Our Father among the Saints Menas, Patriarch of Constantinople
Life
Menas was Patriarch of Constantinople from 536 to 552, serving through much of the reign of the Emperor Justinian I. Before his elevation he was a presbyter of the capital and the supervisor of the Home of Saint Sampson the Hospitable, a charitable institution caring for the poor and the sick, a background that marked his patriarchate as one of pastoral and practical service.
He was raised to the patriarchal throne following the removal of his predecessor Anthimus, who had been deposed for his rejection of the Council of Chalcedon. Menas was consecrated with the participation of Pope Agapitus I of Rome, who had come to Constantinople; sources note this as the first occasion on which a bishop of Rome consecrated a patriarch of Constantinople. He ruled the Church of the capital for roughly sixteen years and died peacefully in 552. He is commemorated on August 25.
Timeline 3 moments
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536Raised to the patriarchal throneAfter the deposition of Anthimus, Menas was elevated from the presbyterate to Patriarch of Constantinople, consecrated with the participation of Pope Agapitus I of Rome, who was then in the capital.
536-552PatriarchateMenas led the Church of Constantinople for about sixteen years. During his tenure the great church of Hagia Sophia, the Wisdom of God, was consecrated. He was also drawn into the doctrinal disputes of Justinian's reign, taking a position against the teachings of Origen and becoming involved in the controversy over the Three Chapters.
552ReposeMenas died peacefully in the year 552 and is commemorated on August 25.
Contributions & Legacy
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Earlier Service
Before becoming patriarch, Menas was a presbyter at Constantinople and the supervisor of the Home of Saint Sampson the Hospitable, an institution devoted to the care of the poor and needy during the reign of Justinian I. The sources attribute his elevation to his virtue and his firm confession of Orthodoxy following the deposition of the heretic Anthimus.
Doctrinal Controversies
Menas's patriarchate coincided with the theological disputes that Justinian sought to resolve. He took a position against the writings of Origen and was involved in the controversy over the Three Chapters. In 551 the emperor pressed for the council that would become the Second Council of Constantinople (the Fifth Ecumenical Council), which convened in 553 after Menas's death and was presided over by his successor Eutychius.
His relations with Rome were not uniformly settled: tradition records that Pope Vigilius excommunicated Menas during the disputes of these years, followed by reconciliation.
Traditional Accounts
The synaxarion relates a miracle from his patriarchate in which a Jewish child who had received Communion was cast into a fiery furnace by his angry father, yet was found unharmed after three days; the account adds that the child and his mother were thereby brought to faith.