Hierarch 5th century

Saint Antipater Bishop of Bostra

5th century (fl. c. 457–460)

Also known as Antipater of Bostra

A bishop of Bostra in Arabia, esteemed among the fathers for his learning and especially for his writings against the errors of Apollinarius.

Feast Day
June 13
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Antipater, Bishop of Bostra

Life

Saint Antipater was a Greek prelate of the fifth century who served as metropolitan bishop of Bostra, the principal city of the Roman province of Arabia Petraea. He was in office by 457, having succeeded Constantine, the bishop who had attended both the Second Council of Ephesus (449) and the Council of Chalcedon (451).

Antipater is esteemed among the fathers chiefly for his learning and his theological writings. He maintained strong connections with Palestinian monasticism, particularly through Euthymius the Great and his followers, and was held in high regard by both civil and ecclesiastical authorities. His date of death is unknown; the Church commemorates him on June 13.

His significance rests primarily on his writings rather than on a narrative life. Saint Antipater's life is not recorded in the Synaxaristes, and the OCA calendar notes its absence there, describing him simply as a fifth-century bishop known for refuting doctrinal errors.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 309 Apology for Origen written Pamphilus of Caesarea composes the Apology for Origen, the text Antipater would later refute.
  2. By 457 Metropolitan of Bostra Antipater is in office as metropolitan bishop of Bostra, succeeding Constantine, who had attended the Second Council of Ephesus (449) and the Council of Chalcedon (451).
  3. c. 460 Flourished Antipater flourishes as one of the prominent Greek ecclesiastical leaders in Arabia, esteemed by both civil and ecclesiastical authorities.
  4. 540 Refutation read in the churches Church leaders order Antipater's Refutation of the Apology for Origen to be read in the churches of the East as an antidote to the spread of Origenistic heresies.
  5. 787 Cited at the Seventh Ecumenical Council The Fathers of the Seventh General Council recognize Antipater among authoritative ecclesiastical writers; fragments of his anti-Origenist refutation survive in their acts.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Historical Context

Antipater led the church of Bostra during a period of intense doctrinal controversy in the Christian East. He had become metropolitan by 457, succeeding Constantine, and flourished around 460. As metropolitan of the province of Arabia Petraea he ranked among the prominent Greek ecclesiastical leaders of the region.

His close ties to Palestinian monasticism, especially to Euthymius the Great and his circle, situated him within the theological currents that would shape the wider Church's response to Origenism in the generations after him.

Theological Writings

Antipater's most significant work was his Refutation of the Apology for Origen, a response to a text written by Pamphilus of Caesarea around 309. In it he denounced the doctrines of the pre-existence of souls and apocatastasis (universal restoration) with dogmatic precision, and opposed Origen's allegorical interpretations of the creation narrative in Genesis.

His refutation was highly regarded as a masterly composition. By 540 church leaders ordered it to be read in the churches of the East as an antidote to the spread of Origenistic heresies. Cyril of Scythopolis noted that Antipater served as a chief doctrinal authority during the sixth-century Origenist crisis, though only fragments of the work survive in the acts of the Seventh Ecumenical Council.

Antipater also composed a treatise against the Apollinarists, the errors of Apollinarius being among the heresies for which he is particularly esteemed; this work survives only in brief fragments. The Fathers of the Seventh General Council (787) cited him among authoritative ecclesiastical writers.

Marian Homilies

Antipater authored numerous homilies on the Theotokos reflecting the theological conclusions of the Council of Ephesus. His works develop the Eve-Mary parallel and refer to Mary as Theotokos. He elevated Mary's salvific role, employing an early form of a word by which later theologians would describe her as Mediatrix.

His surviving and attributed writings include four homilies On Christ's Nativity (preserved in Armenian translation); two homilies on Saint John the Baptist, the silence of Zechariah, and Mary's greeting; homilies on the Annunciation and the Visitation; two homilies On Epiphany and On the Beginning of the Fast; a Latin homily On the Assumption of Mary; and two complete homilies, On John the Baptist and On the Annunciation, published in the Patrologia Graeca. Scholars question the authenticity of many of the works attributed to him.

Relics & Shrines

An ancient Greek inscription discovered in the nineteenth century appears to commemorate a large church dedicated to Mary in Bostra. Scholars have proposed that Antipater was its founder. The inscription describes Mary as 'much-sung' and as 'the undefiled dispenser of marvellous gifts.'

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints