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Venerable (Monastic) · 7th century

Venerable Maximus the Confessor

Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Maximus the Confessor

c. 580 – 13 August 662

A theologian and former imperial secretary who defended the two wills of Christ against the Monothelites; his tongue and right hand were cut off, yet his confession became the faith of the Sixth Ecumenical Council.

Life

Maximus the Confessor was a seventh-century theologian and former imperial official who became the foremost defender of the doctrine that Christ possesses both a divine and a human will, against the Monothelite teaching that he had only one will. Born around 580 into an aristocratic family in or near Constantinople, he received an exceptional education in philosophy, grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, and astronomy.

Before entering monastic life he served in imperial government under Emperor Heraclius, rising to the powerful office of first secretary (Protoasekretis). Recognizing that the court had embraced the Monothelite position, he resigned and took monastic vows at the monastery of Chrysopolis, across the Bosporus from the capital, where he was soon made abbot.

His unyielding confession of the faith brought him into direct conflict with imperial authority. After repeated trials he had his tongue and right hand cut off and was exiled to the Caucasus, where he died in 662. His theological position was vindicated two decades later by the Third Council of Constantinople, the Sixth Ecumenical Council, and he is honored as one of the last Fathers recognized as such by both the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches.

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Timeline

  1. c. 580 Birth Born around 580 into an aristocratic Christian family, in or near Constantinople (some sources place his birth at Hisfiyya in Syria Prima).
  2. under Heraclius (611–641) Imperial service Served in the government of Emperor Heraclius, rising to the office of Protoasekretis, first secretary and chief counselor.
  3. c. 614 Monastic life Resigned his imperial post and entered the monastery of Chrysopolis near Skutari, later becoming its abbot; subsequently fled to North Africa during the Persian invasion.
  4. 645 Debate with Pyrrhus After a public debate in Carthage in which the deposed Patriarch Pyrrhus recanted Monothelitism, Maximus accompanied him to Rome.
  5. 649 Lateran Council Took part in the Lateran Council convened by Pope Martin I, which condemned Monothelitism and the Typos and anathematized the Monothelite patriarchs.
  6. 653 Arrest Arrested with Pope Martin I on the orders of Emperor Constans II and brought to Constantinople.
  7. 662 Mutilation and exile After a further trial his tongue was cut out and his right hand cut off; he was exiled to Schemarum in the Lazica (Colchis) region of present-day Georgia.
  8. 13 August 662 Repose Died in exile in the fortress of Schemarum, near modern Tsageri.
  9. 680–681 Vindication The Third Council of Constantinople, the Sixth Ecumenical Council, affirmed the two wills of Christ and declared Maximus posthumously innocent.

Contributions & Legacy

Early Life and Imperial Service

Maximus was born around 580. Sources differ on his birthplace, some placing it at Hisfiyya in Syria Prima and others in the region of Constantinople, but they agree that he came from an aristocratic and devout Christian household. He received a superior classical education that encompassed philosophy, grammar, rhetoric, mathematics, and astronomy.

He entered imperial government service under Emperor Heraclius, who reigned from 611 to 641, and rose to the office of Protoasekretis, or first secretary and chief counselor, one of the most powerful positions in the empire. His attainment of so high an office by about the age of thirty reflects his elevated social standing and ability.

Recognizing that the emperor and members of the court had embraced the Monothelite heresy, Maximus resigned his post and entered monastic life at the monastery of Chrysopolis, near Skutari (modern Üsküdar), across the Bosporus from Constantinople. Within several years he was elevated to abbot. Sources place his entry into monasticism around 614.

Travels and the Monothelite Controversy

When the Persians invaded Anatolia, Maximus fled westward, eventually reaching a monastery near Carthage in North Africa. There he studied Christological questions under Saint Sophronius of Jerusalem and undertook extensive preaching in Alexandria, on Crete, and in Carthage, where he resided for roughly five years and earned the esteem of the Exarch Gregory and the Eparch George.

The Monothelite controversy concerned how to understand the will of Christ. Patriarch Sergius and his successor Pyrrhus promoted the teaching that Christ possessed only one, divine, will, while Maximus held that Christ possessed two wills, divine and human, a position known as Dyothelitism. From around 640 he championed this Orthodox confession against the Monothelite claims.

His most celebrated theological encounter came when the deposed Patriarch Pyrrhus arrived in Carthage. In a public debate held before many North African bishops, Pyrrhus acknowledged the error of the Monothelite position and recanted. Maximus then accompanied him to Rome in 645.

The Lateran Council and Confession

Maximus is thought to have resided at San Saba in Rome when Pope Martin I convened the Lateran Council in 649 at the Lateran Basilica. The council condemned Monothelitism and the imperial edict known as the Typos, and anathematized the Patriarchs Sergius, Paul, and Pyrrhus of Constantinople. Some hold that the official acts of the council may have been composed by Maximus himself.

His refusal to accept the Typos of Emperor Constans II brought the full weight of imperial displeasure upon him. He summarized his loyalties in a famous saying recorded in tradition: that he held the faith of the Latins but the language of the Greeks.

Both Pope Martin and Maximus were arrested on the emperor's orders. Maximus was brought to Constantinople and tried as a heretic, accused among other charges of having aided the Muslim conquests in Egypt and North Africa, charges that he rejected. After a further trial his tongue was cut out and his right hand cut off, so that he could neither speak nor write his confession.

Theological Writings and Legacy

Maximus left a substantial body of theological work. Among his principal writings are the Quaestiones ad Thalassium, sixty-five questions and answers on Scripture; the Ambigua, an exegetical work engaging the writings of Gregory the Theologian; the Mystagogia, an interpretation of the Divine Liturgy; the Chapters on Love; and dogmatic treatises against Monothelitism.

He articulated a developed theology of theosis, the deification of the human person, teaching that deification is wholly the gift of God's mercy rather than a product of human nature. His thought profoundly shaped later Orthodox tradition, influencing Saint Simeon the New Theologian and Saint Gregory Palamas.

His theological position was vindicated by the Third Council of Constantinople, the Sixth Ecumenical Council of 680 to 681, which declared that Christ possesses both a human and a divine will and condemned Monothelitism as heresy; Maximus was posthumously declared innocent. He became extremely popular within a generation of his death, and remains one of the last men recognized as a Father of the Church by both the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches. Pope Benedict XVI called him the great Greek doctor of the Church in his 2007 encyclical Spe Salvi.

Relics & Shrines

Maximus was buried in the region of his exile in the Caucasus. The Orthodox Church commemorates his repose on January 21, while August 13 marks the translation of his relics to Constantinople.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: His vindication at the Sixth Ecumenical Council and his swift veneration as a saint within a generation of his death are recorded in the historical tradition.

Traditional Accounts: The synaxarion relates that Maximus foreknew the day of his death through a divine revelation. It is also recounted that miraculous candles burned above his grave and that numerous healings occurred at his tomb, accounts that contributed to his rapid popular veneration.

Notes

Aug 13 = translation of his relics.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 21