Saint Cyril of Jerusalem
Bishop, Confessor, Doctor
(315-386)
Saint
Cyril was born at or near the city of Jerusalem, about the year 315. He
was ordained a priest by Saint Maximus, who gave him the important
charge of instructing and preparing the candidates for Baptism. This
office he held for several years, and today we still have one series of
his instructions, given in the year 347 or 348. They are of singular
interest as being the earliest record of the systematic teaching of the
Church on the Creed and Sacraments, and as having been given in the
church built by Constantine on Mount Calvary. They are solid, simple,
profound, precise, and saturated with Holy Scripture, and, as a witness
and exposition of the Catholic faith, invaluable.
On
the death of Saint Maximus, Cyril was chosen Bishop of Jerusalem. At
the beginning of his episcopate a cross was seen in the sky, reaching
from Mount Calvary to Mount Olivet, and so bright that it shone at
noonday. Saint Cyril gave an account of it to the emperor, and the
faithful regarded it as a presage of victory over the Arian heretics.
While Saint Cyril was Bishop of Jerusalem, the apostate emperor Julian resolved to defy the words of Our Lord (Luke 21:6)
by rebuilding the ancient temple of Jerusalem. He employed the power
and resources of a Roman emperor; the Jews thronged enthusiastically to
him and gave munificently. But Cyril was unmoved. The word of God
abides, he said; one stone shall not be laid on another. When the
attempt was made, a pagan writer tells us that horrible flames came
forth from the earth, rendering the place inaccessible to the scorched
and frightened workmen. The attempt was made again and again, and then
abandoned in despair. Soon after, the emperor perished miserably in a
war against the Persians, and the Church had rest.
Like
the other great bishops of his time, Cyril was persecuted, and was
driven twice from his see; but on the death of the Arian emperor Valens,
he returned to Jerusalem. He was present at the Second General Council
of Constantinople, and died in peace A.D. 386, after a troubled
episcopate of thirty-five years
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