Theodorus, bishop of Tyana
Theodorus (50), bp. of Tyana, a fellow countryman and correspondent of
Gregory Nazianzen. He was a native of Arianzus. Accompanying Gregory to Constantinople
in 379, he shared in the ill-treatment received there from the Arian monks and rabble.
He subsequently became bp. of Tyana, but not before 381. After Gregory returned
to Arianzus many letters of friendship passed between him and Theodore. On the attempt
of the Apollinarians to perpetuate the schism at Nazianzus, by appointing a bishop
of their own, Gregory wrote very earnestly (A.D.
382) to Theodore, calling on him, as metropolitan, to appoint a bishop to replace
him, as age and ill-health forbad his efficient superintendence of the church there
(Ep. 88). After being compelled reluctantly to resume the care of Nazianzus,
Gregory felt reason to complain of Theodore apparently siding with his enemies,
and expressed his feelings with vehemence (Ep. 83). Their friendship, however,
was not weakened, and on the completion, in 382, of the Philocalia—the collection
of extracts from Origen made by him and Basil many years before—Gregory sent Theodore
a copy as an Easter gift (Ep. 115 al. 87). Theodore was one of the
bishops attending the council summoned against Chrysostom by Theophilus at the end
of 403. Palladius describes him as a man of much wisdom and authority, who, when
he discovered the malicious intention of Theophilus and his partisans, retired to
his diocese soon after his arrival (Pallad. p. 23). The Theodorus to whom Chrysostom
addressed his Ep. 112 has been identified with Theodore of Tyana by the second
council of Constantinople (Labbe, v. 490). Tillemont decides (xi. 608) for Theodore
of Mopsuestia.
[E.V.]