Online Encyclopedia

NOVATIANUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 832 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NOVATIANUS  ,

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Roman presbyter, and one of the earliest antipopes, founder of the
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sect of the Novatiani or Novatians, was born about the beginning of the 3rd century . On the authority of Philostorgius (H.E. viii . 15) he has been called a native of
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Phrygia, but perhaps the historian merely intended to indicate the persistence of Novatianism in Phrygia at the time when he wrote . Little is known of his
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life, and that only from his opponents . His conversion is said to have taken place after an intense
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mental struggle; he _was baptized by sprinkling, and without episcopal confirmation, when in hourly expectation of
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death; and on his recovery his
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Christianity retained all the gioomy character of its earliest stages . He was ordained at Rome by Fabian, or perhaps by an earlier bishop; and during the Decian persecution he maintained the view which excluded from ecclesiastical communion all those (lapsi) who after
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baptism had sacrificed to idols—a view which had frequently found expression, and had caused the
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schism of Hippolytus . Bishop Fabian suffered martyrdom in
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January 25o, and, when Corneliuswas elected his successor in March or
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April 251, Novatian objected on account of his known laxity on the above-mentioned point of discipline, and allowed himself to be consecrated bishop by the minority who shared his views . He and his followers were excommunicated by the synod held at Rome in
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October of the same
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year . He is said by
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Socrates (H.11. iv . 28) to have suffered martyrdom under
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Valerian . After his death the Novatians spread rapidly over the
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empire; they called them-selves KaOapoi, or Puritans, and rebaptized their converts from the Catholic view . The eighth
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canon of the council of
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Nice provides in a liberal spirit for the readmission of the clergy of the KaOapoi to the Catholic Church, and the sect finally disappeared some two centuries after its origin .

Novatian has sometimes been confounded with his contemporary Novatus, a Carthaginian presbyter, who held similar views . Novatian was the first Roman

Christian who wrote to any considerable extent in Latin . Of his numerous writings three are extant: (1) a letter written in the name of the Roman clergy to Cyprian in 25o; (2) a
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treatise in
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thirty-one chapters, De trinitate; (3) a letter written at the request of the Roman laity, De cibis judaicis . They are well-arranged compositions, written in an elegant and vigorous style . The best
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editions are by Welchman (Oxford, 1724) and by Jackson (
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London . 1728); they are translated in vol. ii. of Cyprian's
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works in the Ante-Nicene Theol . Libr . (
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Edinburgh, 1869) . The Novatian controversy can be advantageously studied in the Epistles of Cyprian .

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