Theotimus, bishop of Tomi
Theotimus (2), bp. and metropolitan of Tomi, the capital of Scythia Minor
in Lower Moesia. By birth a Goth, he was educated in Greece, where he took the name
by which he is known. Adopting strict asceticism for himself, he kept a liberal
table for the savage Goths and Huns who visited Tomi as the great central market
of the province, endeavouring by hospitality, gifts, and courteous treatment to
prepare them to receive the Gospel. In some instances the seed was sown in good
soil, and the Hunnish strangers returned to their distant homes as converts, eager
to convert their fellow-barbarians. Theotimus is with much probability identified
by Baronius (sub ann. 402) with the successful missionary to the Huns mentioned
by St. Jerome. He was regarded by the Huns with superstitious reverence, and was
styled by them "the God of the Romans." The long hair of a philosopher flowed over
his episcopal attire. He was a frequent and much revered visitor at Constantinople.
In 403, during the visit of Epiphanius of Salamis, he refused to affix his signature
to the decree of the council of Cyprus condemning the teaching of Origen, denouncing
the attempt to cast insult on a justly honoured name and to question the decisions
of wise and good men before them. He supported his refusal by publicly reading passages
from Origen. He was an author of some note. Jerome ascribes to him some treatises
in the form of dialogues. Fragments of his are in John Damascene's Parallel.
Sacr. (vol. ii. pp. 640, 675, 694, 785, Le Quien's ed.). The archimandrite Carosus
at the council of Chalcedon boasted that he had been baptized by Theotimus and charged
by him to keep the Nicene faith inviolate (Labbe, Concil. iv. 530). Socr.
H. E. vi. 12; Soz. H. E. vii. 26, viii. 14; Tillem. Mém. eccl.
xi. 190; Le Quien, Or. Chist. ii. 1217; Cave, Hist. Lit. i. 288.
[E.V.]