St. Denis (Dionysius), Pope, Confessor
269 A.D.
December 26


     Denis was a priest of the church of Rome under the pontificates of Stephen and Sixtus II. The latter having received the crown of martyrdom under Valerian on the 6th of August, 258 through the violence of the persecution, the Holy See continued vacant almost a year till our saint was chosen pope on the 2nd of July, 259. St. Denis of Alexandria styles him an admirable man and a person eminently learned. St. Basil wonderfully extols his charity which he extended to the most remote provinces of the empire. When the Goths had plundered Caesarea, the capital of Cappadocia, and carried away most of its inhabitants into captivity, the good pope wrote to that city a letter of comfort and sent messengers with large sums of money to ransom the captives. Our saint condemned Sabellius and others in a council at Rome, and he afterwards confuted the blasphemies of Paul of Samosata. St. Athanasius and St. Basil made use of his elegant writings to prove the divinity of the Son, and the latter also that of the Holy Ghost. St. Athanasius testifies that three hundred fathers at Nice in defending the Catholic faith used no new expressions but those which they received from the foregoing pastors of God's church, copying particularly those of Denis of Rome and his namesake of Alexandria. This holy pope died on the 26th of December in 269.

from Lives of the Saints by Rev. Alban Butler, 1895

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