Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

Saturday 12 April 2014

Lenten Station At Saint John's-Before-The-Latin-Gate. Saturday In Passion Week.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.
Violet Vestments.



English: The Portal of the Basilica
of Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate,
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: San Giovanni a Porta Latina de Rome.
Français: Puits et portique de l'Église
San Giovanni a Porta Latina de Rome.
Photo: July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Lenten Station, on this eve of Palm Sunday, is of a comparatively late origin; formerly [before the Station at Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate was appointed in the 12th-Century], the Pope spent a part of the day distributing alms [in his Palace, the Basilica of Saint John Lateran] to the poor, and rested in preparation for the tiring functions of the following days. When, later on, a Mass was appointed for this day, the parts to be sung by the Choir were borrowed from the Mass of yesterday.

The Stational Church chosen was at Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate. It is near the place where the Appian Way branches off, forming, to the left, the Latin Way.


File:Nef de l'église San Giovanni a Porta Latina.JPG

English: The Nave of the Basilica
of Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate,
Rome, Italy.
Français: Nef de l'église San Giovanni
a Porta Latina à Rome.
Photo: July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


[According to Tertullian (in The Prescription of Heretics), Saint John was banished (presumably to Patmos) after being plunged into boiling oil in Rome (by order of Emperor Domitian) and suffering nothing from it. It is said that all in the entire Colosseum audience were converted to Christianity upon witnessing this Miracle. This event would have occurred during the reign of Domitian, a Roman Emperor who was known for his persecution of Christians in the Late-1st-Century.]

The Mass sums up all the great Mysteries which are about to fill Holy Week.


File:Gethsemane.jpg

English: The Garden of Gethsemane (referred to, below) 
with the Church of Maria-Magdalene in the background.
Deutsch: Bild des Garten Gethsemane mit der
Maria-Magdalena-Kirche im Hintergrund.
Photo: July 2006.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Gospel shows us Jesus "the King of Israel" acclaimed by the Jews and, some days later, "raised from the earth" and crucified. In the few Gentiles, who expressed to Philip their desire to see Christ, let us foresee the many recruits that the Church is to make among the heathen nations.

Jesus is going to die like the grain of wheat, that He may produce much fruit. For the moment, "His Soul is troubled", as it will be in the Garden of Gethsemane. But, "it is for that He has come", "to glorify His Father". And, as a voice from Heaven tells us, this glorification will be complete, for "the prince of this world shall be cast out" and the Saviour raised upon a Cross and, reaching to Heaven, "will draw all things to Him".

The Saviour here reveals to us His whole Heart, which wishes, at the price of such cruel sufferings, to ruin our enemy and secure our salvation.


File:Intérieur de San Giovanni a Porta Latina.JPG

The five Pairs of Columns
in San Giovanni a Porta Latina,
Rome, Italy.
Photo: May 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Finally, Jesus speaks of those who refuse to follow Him and who walk in darkness, not knowing where they go, and, by the mouth of Jeremias, He anathematises "those who plot against the just. Their children will be delivered up to famine and their husbands put to death, for an unforeseen enemy will fall upon them and exterminate them" (Epistle). This prophecy was fulfilled. During the Siege of Jerusalem, by the Romans, in 70 A.D., the Jews, who had not died of famine, perished by the sword.

To avoid the effects of Divine Justice, let us die to sin and we shall produce much fruit unto eternal life.


File:Mur du Narthex église San Giovanni a Porta Latina.JPG

English: The wall of the Narthex in the Basilica
of Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate,
Rome, Italy.
Français: Mur du Narthex de l'Église
San Giovanni a Porta Latina de Rome.
Photo: July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


San Giovanni a Porta Latina (Italian: "Saint John-before-the-Latin-Gate") is a Basilica Church in Rome, near the Porta Latina (on the Via Latina) of the Aurelian Wall. It is currently the Titular Church of Cardinal Franciszek Macharski, former Archbishop of Kraków.

According to Tertullian, as quoted by Saint Jerome, in 92 A.D., Saint John the Evangelist survived Martyrdom at Rome, under the Emperor Domitian, by being immersed in a vat of boiling oil, from which he emerged unharmed. He was later exiled to the island of Patmos. This event was traditionally said to have occurred at the Latin Gate (located on the Southern portion of the Roman Wall). The nearby Chapel of San Giovanni in Oleo is said to be on this very spot.




File:Kardynał Macharski.jpg

English: His Eminence, Franciszek Macharski,
Cardinal-Priest of San Giovanni a Porta Latina.
Polski: Homilia kardynała Franciszka Macharskiego
w sierpniu 2002 r. (21?) w sanktuarium Miłosierdzia
Bożego w Łagiewnikach Krakowskich.
Photo: April 2005.
Source: Own work.
Author: Robert Wrzesiński.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The event was referred to in the Roman Martyrology, which was begun in the 7th-Century, when already there was a celebration of the event.

The tradition, for the building of the Basilica of Saint John-before-the-Latin-Gate, places its construction during the Pontificate of Pope Gelasius I (492 A.D. - 496 A.D.). This is consistent with the oldest of the roof tiles, which have the imprint of a taxation stamp for the Ostrogoth King and ruler of Italy, Theodoric the Great (reigned 493 A.D. - 526 A.D.). One of these ancient roof tiles is now used in the Basilica as a Lectern.

In the 8th-Century, the Basilica was restored by Pope Adrian I, and, later, the Bell-Tower and Portico were added. At the end of the 12th-Century, the Basilica was re-Consecrated by Pope Celestine III. In the 16th- and 17th-Centuries, a Baroque Ceiling and other Baroque features were added to the interior.




File:Fresques San Giovanni a Porta Latina.JPG

English: Apsidal frescoes
in San Giovanni a Porta Latina,
Rome, Italy.
Français: Fresques de l'abside de l'église
San Giovanni a Porta Latina de Rome.
Photo: November 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 1940 - 1941, the Baroque features were removed and the Basilica was returned to a more primitive simplicity. This last renovation was carried out by the Rosminian Fathers, who, in 1938, were given care of the Basilica and the nearby building, where they opened the Collegio Missionario Antonio Rosmini, which houses their International House of Studies.

The main entrance to the Basilica is fronted by a small Piazza, with a 100-year-old Cedar and an 8th-Century Well-Head, nearly reproducing this aspect of the Basilica that would have been seen at the re-Consecration by Pope Celestine III in the 12th-Century.

The Portico (or Porch) of the Basilica is supported by four re-used Classical Columns (each of a different marble) supporting five Arches. The main door is framed with a simple mosaic of red and green porphyry.

The Well-Head, from the time of Pope Adrian I, has a double row circular design around its barrel and a Latin inscription completely around its crown: IN NOMINE PAT[RES] ET FILII ET SPI[RITUS SANT]I "In the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost" and a quote from the Prophet Isaiah: OMN[E]S SITIE[NTES VENITE AD AQUAS] "All you who are thirsty come to the water" and the name of the stone-carver: EGO STEFANUS "I am Stephen".



File:Colonnes église San Giovanni a Porta Latina.JPG

English: Marble Columns in the Nave of the Basilica
of Saint John's-before-the-Latin-Gate,
Rome, Italy.
Français: Les colonnes de la nef de l'Église
San Giovanni a Porta Latina de Rome.
Photo: July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The interior of the Basilica is divided into three Naves, divided by two rows of Columns, on which rest semi-circular Arches. The two Columns closest to the Sanctuary are of white marble with deep fluting. The other Columns are of various types of marble and granite, capped with a diverse collection of Ionic Capitals. The central Nave terminates with a half-hexagon Apse. Each of the three sides of the Apse opens with a large window, filled with honey-coloured onyx.

Occupying the Ledge of the central window, is a carved wooden Crucifixion scene, including Saint John the Evangelist and the Blessed Virgin Mary. In front of the Altar, is a mosaic Pavement in Cosmatesque style. The geometric pattern of red and green porphyry is framed in white marble (as well as re-used fragments of white marble with Latin lettering) and is thought to have been created before the 12th-Century. Inserted in the front step of the Altar, is the “Title” of the Basilica, of ancient origin, discovered during the renovations of 1940: "TIT. S. IOANNIS ANTE PORTAM LA[TINAM]".

In the years 1913-1915, then recently-discovered frescoes were restored above the main Altar. After this work, another search of the face of the Central Nave revealed the presence of a full circle of Mediaeval frescoes. The restoration of these frescoes was completed with the full restoration of the Basilica in 1940-1941. The Central Nave is decorated with about fifty scenes representing the Old and New Testaments, from the Creation of the World to the glorious Apocalypse of the New Jerusalem. The frescoes were executed by several artists under the direction of one master.



Friday 11 April 2014

Saint Leo I (Saint Leo The Great). Pope, Confessor And Doctor. Feast Day 11 April.


Roman Text is from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Saint Leo I.
Pope, Confessor and Doctor.
Feast Day 11 April.

Double.
White Vestments.

File:Herrera mozo San León magno Lienzo. Óvalo. 164 x 105 cm. Museo del Prado.jpg

English: Saint Leo Magnus
(Pope Leo I).
Español: San León Magno.
Artist: Francisco de Herrera el Mozo
(1622-1685).
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source: www.pintura.aut.org.
Author: Francisco Herrera the Younger (1622–1685).
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Leo, surnamed "The Great", was called to govern the Church (Communion). In him are verified the words of the Introit, taken from the Book of Wisdom: "The Lord has opened his mouth in the midst of the Church and has filled him with the Spirit of Wisdom and Intelligence". And, also, the words of the Offertory: "I have anointed My servant with Holy Oil and I lent him the strength of My arm."

As Doctor of the Church and defender of civilisation, he gained signal victories over heretics and barbarians.

He opposed Eutyches, who denied the two natures of Christ, and Nestorius, who affirmed that there were two persons in Jesus; which fatal doctrines tended towards the destruction of the great work of Redemption celebrated by the Paschal Cycle.

The Council of Chalcedon (451 A.D.) exclaimed: "Peter has spoken by the mouth of Leo." Wherefore, the Gospel reminds us of the prerogatives of the Chief Pastor of the Church.


File:Leoattila-Raphael.jpg

The Meeting between Pope Leo the Great
(painted as a portrait of Pope Leo X) and Attila.
Artist: Raphael (1483–1520).
Description: The fresco was completed after the death of Pope Julius II (Pontiff from 1503 to 1513), during the Pontificate of his successor, Pope Leo X (Pontiff from 1513 to 1521). In fact the latter appears twice in the same scene, portrayed in the guise of Pope Leo the Great and as
a Cardinal. According to legend, the miraculous apparition of Saints Peter and Paul,
armed with swords, during the meeting between Pope Leo the Great and Attila (452 A.D.)
caused the King of the Huns to desist from invading Italy and marching on Rome.
Date of Painting: 1514.
Current location: Stanza di Eliodoro, Palazzi Pontifici, Vatican.
Source/Photographer: Web gallery of Art: [2] Art Renewal Center image.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Leo stopped the advance of Attila the Hun, "the scourge of God", at the gates of Rome (452 A.D.) and decided him to retire to Pannonia (North Balkans). Saint Leo died on 11 April 461 A.D.

Let us ask God , through Saint Leo's intercession, to apply to us the merits of the Risen Christ, that we may be freed from our sins. (Collect).

Mass: In médio.


File:Alessandro Algardi, altare di san leone magno (1645-53).JPG

English: Altar of Saint Leo The Great,
in the Basilica of Saint Peter's,
Vatican, Italy.
Italiano: Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano.
Photo: 16 March 2014.
Source: Own work.
Author: Sailko.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Italic Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.

Pope Leo I (400 A.D. – 461 A.D.), also known as Saint Leo the Great, was Pope from 29 September 440 A.D., to his death in 461 A.D.

He was an Italian aristocrat, and was the first Pope to have been called "The Great". He is perhaps best known for having met Attila the Hun in 452 A.D., and persuading him to turn back from his invasion of Italy.


He is also a Doctor of the Church, most remembered theologically for issuing the Tome of Leo, a document which was foundational to the debates of the Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon (451 A.D). The Council of Chalcedon, the fourth Ecumenical Council, dealt primarily with Christology, and elucidated the orthodox definition of Christ's Being as the Hypostatic Union of two Natures — Divine and Human — united in one person, "with neither confusion nor division". It was followed by a major Schism, associated with Monophysitism, Miaphysitism and Dyophysitism.

According to the Liber Pontificalis, he was a native of Tuscany, Italy. By 431 A.D., as a Deacon, he occupied a sufficiently important position for Cyril of Alexandria to apply to him, in order that Rome's influence should be thrown against the claims of Juvenal of Jerusalem to Patriarchal jurisdiction over Palestine — unless this Letter is addressed rather to Pope Celestine I

About the same time, John Cassian dedicated to him the Treatise against Nestorius, written at his request. But nothing shows more plainly the confidence felt in him than his being chosen by the Emperor to settle the dispute between Aëtius and Caecina Decius Aginatius Albinus, the two highest officials in Gaul.

File:Emblem of the Papacy SE.svg

Deutsch: Emblem des Pontifikats.
English: Emblem of the Papacy:
Triple Tiara and Keys.
Français: emblème pontifical.
Italiano: emblema del Papato.
Português: Emblema papal.
Date: 19 January 2007.
Source: various elements taken from
Author: Cronholm144 created this image using a file by
who had created his file using PD art from Open Clip Art Library
and uploaded on 13 July 2006. User talk:F l a n k e r
uploaded this version on 19 January 2007.
(Wikimedia Commons)


During his absence on this mission, Pope Sixtus III died (11 August 440 A.D.), and Leo was unanimously elected by the people to succeed him. On 29 September 440 A.D., he entered upon a Pontificate which was to be epoch-making for the centralisation of the government of the Roman Church.

Leo's writings (both the Sermons and the Letters) are mostly concerned with Theological questions concerning the Person of Jesus Christ (Christology) and his role as Mediator and Savior (Soteriology). This is partially connected to the Council of Chalcedon, in which Roman Legates participated in Leo's name.

Subsequently, through numerous Letters addressed to Bishops and members of the Imperial Family, Leo incessantly worked for the propagation and universal reception of the Faith in Christ, as defined by Chalcedon, also in the Eastern part of the Roman Empire. Leo defends the True Divinity and the True Humanity of the one Christ against Heretical one-sidedness. He takes up this topic also in many of his Sermons, and over the years he further develops his own original concepts.

A central idea, around which Leo deepens and explains his Theology, is Christ's Presence in the Church, more specifically in the Teaching and Preaching of the Faith (Scripture, Tradition and their Interpretation), in the Liturgy (Sacraments and Celebrations), in the life of the individual Believer and of the Organised Church, especially in a Council.


File:Eglise-Trefflean.JPG

English: Church of Saint Leo The Great,
Morbihan, France.
Français: Église de Treffléan (Morbihan).
Photo: January 2010.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Leo contributes to the development of the Doctrine on Papal Primacy, based on his personal devotion to Saint Peter and on the Veneration for the Apostle and his tomb in Rome. Besides recourse to biblical language, Leo also describes his own special relationship with Saint Peter in terms derived from Roman law. He calls himself the (unworthy) heir and deputy (vicarius) of Peter, having received his Apostolic authority and being obliged to follow his example.

On the one hand, Peter stands before him with a claim on how Leo is to exercise his Office; on the other hand, Leo, as the Roman Bishop, represents the Apostle, whose authority he holds. Christ, however, always comes out as the source of all Grace and authority, and Leo is responsible to Him for how he fulfills his duties (cf. Sermon 1). Peter is indeed the example for Leo's relationship to Christ. Thus, the Office of the Roman Bishop, with its universal significance, is grounded on the special relationship between Christ and Saint Peter, a relationship that, per se, cannot be repeated; therefore, Leo depends on Saint Peter's mediation, his assistance and his example, in order to be able to adequately fulfill his role and exercise his authority as the Bishop of Rome, both in the City and beyond.

Leo was a significant contributor to the centralisation of Spiritual authority within the Church and in reaffirming Papal authority. While the Bishop of Rome had always been viewed as the Chief Patriarch in the Western Church, much of the Pope's authority was delegated to local Diocesan Bishops. Not without serious opposition did he succeed in reasserting his authority in Gaul. Patroclus of Arles (died 426 A.D.) had received from Pope Zosimus the recognition of a Subordinate-Primacy over the Gallican Church, which was strongly asserted by his successor, Hilary of Arles.

An appeal from Chelidonius of Besançon gave Leo the opportunity to reassert the Pope's authority over Hilary, who defended himself stoutly at Rome, refusing to recognise Leo's judicial status. Feeling that the Primatial Rights of the Bishop of Rome were threatened, Leo appealed to the Civil Power for support, and obtained from Emperor Valentinian III the famous decree of 6 June 445 A.D., which recognised the Primacy of the Bishop of Rome, based on the merits of Peter, the dignity of the City, and the legislation of the First Council of Nicaea; and provided for the forcible extradition by Provincial Governors of any Bishop who refused to answer a summons to Rome. Faced with this decree, Hilary submitted to the Pope, although under Hilary's successor, Ravennius, Leo divided the Metropolitan Rights between Arles and Vienne (450 A.D.).


File:Chiesa San Leone Magno.JPG

English: Church of Saint Leo The Great,
Ponteginori, Tuscany, Italy.
Italiano: Ponteginori - 
Chiesa di San Leone Magno.
Photo: 9 October 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Daio.
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 445 A.D., Leo disputed with Patriarch Dioscorus, Saint Cyril's successor as Patriarch of Alexandria, insisting that the Ecclesiastical practice of his See should follow that of Rome, on the basis that Mark the Evangelist, the Disciple of Saint Peter and founder of the Alexandrian Church, could have had no other tradition than that of the Prince of the Apostles. This, of course, was not the position of the Copts, who saw the ancient Patriarchates as equals.

Regarding Africa, the fact that the African Province of Mauretania Caesariensis had been preserved to the Empire and, thus, to the Nicene Faith during the Vandal invasion, and in its isolation was disposed to rest on outside support, gave Leo an opportunity to assert his authority there, which he did decisively in regard to a number of questions of discipline.

Regarding Italy, in a Letter to the Bishops of Campania, Picenum, and Tuscany (443 A.D.) he required the observance of all his precepts and those of his predecessors; and he sharply rebuked the Bishops of Sicily (447 A.D.) for their deviation from the Roman custom as to the time of Baptism, requiring them to send Delegates to the Roman Synod to learn the proper practice.

Regarding Greece, because of the earlier line of division between the Western and Eastern parts of the Roman Empire, Illyria was Ecclesiastically subject to Rome. Pope Innocent I had constituted the Metropolitan of Thessalonica his Vicar, in order to oppose the growing influence of the Patriarch of Constantinople in the area.


File:StLeo2011.jpg

Saint Leo The Great Church,
Baltimore, Maryland,
United States of America.
Photo: 6 November 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Teda13.
(Wikimedia Commons)


In a Letter of, about, 446 A.D., to a successor Bishop of Thessalonica, Anastasius, Leo reproached him for the way he had treated one of the Metropolitan Bishops subject to him; after giving various instructions about the functions entrusted to Anastasius and stressing that certain powers were reserved to the Pope himself, Leo wrote: "The care of the Universal Church should converge towards Peter's one Seat, and nothing anywhere should be separated from its Head."

A favorable occasion for extending the authority of Rome, in the East, was offered in the renewal of the Christological controversy by Eutyches, who, in the beginning of the conflict, appealed to Pope Leo and took refuge with him on his condemnation by Flavian. But on receiving full information from Flavian, Pope Leo took his side decisively. In 451 A.D., at the Council of Chalcedon, after Leo's Tome on the two Natures of Christ was read out, the Bishops participating in the Council cried out: "This is the Faith of the Fathers . . . Peter has spoken thus through Pope Leo . . ."

An uncompromising foe of Heresy, Leo found that in the Diocese of Aquileia, Pelagians were received into Church communion without formal repudiation of their errors; he wrote to rebuke them, making accusations of culpable negligence, and required a solemn abjuration before a Synod.

Manichaeans, fleeing before the Vandals, had come to Rome in 439 A.D., and secretly organised there; Leo learned of this around 443 A.D., and proceeded against them by holding a public debate with their representatives, burning their books, and warning the Roman Christians against them.


File:St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption (Covington, Kentucky), interior, stained glass, Doctors of the Church.jpg

Stained-Glass Window,
depicting Doctors of the Church,
including Saint Leo The Great.
Saint Mary's Basilica of the Assumption,
Covington, Kentucky,
United States of America.
Photo: 13 December 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Nheyob.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Nor was his attitude less decided against the Priscillianists. Bishop Turrubius of Astorga, astonished at the spread of this Sect, in Spain, had addressed the other Spanish Bishops on the subject, sending a copy of his Letter to Leo, who took the opportunity to exercise Roman policy in Spain. He wrote an extended Treatise (21 July 447 A.D.), against the Sect, examining its false teaching in detail, and calling for a Spanish General Council to investigate whether it had any adherents in the Episcopate, but this was prevented by the political circumstances of Spain.

At the Second Council of Ephesus, in 449 A.D., Leo's Representatives delivered his famous Tome (Latin: Letter), or Statement of the Faith of the Roman Church, in the form of a Letter addressed to Archbishop Flavian of Constantinople, which repeats, in close adherence to Augustine, the formulas of Western Christology. The Council did not read the Letter, and paid no attention to the protests of Leo's Legates, but deposed Flavian and Eusebius of Dorylaeum, who appealed to Rome. Partially due to this, the Council was never recognised as Ecumenical, and was later repudiated by the Council of Chalcedon.

It was presented again, at the subsequent Council of Chalcedon, as offering a solution to the Christological controversies still raging between East and West. This time it was read out. The Acts of the Council report: "After the reading of the foregoing Epistle, the most reverend Bishops cried out: This is the Faith of the Fathers, this is the Faith of the Apostles. So we all believe, thus the orthodox believe. Anathema to him who does not thus believe. Peter has spoken thus through Leo. So taught the Apostles. Piously and truly did Leo teach, so taught Cyril. Everlasting be the memory of Cyril. Leo and Cyril taught the same thing, anathema to him who does not so believe. This is the true Faith. Those of us who are orthodox thus believe. This is the Faith of the Fathers. Why were not these things read at Ephesus? These are the things Dioscorus hid away."

Leo demanded of the Emperor that an Ecumenical Council should be held in Italy, and, in the meantime, at a Roman Synod in October 449 A.D., repudiated all the decisions of the "Robber Synod" (the Second Council of Ephesus, 449 A.D.). Without going into a critical examination of its Dogmatic Decrees, in his Letters to the Emperor, and others, he demanded the deposition of Eutyches as a Manichaean and Docetic Heretic.


File:Clichy Saint-Vincent-de-Paul349.JPG

English: Stained-Glass Window,
depicting Saint Leo The Great.
Church of Saint Vincent-de-Paul,
Clichy, France.
Deutsch: Bleiglasfenster (Ausschnitt)
in der katholischen Pfarrkirche
Saint-Vincent-de-Paul,
in Clichy.
Darstellung: PapstLeo der Große.
Photo: 28 March 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: GFreihalter.
(Wikimedia Commons)


With the death of Theodosius II, in 450 A.D., and the sudden change in the Eastern situation, Anatolius, the new Patriarch of Constantinople, fulfilled Leo's requirements, and his Tome was everywhere read and recognised.

Leo was now no longer desirous of having a Council, especially since it was not to be held in Italy. Instead, it was called to meet at Nicaea, then subsequently transferred to Chalcedon, where his Legates held at least an Honorary Presidency, and where the Bishops recognised him as the interpreter of the Voice of Peter and as the Head of their Body, requesting of him the confirmation of their Decrees.

He firmly declined to confirm their disciplinary arrangements, which seemed to allow Constantinople a practically equal authority with Rome and regarded the civil importance of a City as a determining factor in its Ecclesiastical position; but he strongly supported its Dogmatic Decrees, especially when, after the accession of Leo I, the Thracian (457 A.D.), there seemed to be a disposition toward compromise with the Eutychians.

He succeeded in having an Imperial Patriarch, and not the Oriental Orthodox Pope Timotheus Aelurus, chosen as Coptic Orthodox Pope of Alexandria, on the murder of Greek Patriarch Proterius of Alexandria.




File:1470 - Milano - S. Lorenzo - Cappella S. Aquilino - S. Marco fra 2 dottori d. Chiesa - Foto Dall'Orto - 18-May-2007.jpg

Italiano: San Marco Evangelista fra due Dottori della Chiesa (Sant'Agostino e Leone Magno). Particolare dagli affreschi manieristi di Carlo Urbino sul soffitto della cappella dell'altare nella Cappella di sant'Aquilino nella Basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore a Milano.
English: Mark the Evangelist between two Doctors of the Church (Augustinus and, possibly, Leo the Great). Detail from the manneristic frescos by Carlo Urbino on the Ceiling of the Altar Chapel in the Cappella di sant'Aquilino in the Basilica di San Lorenzo Maggiore in Milan, Italy.
Photo: 18 May 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Foto di Giovanni Dall'Orto.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The approaching collapse of the Western Empire gave Leo a further opportunity to appear as the representative of lawful authority.

Despite his defeat at the Battle of Chalons in 451 A.D., Attila invaded Italy in 452 A.D., sacking Cities, such as Aquileia, and heading for Rome. He allegedly demanded that the sister of the reigning Emperor, Valentinian III, be sent to him with a Dowry. In response, the Emperor sent three Envoys to negotiate with Attila: Gennadius Avienus, one of the Consuls of 450 A.D., Memmius Aemilius Trygetius, the former Urban Prefect, and Leo.

Little is known of the specifics of the negotiations, as a result of which Attila withdrew. Historians debate possible reasons. The Pope may have offered Attila a large sum of gold or Attila may have had logistical and strategic concerns: An army probably laden with booty from plunder; a plague in Northern Italy; food shortages; military actions of the Eastern Emperor, Marcianus, on the Danube frontier. Besides, the whereabouts of Aëtius (famous Roman General) at that time are unknown, and Attila, or his warriors, may have felt endangered by their arch-enemy from the Catalaunian Plains.

John B. Bury remarked: "The fact of the Embassy cannot be doubted. The distinguished Ambassadors visited the Hun's camp, near the South Shore of Lake Garda. It is also certain that Attila suddenly retreated. But we are at a loss to know what considerations were offered him to induce him to depart. It is unreasonable to suppose that this heathen King would have cared for the thunders or persuasions of the Church.



File:Tiepolo - St Leo in Glory.jpg

Saint Leo in Glory.
London, England.
Author: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770).
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Emperor refused to surrender Honoria (his sister), and it is not recorded that money was paid. A trustworthy chronicle hands down another account, which does not conflict with the fact that an Embassy was sent, but evidently furnishes the true reasons which moved Attila to receive it favourably. Plague broke out in the barbarian host and their food ran short, and, at the same time, troops arrived from the East, sent by Marcian (Marcianus: The Eastern Emperor) to the aid of Italy.

If his host was suffering from pestilence, and if troops arrived from the East, we can understand that Attila was forced to withdraw. But whatever terms were arranged, he did not pretend that they meant a permanent Peace. The question of Honoria was left unsettled, and he threatened that he would come again and do worse things in Italy, unless she were given up with the due portion of the Imperial Possessions."

Most historians celebrated Leo's actions, giving him all the credit for this successful Embassy. According to Prosper of Aquitaine, Attila was so impressed by Leo that he withdrew. Jordanes says that Attila was afraid of sharing the fate of the Visigoth King, Alaric, who died shortly after sacking Rome in 410 A.D. Paul the Deacon, in the Late-8th-Century, relates that an enormously huge man dressed in Priestly Robes and armed with a naked sword, visible only to Attila, threatened him and his army with death during his discourse with Leo, and this prompted Attila to submit to his request. Unfortunately Leo's intercession could not prevent the Sack of the City by the Vandals, in 455 A.D., but murder and arson were repressed by his influence. He died in 461 A.D.


File:Gołdap Kościół Kościół Świętych Leona i Bonifacego 012.jpg

Church of Saint Leo The Great
and Saint Boniface,
Gołdap, Poland.
Photo: 10 August 2012.
Source: Own work.
Ludwig Schneider / Wikimedia.
(Wikimedia Commons)



In his Nativitate Domini, in the Christmas Day Sermon, "Christian, Remember your Dignity", Leo appears to articulate a fundamental and inclusive human dignity and equality: The Saint, the sinner, and the unbeliever are all equal as sinners, and none is excluded in the call to "happiness":
Our Saviour, dearly-beloved, was born today: Let us be glad. For there is no proper place for sadness, when we keep the birthday of the Life, which destroys the fear of mortality and brings to us the joy of promised eternity. No one is kept from sharing in this happiness. There is for all one common measure of joy, because as Our Lord, the destroyer of sin and death, finds none free from charge, so is He come to free us all. Let the Saint exult in that he draws near to victory. Let the sinner be glad in that he is invited to pardon. Let the Gentile take courage in that he is called to Life.
The significance of Leo's Pontificate lies in his assertion of the Universal Jurisdiction of the Roman Bishop, as expressed in his Letters, and, still more, in his ninety-six extant Orations. This assertion is commonly referred to as the Doctrine of Petrine Supremacy.

According to Leo and several Church Fathers, as well as certain interpretations of the Scriptures, the Church is built upon Peter, in pursuance of the promise of Matthew 16:16–19. Peter participates in everything which is Christ's; what the other Apostles have in common with him, they have through him. What is true of Peter is true also of his successors. Every other Bishop is charged with the care of his particular flock, the Roman Pontiff with that of the whole Church. Other Bishops are his assistants in this great task. In Leo's eyes, the Decrees of the Council of Chalcedon acquired their validity from his confirmation.



English: Church of Pope Saint Leo The Great,
Wejherowo, Poland.
Polski: Wejherowo, ul. Sobieskiego - kościół św.
Leona Wielkiego. Ujęty z tyłu. (zabytek nr 1890 z 5.11.2012).
Photo: 12 April 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Starscream.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Leo's Letters and Sermons reflect the many aspects of his career and personality,and are invaluable historical sources. His rhythmic prose style, called "cursus leonicus", influenced Ecclesiastical language for centuries.

The Roman Catholic Church marks 10 November as the Feast Day of Saint Leo, given in the Martyrologium Hieronymianum and the 8th-Century Calendar of Saint Willibrord as the date of his death and entry to Heaven. His Feast was once celebrated in Rome on 28 June, the anniversary of the placing of his Relics in Saint Peter's Basilica, but, in the 12th-Century, the Gallican Rite Feast Day of 11 April was admitted to the General Roman Calendar, which maintained that date until 1969. Some Traditionalist Catholics continue to observe Pre-1970 versions of that Calendar.

The Eastern Catholic Churches, as well as the Eastern Orthodox Church, celebrate Saint Leo's Feast Day on 18 February.

Leo was originally buried in his own monument. However, some years after his death, his remains were put into a tomb that contained the first four Pope Leos. In the 18th-Century, Leo the Great's Relics were separated from those of the other Leos and he was given his own Chapel.


File:Église Saint-Léon-le-Grand 06.JPG

English: Church of Saint Leo The Great,
Mauricie, Canada.
Français: L'église Saint-Léon-le-Grand,
Mauricie, Canada,
est une église construite entre 1819 et 1824.
Photo: 3 September 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Fralambert.
(Wikimedia Commons)

File:Église Saint-Léon-le-Grand 05.JPG

English: Church of Saint Leo The Great,
Mauricie, Canada.
Français: L'église Saint-Léon-le-Grand,
Mauricie, Canada,
est une église construite entre 1819 et 1824.
Photo: 3 September 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Fralambert.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Église Saint-Léon-le-Grand 01.JPG

English: Church of Saint Leo The Great,
Mauricie, Canada.
Français: L'église Saint-Léon-le-Grand,
Mauricie, Canada,
est une église construite entre 1819 et 1824.
Photo: 3 September 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Fralambert.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Hymns.

Troparion (Tone 3).

You were the Church's instrument in strengthening the teaching of true doctrine; you shone forth from the West like a Sun dispelling the errors of the Heretics. Righteous Leo, entreat Christ God to grant us His great mercy.

Troparion (Tone 8).

O Champion of Orthodoxy, and teacher of holiness. The enlightenment of the universe and the inspired glory of true believers. O most wise Father Leo, your teachings are as music of the Holy Spirit for us ! Pray that Christ our God may save our Souls !

Kontakion (Tone 3).

Seated upon the Throne of the Priesthood, glorious Leo, you shut the mouths of the spiritual lions. With divinely-inspired teachings of the honoured Trinity, you shed the light of the knowledge of God upon your flock. Therefore, you are glorified as a Divine Initiate of the Grace of God.


Lenten Station At Saint Stephen-in-the-Round On Mount Coelius. The Ferial Mass Of Friday In Passion Week.


Roman Text is taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.


Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.
Violet Vestments.



English: The Basilica of Saint Stephen-in-the-Round
on Mount Coelius,
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: Santo Stefano Rotondo in Rome (rione Celio).
Date: Circa 1880.
Source: Scanning of reproduction.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Station was at the Church of Saint Stephen on Mount Coelius, called Saint Stephen the Round, on account of its circular form. It was dedicated in the 5th-Century to the first of the Martyrs, whose relics had been brought to Rome.

This Saint was the first Martyr or witness of Christ. Whilst dying, he beheld the Saviour at the right hand of the Father in Heaven. Thus, it was fitting to assemble in this Basilica at this holy time, consecrated to the memory of the Saviour’s Passion, which prepares us to celebrate His triumph at Easter.


File:Celio - santo Stefano rotondo 1792st.JPG

English: Basilica of Saint Stephen-in-the-Round
on Mount Coelius,
Rome, Italy.
Santo Stefano Rotondo is the most ancient example
of a Centrally-Planned Church in Rome.
Photo: January 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Gospel of today mentions the sitting of the Sanhedrin, at which the death of Jesus was irrevocably decreed by the Jewish priests. [Jesus having raised Lazarus from the dead, at the time that the pilgrims were preparing to come in multitudes to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover, the Jewish authorities of the Sanhedrin assembled on the Mount of Evil Counsel, and, under pretext that the Romans, who had conquered Judea, would take umbrage at the influence of Christ and use repressive measures against the Jewish people, the High Priest declares that Jesus must die.]


File:Celio - s Stefano Rotondo 1040178-80.JPG

English: Interior of the Basilica of Saint Stephen-in-the-Round
on Mount Coelius,
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: Roma, Santo Stefano Rotondo al Celio:
interno dopo il restauro.
Photo: June 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The miracle of the resurrection of Lazarus  they say, will excite such popular enthusiasm during the Paschal festivities, when crowds fill Jerusalem, that the Romans, uneasy for their authority, will destroy our city and nation. It is therefore better, concludes Caiphas, that one man should disappear and that the nation should be saved.

Jeremias, in the Epistle, and the Psalmist, in the Introit, the Gradual, the Offertory and the Communion, express the sorrows and anguish of Jesus, who feels Himself surrounded by such treacherous and relentless enemies.

Let us participate in the feelings of Christ, who will soon atone for our sins by the sufferings of His Passion. And may the fear of eternal punishment make us accept the troubles of this life and the holy austerities of Lent (Collect).


File:Coat of Arms of Hungary.svg

Coat-of-Arms of Hungary.

English:
Blazon: “Per pale, the first barry of eight Gules and Argent, the second Gules, on a mount Vert a crown Or, issuant therefrom a double cross Argent. In crest the Holy Crown of Hungary.”
Magyar:
Címerleírás A Magyar Köztársaság címere hegyes talpú, hasított pajzs. Első mezeje vörössel és ezüsttel hétszer vágott. Második, vörös mezejében zöld hármas halomnak arany koronás kiemelkedő középső részén ezüst kettős kereszt. A pajzson a magyar Szent Korona nyugszik.
Date: January 2009.
Source: Own work, based on Flags of the World - Hungary -
Author: Thommy.
(Wikimedia Commons)



English: Cardinal Mindszenty was a Cardinal Priest
of the Titulus S. Stephani in Coelio Monte.
Magyar: Mindszenty József szobor (szobrász: Domonkos Béla, 2009).
Állíttatta a „Hittel a nemzetért” alapítvány 2009-ben, október 26-án 220 centiméter
magas bronzszobor, amely egy 80 centiméteres süttői mészkő alapon áll.
A szobor áldást emelő kézzel ábrázolja Mindszenty Józsefet.
Mindszenty József szobor (szobrász: Domonkos Béla, 2009).
Photo: 8 November 2009 (original upload date).
Source: Transferred from hu.wikipedia; transferred to Commons
Author: Original uploader was Misibacsi at hu.wikipedia
(Wikimedia Commons.)

The Venerable József Mindszenty (29 March 1892 – 6 May 1975) was a Cardinal and the Head of the Roman Catholic Church in Hungary, as the Archbishop of Esztergom. He became known as a steadfast supporter of Church freedom and opponent of Communism and the brutal Stalinist persecution in his country. As a result, he was tortured and given a life sentence in a 1949 Show Trial that generated worldwide condemnation, including a United Nations resolution

Freed in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, he was granted political asylum and lived in the U.S. embassy in Budapest for 15 years. He was finally allowed to leave the country in 1971.
He died in exile in 1975 in Vienna, Austria.


File:Celio - santo Stefano Rotondo - interno1.jpg

Basilica of San Stefano Rotondo,
Rome, Italy.
Photo: March 2003.
The Basilica of Saint Stephen-in-the-Round on Mount Coelius (Italian: Basilica di Santo Stefano al Monte Celio), (Latin: Basilica San Stephani in Coelio Monte) is an ancient Basilica and Titular Church in Rome. Commonly named Santo Stefano Rotondo, the Church is the National Church in Rome of Hungary, dedicated to Saint Stephen and, also, Saint Stephen of Hungary. The Minor Basilica is also the Rectory Church of the Pontifical Collegium Germanicum et Hungaricum.

The Cardinal Priest or Titular of Saint Stephen's is Friedrich Wetter.

The earliest Church was consecrated by Pope Simplicius between 468 A.D. and 483 A.D. It was dedicated to the Proto-Martyr, Saint Stephen, whose body had been discovered a few decades before in the Holy Land, and brought to Rome. The Church was the first in Rome to have a circular Plan, inspired by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.




Illustration of Pope John I.
Pope Saint John I (523 A.D. - 526 A.D.)
embellished the Basilica di Santo Stefano al Monte Celio.
He is the first Pope known to have visited Constantinople while in office.
Author: Artaud de Montor, Alexis François.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Santo Stefano was probably financed by the wealthy Valerius family, whose estates covered large parts of the Caelian Hill. Their villa stood nearby, on the site of the present-day Hospital of San Giovanni - Addolorata. Saint Melania the Elder, a member of the family, was a frequent pilgrim to Jerusalem and died there, so the family had connections to the Holy Land.

Originally, the Church had three concentric Ambulatories, flanked by 22 Ionic Columns, surrounding the central circular space surmounted by a tambour (22 m high and 22 m wide). There were 22 windows in the tambour, but most of them were walled up in the 15th-Century restoration. The outermost corridor was later demolished.

The Church was embellished by Pope John I and Pope Felix IV in the 6th-Century. In 1130, Pope Innocent II had three Transversal Arches added to support the dome.




Nederlands: Paus Nicolas V.
English: Pope Nicholas V, who reigned from 6 March 1447 until his death in 1455. Born Tommaso Parentucelli, Nicholas was made a Cardinal for his diplomatic efforts by Pope Eugene IV. He was a patron of the humanist movement and promoted the enslavement of African "infidels".
In 1454, Pope Nicholas V entrusted the ruined Church to the Pauline Fathers, the only Catholic Order founded by Hungarians.This is the reason why Santo Stefano Rotondo later became the unofficial Church of Hungarians in Rome.
Date of painting: 1612 - 1616.
Author: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
(Wikimedia Commons)


In the Middle Ages, Santo Stefano Rotondo was in the charge of the Canons of San Giovanni in Laterano, but, as time went on, it fell into disrepair. In the middle of the 15th-Century, Flavio Biondo praised the marble columns, marble-covered-walls and cosmatesque works-of-art of the Church, but he added that: "Unfortunately, nowadays, Santo Stefano Rotondo has no roof". Blondus claimed that the Church was built on the remains of an ancient Temple of Faunus. Excavations in 1969 to 1975 revealed that the building was never converted from a pagan temple, but was always a Church, erected under Emperor Constantine I in the first half of the 4th-Century.


File:Celio - santo Stefano Rotondo - interno2.jpg

A model of a Renaissance Church
inside San Stefano Rotondo, Rome.
Photo: March 2003.
Author: seier+seier
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 1454, Pope Nicholas V entrusted the ruined Church to the Pauline Fathers, the only Catholic Order founded by Hungarians. This is the reason why Santo Stefano Rotondo later became the unofficial Church of the Hungarians in Rome. The Church was restored by Bernardo Rossellino, it is presumed under the guidance of Leon Battista Alberti.

In 1579, the Hungarian Jesuits followed the Pauline Fathers. The Collegium Hungaricum, established here by István Arator that year, was soon merged with the Collegium Germanicum in 1580, which became the Collegium Germanicum et Hungaricum, because very few Hungarian students were able to travel to Rome from the Turkish-occupied Kingdom of Hungary.


File:C o a Niccolo V.svg

English: Coat-of-Arms of Pope Nicholas V.
Français: Armoiries du pape Nicolas V :
de gueules à la clef d'argent posée en bande
et à la clef d'or posée en barre toutes
deux liées d'un cordon d'azur.
Date: August 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Odejea.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Stephani in Coelio Monte has been Friedrich Wetter since 1985. His predecessor, József Mindszenty, was famous as the persecuted Catholic leader of Hungary under the Communist dictatorship. Although the inside of the Church is circular, the exterior is cruciform.

The walls of the Church are decorated with numerous frescoes, including those of Niccolò Circignani (Niccolò Pomarancio) and Antonio Tempesta, portraying 34 scenes of martyrdom, commissioned by Pope Gregory XIII in the 16th-Century. Each painting has a Titulus, or inscription, explaining the scene and giving the name of the Emperor who ordered the execution, as well as a quotation from the Bible. The paintings' naturalistic depictions of torture and execution are somewhat morbid.





Deutsch: Kardinal Friedrich Wetter
bei der Verleihung des Martinsmantels
(Sankt Michaelsbund) in der Karmelitenkirche München.
English: Cardinal Friedrich Wetter,
Cardinal-Priest of the Titulus
S. Stephani in Coelio Monte.
Photo: November 2008.
Source: Transferred from de.wikipedia;
transferred to Commons by User:Kurpfalzbilder.de
using CommonsHelper. (Original text : selbst fotographiert).
Author: Papiermond. Original uploader was Papiermond at de.wikipedia.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Altar was made by the Florentine artist, Bernardo Rossellino, in the 15th-Century. The painting in the Apse shows Christ between two Martyrs. The mosaic/marble decoration is from 523 A.D. - 530 A.D. One mosaic shows the Martyrs, Saint Primus and Saint Felicianus, flanking a Crux Gemmata (Jewelled Cross).

There is a tablet recording the burial, here, of the Irish king, Donough O'Brien, of Cashel and Thomond, who died in Rome in 1064. An ancient Chair of Pope Gregory the Great, from around 580 A.D., is also preserved here.

The Chapel of Ss. Primo e Feliciano has very interesting and rare mosaics from the 7th-Century. The Chapel was built by Pope Theodore I, who brought the Relics of the Martyrs here and buried them (together with the remains of his father).


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