Quodvultdeus Explained

Saint Quodvultdeus
Death Date:~450 AD
Feast Day:26 October (Roman calendar); 8 January (calendar of Carthage); 19 February (calendar of Naples, Eastern Orthodox)
Venerated In:Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Death Place:Neapolis, Western Roman Empire
Titles:Church Father and Bishop of Carthage

Quodvultdeus (Latin for "what God wills", died 450 AD) was a fifth-century Church Father and Bishop of Carthage who was exiled to Naples. He was known to have been living in Carthage around 407 and became a deacon in 421 AD. He corresponded with Augustine of Hippo, who served as Quodvultdeus' spiritual teacher.[1] Augustine also dedicated some of his writings to Quodvultdeus.[1]

Quodvultdeus was exiled when Carthage was captured by the Vandals led by King Gaiseric, who followed Arianism. Tradition states that he and other churchmen (such as Gaudiosus of Naples) were loaded onto leaky ships that landed at Naples around 439 AD and Quodvultdeus established himself in Italy.[1] He would go on to convert dozens of Arian Goths to the orthodox Christian faith during his lifetime.

One of the mosaic burial portraits in the Galleria dei Vescovi in the Catacombs of San Gennaro depicts Quodvultdeus.[2]

Writings

None of the surviving writings by Quodvultdeus were transmitted under his name. While Liber promissionum et praedicatorum Dei was attributed to Prosper of Aquitaine already in the 6th century, Quodvultdeus's sermons came down to us in Augustinian collections. In 1914 Germain Morin was the first to suppose that 12 sermons by Pseudo-Augustine were actually written by Quodvultdeus.[3] In 1920 Desiderius Franses showed this hypothese to be highly plausible.[4]

List of writings

  1. Contra iudaeos, paganos et arrianos ("Against Jews, Pagans and Arians")
  2. Adversus quinque haereses ("On five heresies")
  3. De symbolo I ("On the creed I")
  4. De symbolo II ("On the creed II")
  5. De symbolo III ("On the creed III")
  6. De quattuor virtutibus caritatis ("On the four virtues of love")
  7. De cantico novo ("On the new song")
  8. De ultima quarta feria ("On the last Wednesday")
  9. De cataclismo ("On the cataclysm")
  10. De tempore barbarico I ("On barbaric times I")
  11. De accedentibus ad gratiam I ("On the approach to grace I")
  12. De accedentibus ad gratiam II ("On the approach to grace II")
  13. De tempore barbarico II ("On barbaric times II")

Editions and Translations

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://saints.sqpn.com/saintq08.htm Patron Saints Index: Saint Quodvultdeus
  2. Book: MacKie, Gillian . Early Christian Chapels in the West . 2003 . University of Toronto Press . 31 . 10.3138/9781442674189 . 10.3138/9781442674189 . 978-0-802035042.
  3. G. Morin. Pour une future édition des opuscules de S. Quodvultdeus évêque de Carthage au Ve siècle. Revue Bénédictine 31, 1914, p. 156–162.
  4. D. Franses. Die Werke des hl. Quodvultdeus. Munich, 1920.