Nicetas of Remesiana

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Saint

Nicetas of Remesiana
Nicetas Dardani
Born333
Died414
Venerated in
Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Catholic Churches
Feast22 June
Major worksTe Deum

Nicetas (c. 335–414) was

Bishop of Remesiana (present-day Bela Palanka, Serbia), which was then in the Roman province of Dacia Mediterranea.[1]

Biography

Nicetas promoted

Because of his missionary activity, his contemporary and friend, Paulinus of Nola, lauded him poetically for instructing in the Gospel barbarians changed by him from wolves to sheep and brought into the fold of peace, and for teaching to sing of Christ with Roman heart bandits, who previously had no such ability.[3] However, it is doubtful whether these barbarians really were barbarians, or whether their mention is only a poetical topos. Indeed, Paulinus, who wrote a quite classical Latin poetry, probably used existing poetical authorities. For Dacia, where Nicetas was from, the poetical authority was Ovid, although the Dacia (probably the province Dacia Mediterranea) of that time did not correspond with the Getia where Ovid had been banished to.[4]

In 398, Nicetas made a pilgrimage to Nola to visit the grave of Felix of Nola.[5]

Lengthy excerpts survive of his principal doctrinal work, Instructions for Candidates for Baptism, in six books. They show that he stressed the orthodox position in trinitarian doctrine. They contain the expression "communion of saints" about the belief in a mystical bond uniting both the living and the dead in a certain hope and love. No evidence survives of previous use of this expression, which has since played a central role in formulations of the Christian creed.

His

feast day as a saint is on 22 June.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Letter of Pope John Paul II for the third centenary of the union of the Greek-Catholic Church of Romania with the Church of Rome".
  2. ^ "1994 | Gottfried Schramm: A New Approach to Albanian History". www.albanianhistory.net. Retrieved February 29, 2020.
  3. , p. 330).
  4. ^ Philippe Blasen, “Nicetas of Remesiana – A Missionary Bishop in Dacia?” in Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Theologia catholica, 1-2, 2012, 39-49
  5. ^ Kirsch, Johann Peter. "Nicetas." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 27 February 2016
  6. .

External links