Pope
Cornelius
Martyr (251 to 253).
We may accept the statement of the Liberian catalogue that he reigned two years, three
months, and ten days, for Lipsius, Lightfoot, and Harnack have shown that this list is a
first-rate authority for this date. His predecessor, Fabian, was put to death by Decius,
20 January, 250. About the beginning of March, 251 the persecution slackened, owing to the
absence of the emperor, against whom two rivals had arisen. It was possible to assemble
sixteen bishops at Rome, and Cornelius was elected though against his will (Cyprian, Ep.
lv, 24), "by the judgment of God and of Christ, by the testimony of almost all the
clergy, by the vote of the people then present, by the consent of aged priests and of good
men, at a time when no one had been made before him, when the place of Fabian, that is the
place of Peter, and the step of the sacerdotal chair were vacant". "What
fortitude in his acceptance of the episcopate, what strength of mind, what firmness of
faith, that he took his seat intrepid in the sacerdotal chair, at a time when the tyrant
in his hatred of bishops was making unspeakable threats, when he heard with far more
patience that a rival prince was arising against him, than that a bishop of God was
appointed at Rome" (ibid., 9). Is he not, asks St. Cyprian, to be numbered among the
glorious confessors and martyrs who sat so long awaiting the sword or the cross or the
stake and every other torture?
A few weeks later the Roman priest Novatian made himself anti-pope, and the whole
Christian world was convulsed by the schism at Rome. But the adhesion of St. Cyprian
secured to Cornelius the hundred bishops of Africa, and the influence of St. Dionysius the
Great, Bishop of Alexandria, brought the East within a few months to a right decision. In
Italy itself the pope got together a synod of sixty bishops. (See NOVATIAN.) Fabius,
Bishop of Antioch, seems to have wavered. Three letters to him from Cornelius were known
to Eusebius, who gives extracts from one of them (Hist. Eccl., VI, xliii), in which the
pope details the faults in Novatian's election and conduct with considerable bitterness.
We incidentally learn that in the Roman Church there were forty-six priests, seven
deacons, seven subdeacons, forty-two acolytes, fifty-two ostiarii, and over one thousand
five hundred widows and persons in distress. From this Burnet estimated the number of
Christians in Rome at fifty thousand, so also Gibbon; but Benson and Harnack think this
figure possibly too large. Pope Fabian had made seven regions; it appears that each had
one deacon, one subdeacon and six acolytes. Of the letters of Cornelius to Cyprian two
have come down to us, together with nine from Cyprian to the pope. Mgr. Merrati has shown
that in the true text the letters of Cornelius are in the colloquial
"vulgar-Latin" of the day, and not in the more classical style affected by the
ex-orator Cyprian and the learned philosopher Novatian. Cornelius sanctioned the milder
measures proposed by St. Cyprian and accepted by his Carthaginian council of 251 for the
restoration to communion, after varying forms of penance, of those who had fallen during
the Decian persecution (see CYPRIAN).
At the beginning of 252 a new persecution suddenly broke out. Cornelius was exiled to
Centumcellæ (Civita Vecchia). There were no defections among the Roman Christians, all
were confessors. The pope "led his brethren in confession", writes Cyprian (Ep.
lx, ad Corn.), with a manifest reference to the confession of St. Peter. "With one
heart and one voice the whole Roman Church confessed. Then was seen, dearest Brother, that
faith which the blessed Apostle praised in you (Rom., i, 8); even then he foresaw in
spirit your glorious fortitude and firm strength." In June Cornelius died a martyr,
as St. Cyprian repeatedly calls him. The Liberian catalogue has ibi cum gloriâ
dormicionem accepit, and this may mean that he died of the rigours of his banishment,
though later accounts say that he was beheaded. St. Jerome says that Cornelius and Cyprian
suffered on the same day in different years, and his careless statement has been generally
followed. The feast of St. Cyprian was in fact kept at Rome at the tomb of Cornelius, for
the fourth century "Depositio Martirum" has "XVIII kl octob Cypriani
Africæ Romæ celebratur in Callisti". St. Cornelius was not buried in the chapel of
the popes, but in an adjoining catacomb, perhaps that of a branch of the noble Cornelii.
His inscription is in Latin: CORNELIUS* MARTYR* whereas those of Fabian and Lucius are in
Greek (Northcote and Brownlow, "Roma sotteranea", I, vi). His feast is kept with
that of St. Cyprian on 14 September, possibly the day of his translation from Centumcellæ
to the catacombs.
The two Latin letters will be found in all editions of CYPRIAN. A better text is in
MERCATI, D'alcuni muori sussidi per la critica del texto di S. Cipriano (Rome,
1899). They will be found with the fragments in COUSTANT, Epp. Rom. Pontt. and in
ROUTH, Reliquæ Sacræ. There is a spurious letter to St. Cyprian in the appendix
to his works, another to Lupicinus of Vienne, and two more were forged by Pseudo-Isidore.
All these will be found in the collections of councils and in MIGNE. The pseudo-Cyprianic Ad
Novatianum is attributed to Cornelius by NELKE, Die Chronol. der Correspondenz
Cyprians (Thorn, 1902); but it is by an unknown contemporary. On Cornelius see
TILLEMONT, III; Acta SS. 14 Sept.; BENSON, Cyprian (London, 1897). The Acta
of St. Cornelius are valueless.
JOHN CHAPMAN
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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