Sunday, August 07, 2005

TODAY'S SAINT (Sixtus II)

AUGUST 7
SIXTUS II
(d. 258)
Pope and martyr
Also known as: Xystus II
Sixus II may have been a Greek philosophere,though more probably this impression arose from a confusion of names. He served as a deacon in the Church of Rome and succeded St. Stephen I as bishop on August 30, 257.
Sixtus repaired the rift between the sees of Rome and Carthage that had developed under Stephen over the issues of baptism and rebaptism. Like Stephen, Sixtus believer that a single baptism was sufficient to bring persons into the Church but, unlike him, was tolerant of those who disagreed.
He is probably best remembered, however, for the way in which he met his death. Early in his reign, Emperor Valerian had shown compassion toward Christians, But later he issued an edict requiring Christians to participate in the national cult of the pagan gods and forbade them to assemble in the cemeteries (or catacombs), at the penalty of death. He followed this up at the beginning of August 258, with an order that all bishops, priests and deacons were to be killed.
Flaunting death, Sixtus assembled his followers in the Catacomb of Praet-extatus (on the Appian Way across from the Catacomb of St. Callistus) on August 6. He was seated in his chair addressing his flock when a band of sold-iers appeared and cut off his head, (He may have been taken before a tribunal, which pronounced sentence on him, then returned to the cemetery and decapi-tated.) Several other church officers with him suffered the same fate. Followers carried his relics to the papal crypt in the St. Callistus catcomb, placing the blood-stained chair on which he died behind his tomb. Later an orattory (the Oratorium Xysti) was erected over the St. Praetextatus catacomb, becoming a pilgrimage site in the seventh and eighth centuries.
There is a legend that on the way to his execution Sixtus met his decon St. Lawrence, who was to be martyred three days later.
Sixtus was one of the most highly esteemed martyrs of the early church. His name is mentioned in the canon of the Roman Mass.
In art, he is shown with Lawrence and St. John the Baptist, holding a money-bag. He may also be shown ordaining Lawrence, giving him a bag of money to distribbute to the poor, or with Lawrence on the way to his death.

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