Severus II bar Masqeh

Severus II bar Masqeh (Syriac: ܦܛܪܝܪܟܐ ܣܘܝܪܐ ܕܬܪܝܢ, Arabic: البطريرك ساويرا الثاني)[1] was the Patriarch of Antioch and head of the Syriac Orthodox Church from 667/668 until his death in 684. He is commemorated as a saint by the Syriac Orthodox Church.[2]

Severus II bar Masqeh
Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East
ChurchSyriac Orthodox Church
SeeAntioch
Installed667/668
Term ended684
PredecessorTheodore
SuccessorAthanasius II Baldoyo
Sainthood
Venerated inSyriac Orthodox Church

Biography

Severus was a monk at the monastery of Asphulos near Reshʿayna, and later became the archbishop of Amida.[3] He succeeded Theodore as patriarch of Antioch in 667/668 (AG 979),[3] and was consecrated by John Bar ‘Ebrayta, archbishop of Tarsus.[4] 667/668 (AG 979) is given as the year of Severus' consecration by Bar Hebraeus in his Ecclesiastical History,[4] whilst Michael the Syrian gives 666/667 (AG 978), and the Chronicle of 819, the Chronicle of 846, and the Zuqnin Chronicle place it in 664/665 (AG 976).[5][6]

In Severus' tenure as patriarch, he attempted to centralise authority in the church by removing the right of the archbishops to ordain suffragan bishops.[7] A number of bishops opposed Severus' challenge to the archbishops' rights, and united under the leadership of Sergius Zkhunoyo, bishop of Germanicia, Ananias of Qartmin, archbishop of Damascus, and Gabriel, bishop of Reshʿayna,[8][9] and asserted that this right had been established by the fourth canon of the Council of Nicaea in 325, whereas Severus argued this right had been abolished by the Council of Chalcedon in 451.[7] Severus convened a synod at Beth Tellat to settle the dispute in 679/680, but was preempted by his opponents, who declared his deposition as patriarch of Antioch and excommunicated him, to which he responded by excommunicating them also.[3][4]

The schism endured for four years until Severus, on his deathbed, wrote to John, archbishop of the monastery of Saint Matthew, to authorise him and the bishops Joseph and Sergius to restore communion to his opponents on the condition that they repented and renounced their actions against him.[3][10] Severus subsequently died in 684 (AG 995),[3] according to Michael the Syrian.[8] Other sources date Severus' death differently, as the Chronicle of 846 and the Zuqnin Chronicle place Severus' death in 682/683 (AG 994),[11] and Bar Hebraeus gives 679/680 (AG 991).[4]

Works

Severus is known to have written a number of propitiatory prayers (pl. Syriac: ḥusoye).[10]

gollark: Another is superdeterminism, which is sort of kind of where the particles "know" what properties of them will be measured in advance.
gollark: One resolution is nonlocal hidden variables, i.e. the particles have some faster-than-light-speed backchannel to communicate things.
gollark: Bell's theorem rules out "local hidden-variables" interpretations of quantum physics, meaning that quantum mechanics cannot, assuming some assumptions, be doing this by storing some extra secret metadata with particles.
gollark: As you will know in time, quantum QM mechanics has "Bell's theorem". This describes some correlations between measurements of entangled particles which QM predicts correctly (based on empirical tests) and classical physics doesn't.
gollark: What? No. That would be stupid.

References

  1. Jeanne-Nicole Mellon Saint-Laurent (17 August 2016). "Severus bar Mashqo". Qadishe: A Guide to the Syriac Saints. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  2. Fiey (2004), p. 174.
  3. Van Rompay (2011).
  4. Mazzola (2018), pp. 249-250.
  5. Harrack (1999), p. 146.
  6. Palmer (1993), p. xlix.
  7. Mazzola (2019), pp. 399-413.
  8. Moosa (2014), pp. 477-480.
  9. Palmer (1990), p. 155.
  10. Barsoum (2003), pp. 330-331.
  11. Harrack (1999), p. 147.

Bibliography

Preceded by
Theodore
Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch
667/668–684
Succeeded by
Athanasius II Baldoyo
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