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Date of birth unknown; d. 274. Early in 269 he succeeded Saint
Dionysius as head of the Roman Church. About this time there arrived at
Rome, directed to {ln:Pope} Dionysius, the report of the Synod of Antioch
which in that very year had deposed the local bishop, Paul of Samosata,
for his heretical teachings concerning the doctrine of the Trinity (see
Antioch). A letter, probably sent by Felix to the East in response to
the synodal report, containing an exposition of the doctrine of the
Trinity, was at a later date interpolated in the interest of his sect
by a follower of Apollinaris (see Apollinarianism). This spurious
document was submitted to the Council of Ephesus in 431 (Mansi, "Coll.
conc.", IV, 1188; cf. Harnack, "Geschichte der altchristlichen
Literatur", I, 659 sqq.; Bardenhewer, "Geschichte der altchristlichen
Literatur", II, 582 sq.). The fragment preserved in the Acts of the
council lays special emphasis on the unity and identity of the Son of
God and the Son of Man in Christ. The same fragment gives {ln:Pope} Felix as
a martyr; but this detail, which occurs again in the biography of the
{ln:Pope} in the "Liber Pontificalis" (Ed. Duchesne, I, 58), is unsupported
by any Authentic earlier evidence and is manifestly due to a confusion
of names. According to the notice in the "Liber Pontificalis", Felix
erected a basilica on the Via Aurelia; the same source also adds that
he was buried there ("Hic fecit basilicam in Via Aurelia, ubi et
sepultus est"). The latter detail is evidently an error, for the fourth
century Roman calendar of feasts says that {ln:Pope} Felix was interred in
the Catacomb of St. Callistus on the Via Appia ("III Kal. Januarii,
Felicis in Callisti", it reads in the "Depositio episcoporum"). The
statement of the "Liber Pontificalis" concerning the {ln:Pope} 's martyrdom
results obviously from a confusion with a Roman martyr of the same name
buried on the Via Aurelia, and over whose grave a church was built. In
the Roman "Feriale" or calendar of feasts, referred to above, the name
of Felix occurs in the list of Roman bishops (Depositio episcoporum),
and not in that of the martyrs. The notice in the "Liber Pontificalis"
ascribes to this {ln:Pope} a decree that Masses should be celebrated on the
tombs of martyrs ("Hic constituit supra memorias martyrum missas
celebrare"). The author of this entry was evidently alluding to the
custom of celebrating the Holy Sacrifice privately, at the altars near
or over the tombs of the martyrs in the crypts of the catacombs (missa ad corpus),
while the solemn celebration of the Sacred Mysteries always took place
in the basilicas built over the catacombs. This practice, still in
force at the end of the fourth century (Prudentius, "Peristephanon",
XI, vv. 171 sqq.), dates apparently from the period when the great
cemeterial basilicas were built in Rome, and owes its origin to the
solemn commemoration services of martyrs, held at their tombs on the
anniversary of their burial, as early as the third century. Felix
probably issued no such decree, but the compiler of the "Liber
Pontificalis" attributed it to him because he made no departure from
the custom in force in his time. According to the above-mentioned
detail of the "Depositio episcoporum", Felix was interred in the
catacomb of St. Callistus, 30 December. In the present Roman
Martyrology his name occurs 30 May, the date given in the "Liber
Pontificalis" as that of his death (III Kal. Jun.); it is probably an error which could easily occur through a transcriber writing Jun. for Ja?n.
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