This morning I invite you to reflect on St Eusebius of Vercelli,
the first Bishop of Northern Italy of whom we have reliable information. Born
in Sardinia at the beginning of the fourth century, he moved to Rome with his
family at a tender age. Later, he was instituted lector: he thus came to
belong to the clergy of the city at a time when the Church was seriously
troubled by the Arian heresy. The high esteem that developed around Eusebius
explains his election in 345 A.D. to the Episcopal See of Vercelli. The new
Bishop immediately began an intense process of evangelization in a region that
was still largely pagan, especially in rural areas. Inspired by St Athanasius -
who had written the Life of St Anthony, the father of monasticism
in the East - he founded a priestly community in Vercelli that resembled a
monastic community. This coenobium impressed upon the clergy of Northern Italy
a significant hallmark of apostolic holiness and inspired important episcopal
figures such as Limenius and Honoratus, successors of Eusebius in Vercelli,
Gaudentius in Novara, Exuperantius in Tortona, Eustasius in Aosta, Eulogius in
Ivrea and Maximus in Turin, all venerated by the Church as saints.
With his sound formation in the Nicene faith, Eusebius did his
utmost to defend the full divinity of Jesus Christ, defined by the Nicene Creed
as "of one being with the Father". To this end, he allied himself
with the great Fathers of the fourth century - especially St Athanasius, the
standard bearer of Nicene orthodoxy - against the philo-Arian policies of the
Emperor. For the Emperor, the simpler Arian faith appeared politically more
useful as the ideology of the Empire. For him it was not truth that counted but
rather political opportunism: he wanted to exploit religion as the bond
of unity for the Empire. But these great Fathers resisted him, defending the
truth against political expediency.
Eusebius was consequently condemned to exile, as were so many
other Bishops of the East and West: such as Athanasius himself, Hilary of
Poitiers - of whom we spoke last time - and Hosius of Cordoba. In Scythopolis,
Palestine, to which he was exiled between 355 and 360, Eusebius wrote a
marvellous account of his life. Here too, he founded a monastic community with
a small group of disciples. It was also from here that he attended to his
correspondence with his faithful in Piedmont, as can be seen in the second of
the three Letters of Eusebius recognized as authentic. Later, after 360,
Eusebius was exiled to Cappadocia and the Thebaid, where he suffered serious
physical ill-treatment. After his death in 361, Constantius II was succeeded by
the Emperor Julian, known as "the Apostate", who was not interested
in making Christianity the religion of the Empire but merely wished to restore
paganism. He rescinded the banishment of these Bishops and thereby also enabled
Eusebius to be reinstated in his See. In 362 he was invited by Anastasius to
take part in the Council of Alexandria, which decided to pardon the Arian
Bishops as long as they returned to the secular state. Eusebius was able to
exercise his episcopal ministry for another 10 years, until he died, creating
an exemplary relationship with his city which did not fail to inspire the
pastoral service of other Bishops of Northern Italy, whom we shall reflect upon
in future Catecheses, such as St Ambrose of Milan and St Maximus of Turin.
The Bishop of Vercelli's relationship with his city is illustrated
in particular by two testimonies in his correspondence. The first is found in
the Letter cited above, which Eusebius wrote from his exile in
Scythopolis "to the beloved brothers and priests missed so much, as well
as to the holy people with a firm faith of Vercelli, Novara, Ivrea and
Tortona" (Second Letter, CCL 9, p. 104). These first words, which
demonstrate the deep emotion of the good Pastor when he thought of his flock,
are amply confirmed at the end of the Letter in his very warm fatherly
greetings to each and every one of his children in Vercelli, with expressions
overflowing with affection and love. One should note first of all the explicit
relationship that bound the Bishop to the sanctae plebes, not only of Vercellae/Vercelli
- the first and subsequently for some years the only Diocese in the Piedmont -
but also of Novaria/ Novara, Eporedia/Ivrea and Dertona/
Tortona, that is, of the Christian communities in the same Diocese which had
become quite numerous and acquired a certain consistency and autonomy. Another
interesting element is provided by the farewell with which the Letter concludes.
Eusebius asked his sons and daughters to give his greeting "also to those
who are outside the Church, yet deign to nourish feelings of love for us:
etiam hos, qui foris sunt et nos dignantur diligere". This is an
obvious proof that the Bishop's relationship with his city was not limited to
the Christian population but also extended to those who - outside the Church -
recognized in some way his spiritual authority and loved this exemplary man.
The second testimony of the Bishop's special relationship with his
city comes from the Letter St Ambrose of Milan wrote to the Vercellians
in about 394, more than 20 years after Eusebius' death (Ep. extra
collecitonem 14: Maur. 63). The Church of Vercelli was going
through a difficult period: she was divided and lacked a Bishop. Ambrose
frankly declared that he hesitated to recognize these Vercellians as descending
from "the lineage of the holy fathers who approved of Eusebius as soon as
they saw him, without ever having known him previously and even forgetting
their own fellow citizens". In the same Letter, the Bishop of Milan
attested to his esteem for Eusebius in the clearest possible way: "Such a
great man", he wrote in peremptory tones, "well deserves to be
elected by the whole of the Church". Ambrose's admiration for Eusebius was
based above all on the fact that the Bishop of Vercelli governed his Diocese
with the witness of his life: "With the austerity of fasting he
governed his Church". Indeed, Ambrose was also fascinated, as he himself
admits, by the monastic ideal of the contemplation of God which, in the
footsteps of the Prophet Elijah, Eusebius had pursued. First of all, Ambrose
commented, the Bishop of Vercelli gathered his clergy in vita communis
and educated its members in "the observance of the monastic rule, although
they lived in the midst of the city". The Bishop and his clergy were to
share the problems of their fellow citizens and did so credibly, precisely by
cultivating at the same time a different citizenship, that of Heaven (cf. Heb
13: 14). And thus, they really built true citizenship and true solidarity
among all the citizens of Vercelli.
While Eusebius was adopting the cause of the sancta
plebs of Vercelli, he lived a monk's life in the heart of the city, opening
the city to God. This trait, though, in no way diminished his exemplary
pastoral dynamism. It seems among other things that he set up parishes in
Vercelli for an orderly and stable ecclesial service and promoted Marian
shrines for the conversion of the pagan populations in the countryside. This
"monastic feature", however, conferred a special dimension on the
Bishop's relationship with his hometown. Just like the Apostles, for whom Jesus
prayed at his Last Supper, the Pastors and faithful of the Church "are of
the world" (Jn 17: 11), but not "in the world". Therefore,
Pastors, Eusebius said, must urge the faithful not to consider the cities of
the world as their permanent dwelling place but to seek the future city, the
definitive heavenly Jerusalem. This "eschatological reserve" enables
Pastors and faithful to preserve the proper scale of values without ever
submitting to the fashions of the moment and the unjust claims of the current political
power. The authentic scale of values - Eusebius' whole life seems to say - does
not come from emperors of the past or of today but from Jesus Christ, the
perfect Man, equal to the Father in divinity, yet a man like us. In referring
to this scale of values, Eusebius never tired of "warmly
recommending" his faithful "to jealously guard the faith, to preserve
harmony, to be assiduous in prayer" (Second Letter, op. cit.).
Dear friends, I too warmly recommend these perennial values to you
as I greet and bless you, using the very words with which the holy Bishop
Eusebius concluded his Second Letter: "I address you all, my
holy brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, faithful of both sexes and of
every age group, so that you may... bring our greeting also to those who are
outside the Church, yet deign to nourish sentiments of love for us"
(ibid.).
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