Eusebius of Nicomedia, Bishop of Constantinople
III/IV Centuries
Bishop of Berytus, in Phoenicia, then of Nicomedia, where the imperial
court resided, and finally of Constantinople (as early as 338), where he
died 341. Distantly related to the imperial house, he not only owed his
removal from an insignificant to the most splendid episcopal see to his
influence at court, but the great power he wielded in the Church was
derived from that source. With the exception of a short period of eclipse,
he enjoyed the complete confidence both of Constantine and Constantius;
and it was he who baptized the former May, 337. Like Arius, he was a pupil
of Lucian of Antioch, and it is probable that he held the same views as
Arius from the very beginning. He afterward modified his ideas somewhat,
or perhaps he only yielded to the pressure of circumstances; but he was,
if not the teacher, at all events the leader and organizer, of the Arian
party. At the Council of Nimes, (325) he signed the Confession, but only
after a long and desperate opposition. His defense of Arias excited the
wrath of the emperor, and a few months after the council he was sent into
exile. After the lapse of three years, he succeeded in regaining the
imperial favor; and after his return (in 329) he brought the whole
machinery of the state government into action in order to impose his views
upon the Church.
---Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia
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