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Cornelius

 

Cornelius (d. 253), pope and martyr. Nothing is known of his early life, but after a vacancy of a year due to the persecution of Decius, Cornelius, a member of the gens Cornelia, was chosen bishop of Rome by the clergy and people in 251. The main problem of his pontificate was not persecution but dissension within the Church concerning the reconciliation of those who had lapsed. Novatian, a gifted Roman priest, opposed his policy of leniency, maintaining that the Church had no power to pardon those who had lapsed during persecution, nor those who had committed murder and adultery, nor even, apparently, those who contracted second marriages. Novatian then set himself up as a rival bishop of Rome. Cornelius, strongly supported by Cyprian of Carthage, asserted that the Church indeed does have the power to forgive apostates and other sinners, and to admit them to communion after suitable penance has been done. A few letters of Cornelius to Cyprian survive with Cyprian's answers, some of which date from the time when Cornelius was banished to Civita Vecchia (Centumcellae), when the persecution was renewed in 253. Cornelius died soon after, probably through the hardships endured there; Cyprian called him a martyr; later accounts say that he was beheaded. He was buried at Rome in the crypt of Lucina, where his tomb can still be seen with the inscription ‘Cornelius Martyr’. A painting of Cyprian was added to the wall of the crypt in the 8th century: Cornelius and Cyprian are associated in the R.M., in the Canon of the Mass, and in their common feast in the Western Church, formerly on 14 September, now on 16 September. At the church of Portlemouth (Devon) there is a screen painting of Cornelius, vested as a pope, holding a triple cross and a horn.

Bibliography
Click here for a list of abbreviations used in this bibliography.

  • AA.SS. Sept. IV (1753), 143–91
  • Letters of Cornelius are 49–50 in the collected letters of Cyprian; also extracts in Eusebius, H.E., vi. 43
  • see also A. d'Alès, Novatien (1925)
  • J. Chapman, Studies in the Early Papacy (1928). For his death, burial, and inscription with the fresco see A. Wilpert, La cripta dei Papi e la cappella di santa Cecilia (1910, cf. Anal. Boll., xxix (1910), 185–6)

A Roman centurion in the Italian cohort and a God-fearing man, stationed at Caesarea. In a vision he was told to send for Peter, who at the time was staying in Joppa (Jaffa) at the home of Simon the Tanner. About the same time, Peter himself also had a vision, cautioning him that it was not for him to call unclean what God counts clean, and thus preparing him for the visit of the "unclean" Gentile Cornelius. The latter was subsequently converted, thereby becoming the first Gentile to be accepted by the young Christian congregation.

Concordance
Acts 10:1, 3,7, 17, 21-22,24-25, 30-31


Columbia Encyclopedia:

Cornelius

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Cornelius, in the New Testament, centurion of an Italian cohort stationed at Caesarea, one of the first Gentile converts and traditionally first bishop of Caesarea.
Cornelius
Gender Male
Origin
Word/Name Latin

Cornelius is a Roman family name and a masculine given name. It could be derived from Latin cornu "horn".[1] People, places and things named Cornelius include:

Contents

People

Surname

Given name

  • Corneille (singer), stage name of Cornelius Nyungura, German-born Québécois rhythm and blues singer

Fictional characters

Place names

In the United States:

Other uses

References

  1. ^ MFnames.com - Origin and Meaning of Cornelius

See also


 
 
Related topics:
Cornelious (family name)
Cornelison (family name)
Kornely (family name)

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Oxford Dictionary of Saints. The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Copyright © David Hugh Farmer 1978, 1987, 1992, 1997, 2003, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Bible Dictionary and Concordance. Illustrated Dictionary & Concordance of the Bible. Copyright © 1986 by G.G. The Jerusalem Publishing House, Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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