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Pope Celestine I

Pope Saint
Celestine I
Coelestinus I.png
Papacy began 10 September 422
Papacy ended 26 July 432
Predecessor Boniface I
Successor Sixtus III
Personal details
Birth name Celestine
Born Rome, Western Roman Empire
Died 26 July 432
Sainthood
Feast day
  • 6 April (Roman Catholic)
  • 8 April (Greek Orthodox)
Venerated in
Attributes
  • Dove
  • Dragon
  • Flame
Papal styles of
Pope Celestine I
Emblem of the Papacy SE.svg
Reference style Our Holiness
Spoken style Your Holiness
Religious style Holy Father
Posthumous style Saint

Pope Celestine I (Latin: Caelestinus I; died 26 July 432) was Pope from 10 September 422 to his death in 432. According to the Liber Pontificalis, the start of his papacy was 3 November. However, Tillemont places the date at 10 September.

Celestine I was a Roman from the region of Campania. Nothing is known of his early history except that his father's name was Priscus. He is said to have lived for a time at Milan with St. Ambrose. The first known record of him is in a document of Pope Innocent I from the year 416, where he is spoken of as "Celestine the Deacon".

Various portions of the liturgy are attributed to him, but without any certainty on the subject. Though he did not attend personally, he sent delegates to the First Council of Ephesus of 431, in which the Nestorians were condemned. Four letters written by him on that occasion, all dated 15 March 431, together with a few others, to the African bishops, to those of Illyria, of Thessalonica, and of Narbonne, are extant in re-translations from the Greek; the Latin originals having been lost.

St. Celestine actively condemned the Pelagians and was zealous for Roman orthodoxy. He sent Palladius to Ireland to serve as a bishop in 431. Bishop Patricius (Saint Patrick) continued this missionary work. Pope Celestine strongly opposed the Novatians in Rome; as Socrates Scholasticus writes, "this Celestinus took away the churches from the Novatians at Rome also, and obliged Rusticula their bishop to hold his meetings secretly in private houses." He was zealous in refusing to tolerate the smallest innovation on the constitutions of his predecessors. As St. Vincent of Lerins reported in 434:


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