SAINT JULIUS I
Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin, Vol. 4
He condemned the synods which the Arians had assembled in Tyreand in Antioch, with the intention of abolishing the faith of Nicea. He assembled two councils in Rome, where he heard the exiled bishops and proclaimed their innocence. By his counsel, the Emperor Constans, the pious prince of the West, influenced his brother Constantius to recall Saint Athanasius from exile. Saint Julius rejected a deceptive formula of faith, imagined by the Eusebians, who were partisans of Arius at the second council of Antioch.
He assembled the second Council of Sardica, composed of both Western and Oriental bishops. His legates presided there, and he saw to it that useful measures for the maintenance of the Catholic faith and the re-establishment of ecclesiastical discipline were drafted and implemented. He built two basilicasin Rome and adorned them with sacred paintings. He had three cemeteries constructed, on the Flaminian and Aurelian ways, and at Porto. He regulated legal questions concerning the clergy, ordaining that they would plead nowhere but in ecclesiastical courts. Saint Julius reigned for fifteen years, and died on the 12th of April, 352.
Reflection. The great Popes have all pleased God by their outstanding humility. When the Lord gives the Graces of a good administrator to souls, He requires in them more than ordinary virtue, for it is His Authority which they merely share, by His permission. He does not permit that they attribute their success to their own imaginary powers.
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