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  1. Oct 15, 2024 · The official rehabilitation of John Chrysostom came about 31 years later, when his relics were brought from Comana to Constantinople and were solemnly received by the archbishop Proclus and the emperor Theodosius II, son of Arcadius and Eudoxia.

    • Donald Attwater
  2. John Chrysostom (/ ˈ k r ɪ s ə s t ə m, k r ɪ ˈ s ɒ s t ə m /; Greek: Ἰωάννης ὁ Χρυσόστομος, Latin: Ioannes Chrysostomus; c. 347 – 14 September 407 AD) [5] was an important Early Church Father who served as Archbishop of Constantinople.

  3. The dates of John Chrysostoms birth and life until 381 are highly disputed. Many of his writings can be traced only to a general period in his life; the dates given here are generally accepted...

  4. Aug 27, 2021 · Under Roman soldiers, John was marched to a slow death for over 400 miles on foot to a village on the Black Sea. On the way, he wrote a consoling treatise to his dear friend, Olympia, a female deaconess who was riddled with anxiety over John’s fate.

  5. being adduced to muddy the waters, John was being cast by his supporters as the champion against Arianism of the neo-Nicene (orthodox) faith.4 This phe-nomenon did not end with John’s rehabilitation and the ultimate resolution of the Johannite—anti-Johannite dispute in 438 CE.

  6. Jan 27, 2021 · By 419, however, Chrysostom was rehabilitated even in Alexandria. In 438 his remains were brought to Constantinople and interred in the Church of the Apostles. The sentence of the "Synod of the Oak" was revoked by the general testimony of the Church.

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  8. Abstract. When saints utter prophetic words, they must in some way come true, at least in the hagiographic tradition. But what if one holy person curses another (and vice versa)? Such was the case between Epiphanius and John Chrysostom during the so-called Origenist Controversy, which ensued at the end of the fourth century and into the fifth.

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