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- Chapter XXVII. -Of The Piety Of The Emperor Arcadius And The Ordination Of John Chrysostom.
Chapter XXVII.--Of the piety of the emperor Arcadius and the ordination of John Chrysostom.
This fact is alone sufficient to show the emperor's care for divine things. At the same time the see of Antioch was held by Flavianus, and that of Laodicea by Elpidius, who had formerly been the comrade of the great Meletius, and had received the impress of his life and conversation more plainly than wax takes the impression of a seal ring. [908]
He succeeded the great Pelagius; [909] and the divine Marcellus [910] was followed by the illustrious Agapetus [911] whom I have already described as conspicuous for high ascetic virtue. In the time of the tempest of heresy, of Seleucia ad Taurum, Maximus, [912] the companion of the great John, was bishop, and of Mopsuestia Theodorus, [913] both illustrious teachers. Conspicuous, too, in wisdom and character was the holy Acacius, [914] bishop of Beroea.
Leontius, [915] a shining example of many virtues, tended the flock of the Galatians.