Victorinus of Pettau

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Roman Greece
Died303 or 304 AD
Ptuj (Pettau or Poetovio)
Venerated inCatholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Feast2 November
AttributesPalm, pontifical vestments

Saint Victorinus of Pettau (also Ptuj or Poetovio;

Holy Scriptures
.

Life

Born probably in

St. Jerome's opinion, his works written in the latter tongue were more remarkable for their matter than for their style.[2] Bishop of the City of Pettau, he was the first theologian to use Latin for his exegesis
.

His works are mainly exegetical. Victorinus composed commentaries on various works of the Bible, including

Song of Songs, Matthew, and the Apocalypse of John (Revelation). He also composed theological treatises against varieties of Christianity he considered heretical. The only works of his that survived past antiquity, however, are his Commentary on the Apocalypse[3] and the short tract On the construction of the world (De fabrica mundi).[4]

Victorinus was much influenced by Origen.[5] Jerome gives him an honorable place in his catalogue of ecclesiastical writers. Jerome occasionally cites the opinion of Victorinus (on Ecclesiastes 4:13, Ezekiel 26, and elsewhere), but considered him to have been affected by the opinions of the Chiliasts or Millenarians.[6] According to Jerome, Victorinus died a martyr in 304.[7]

By contrast to Jerome's positive reception in the late fourth and early fifth century, Victorinus's works were condemned and listed as forbidden according to the Gelasian Decree, a 6th century work. The decree was attributed to the fifth century Pope Gelasius I; it includes a list of works compiled by heretics or used by schismatics to be rejected and avoided, and lists Victorinus's work there.[8]

Victorinus is commemorated in both the Latin

Victorinus Afer
.

Commentary on the Apocalypse

Victorinus wrote a commentary on the Book of Revelation that was later republished in a redacted form by Jerome in the 5th century AD. An original unredacted manuscript was found in 1918, however. The commentary was composed not long after the Valerian Persecution, about 260. According to Claudio Moreschini, "The interpretation is primarily allegorical, with a marked interest in arithmology."[9] Johannes Quasten writes that "It seems that he did not give a running commentary on the entire text but contented himself with a paraphrase of selected passages."[10]

The book is interesting to modern scholars as an example of how people in antiquity interpreted the book of Revelation. Victorinus sees the four animals singing praise to God as the Gospels, and the 24 elders seated on thrones in Revelation 4 are the 12 patriarchs of the 12 tribes of Israel and the 12 apostles. He also agrees with views that the Whore of Babylon "drunk with the blood of martyrs and saints" represents the City of Rome and its persecutions of Christians, and that The Beast described in chapter 13 represents Emperor Nero. As Nero was already dead during Victorinus's time, he believed that the later passages referred to Nero Redivivus, a monstrous revived Nero who would attack from the East with the aid of the Jews.[11]

Works

  • On the Creation of the World[4]
  • Commentary on the Apocalypse[3]

See also

  • Saint Victorinus of Pettau, patron saint archive

Footnotes

  1. Diocese of Poitiers
    (France).
  2. ^ Clugnet, Léon. "St. Victorinus." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 10 August 2018
  3. ^ a b "CHURCH FATHERS: Commentary on the Apocalypse (Victorinus)".
  4. ^ a b "CHURCH FATHERS: On the Creation of the World (Victorinus)".
  5. ^ Bardenhewer, Otto. Patrology: The Lives and Works of the Fathers of the Church, B. Herder, 1908, p. 227
  6. ^ Wilson, H.A., "Victorinus", Dictionary of Christian Biography, (Henry Wace, ed.), John Murray, London, 1911
  7. ^ Butler, Alban. "St. Victorinus, Bishop Martyr", The Lives of the Saints, 1866
  8. ^ "The Development of the Canon of the New Testament - The Decretum Gelasianum". Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 8 November 2006.
  9. , p. 397
  10. , p. 413
  11. . The Bart Ehrman Blog: The History & Literature of Early Christianity. Retrieved 14 October 2021.

References

External links