Spain and France.


Born

at Cordoba, Spain


Died

shot with arrows in 304


Representation

• crowned with roses

• in the company of Saint Acisclus


Patronage

Cordoba, Spain

Saint Acisclus November 17

 Saint Acisclus


Also known as

Aciscle, Acisclo, Ascylus, Iscle, Ocysellus



Profile

Brother of Saint Victoria of Cordoba. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian. After their deaths, their home was turned into a church. They have an office in the Mozabic Liturgy, and devotion to them is widespread throughout Spain and France.


Born

at Cordoba, Spain


Died

beheaded in 304


Patronage

Cordoba, Spain


Representation

• with Saint Victoria

• wearing a crown of roses

Blessed Sébastien-Loup Hunot November 17

 Blessed Sébastien-Loup Hunot



Profile

Priest in the Archdiocese of Sens, France. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.


Born

7 August 1745 in Brienon-l'Archevêque, Yonne, France


Died

17 November 1794 aboard the prison ship Washington, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II

Saint Giacinto Ansalone November 17

 Saint Giacinto Ansalone



Also known as

• Giordano Ansaloni

• Giordano of Saint Stephen

• Hyacinth Jordan Ansalone

Profile

Dominican priest. Studying in Palermo, Italy and Salamanca, Spain. Missionary to Mexico, the Philippines and Japan. As he travelled, he wrote a book on the lives of Dominican saints. Martyr.


Born

1 November 1598 in San Stefano Quisquina, Agrigento, Italy


Died

17 November 1634 in Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

18 October 1987 by Pope John Paul II


Patronage

Santo Stefano Quisquina, Italy

Saint Juan del Castillo Rodríguez November 17

 Saint Juan del Castillo Rodríguez



Profile

Jesuit priest. One of the Jesuit Martyrs of Paraguay.


Born

14 September 1595 in Belmonte, Cuenca, Spain


Died

stoned to death on 17 November 1628 in Ijuí, Rio Grande do Sul, Paraguay (in modern Brazil)


Canonized

16 May 1988 by Pope John Paul II


Patronage

native traditions

Saint Gregory of Tours November 17

 Saint Gregory of Tours


Also known as

George Florentius



Profile

Born to the Gallic nobility; great-nephew of Saint Eustadius. Friend of Saint Magnericus and Saint Senoch. While on pilgrimage to the shrine of Saint Martin of Tours, his obvious piety led to his being chosen bishop of Tours, France in 573, taking the name Gregory on his ordination. An excellent bishop for 20 years; Pope Saint Gregory the Great thought highly of him. Historian and writer; his works are our best historical source for the Merovingian period.


Born

540 at Auvergne, France as George Florentius


Died

594 of natural causes