Pope Saint Victor I was a
Pope
from 189 to 199 (the Vatican cites 186 or 189 to 197 or 201).
Pope
Victor I was the first bishop of Rome
born in the
Roman Province of Africa.
He was later
canonized. His
feast day is celebrated on
July
28 as ""St Victor I, Pope and Martyr.""
Before his
elevation to the Roman episcopacy, a difference in dating the
celebration of the Christian
Passover/Easter between Rome and the
bishops of Asia
Minor
had been tolerated by both the Roman and Eastern
churches. The churches in Asia Minor celebrated it on the
14th of the Jewish month of Nisan, the
day before Jewish
Passover, regardless of
what day of the week it fell on, as the Crucifixion had occurred on
the Friday before Passover. The Latins called them
Quartodecimans (see
Quartodecimanism). Rome and the West
celebrated Easter on the Sunday following the 14th of Nisan. Victor
is remembered for the great concern he displayed for order in the
church by severing ties with bishops such as
Polycrates of Ephesus who opposed his
views on Easter. He also broke with
Theodotus of Byzantium for his
beliefs about Christ.
Until Victor's time, Rome celebrated the
Mass in
Greek.
Pope Victor changed the language to
Latin,
which was used in his native North Africa. According to
Jerome, he was the first Christian author to write
about theology in Latin. Latin masses, however, did not become
universal until the latter half of the fourth century.
References
- He was the first Pope from Africa. The dates assigned to
Victor’s episcopate by the ancient authorities vary greatly.
Eusebius here puts his accession in the tenth year of Commodus
(i.e. 189 a.d.), and this is accepted by Lipsius as the correct
date. Jerome’s version of the Chron. puts his accession in the
reign of Pertinax, or the first year of Septimius Severus (i.e.
193), while the Armenian version puts it in the seventh year of
Commodus (186). Eusebius, in his History, does not state directly
the duration of his episcopate, but in chap. 28 he says that
Zephyrinus succeeded him about the ninth year of Severus, i.e.
according to his erroneous reckoning (see Bk. VI. chap. 21, note 3)
about 200, which would give Victor an episcopate of about eleven
years. Jerome, in his version of the Chronicon and in his
De Viris Illustribus,
assigns him ten years; the Armenian version of the Chron. twelve
years. The Iberian Catalogue makes his episcopate something over
nine years long; the Felician Catalogue something over ten.
Lipsius, considering Victor in connection with his successors,
concludes that he held office between nine and ten years, and
therefore gives as his dates 189–198 or 199 (see p. 172 sq.).
According to an anonymous writer quoted in chap. 28, Victor
excommunicated Theodotus of Byzantium for teaching that Christ was
a mere man. He is best known, however, on account of his action in
connection with the great Quartodeciman controversy (see chap. 24).
Jerome, in his version of the Chron., says of him cujus mediocria
de religione extant volumina, and in his de vir. ill. chap. 34, he
tells us that he wrote upon the passover, and also some other works
(super quaestione Paschae, et alia quaedam scribens opuscula).
Harnack believes that he has discovered one of these works (all of
which have been supposed lost) in the Pseudo-Cyprianic de
Aleatoribus. In his Texte und Unters. Bd. V. Heft 1, he has
discussed the subject in a very learned and ingenious manner. The
theory has much to commend it, but there are difficulties in its
way which have not yet been removed; and I am inclined to think it
a product of the first half of the third century, rather than of
the last quarter of the second (see the writer’s review of
Harnack’s discussion in the Presbyterian Review, Jan., 1889, p. 143
sqq.). Schaff, Philip: The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
Second Series Vol. I. Oak Harbor : Logos Research Systems,
1997, S. 3
- See the General Roman Calendar of
1954
- Eusebius Pamphilius: Church History, Life of Constantine,
Oration in Praise of Constantine, Ch. XXIV
- Eusebius Pamphilius: Church History, Life of Constantine,
Oration in Praise of Constantine, Ch. XXVIII
- Kung, Hans. The Catholic Church: A Short History. New
York; The Modern Library, 2003, p.44
External links