People/CharactersAcacius of Caesarea
Works (1)
Titles | Order |
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Evangelical Lutheran Dogmatics III by Adolf Hoenecke | died c.366 |
Titles | Order |
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Evangelical Lutheran Dogmatics III by Adolf Hoenecke | died c.366 |
Description | Acacius of Caesarea (Greek: Ἀκάκιος; date of birth unknown, died in 366) was a Christian bishop probably originating from Syria; Acacius was the pupil and biographer of Eusebius and his successor on the see of Caesarea Palestina. Acacius is remembered chiefly for his bitter opposition to Cyril of Jerusalem and for the part he was afterwards enabled to play in the more acute stages of the Arian controversy. The Acacian theological movement is named after him. In the twenty-first oration of St. Gregory Nazianzen, the author speaks of Acacius as being "the tongue of the Arians". Throughout his life, Acacius bore the nickname of one-eyed (in Greek ό μονόφθαλμος); no doubt from a personal defect, but also possibly with a maliciously figurative reference to his alleged general shiftiness of conduct and rare skill in ambiguous statement. Acacius was a prelate of great learning, a patron of studies, enriching with parchments the library at Caesarea founded by Eusebius. Most of his writing have been lost. Wikipedia |