The 1282 Maronite Schism: The Story of the Two Patriarchs

The 1282 Maronite Schism: The Story of the Two Patriarchs

The complete history of the Maronite Church's forgotten 1282 schism — when two Patriarchs simultaneously claimed the See of Antioch, the mountain versus Rome factions divided the church, Patriarch Daniel II of Hadshit held Ehden for forty days, and eight villagers fled into the Qadisha caves and never returned.

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Saint John Maron: The First Patriarch of the Maronite Church
Maronite Saint, Maronite A Servant of God Maronite Saint, Maronite A Servant of God

Saint John Maron: The First Patriarch of the Maronite Church

An Exhaustive Portrait of the Saint Who Forged a Nation and a Rite in the Fires of the Seventh Century

Saint John Maron (c. 575–707) is not merely one saint among many. He is the living cornerstone of the entire Maronite Catholic Church, the man who, by the grace of God and at the cost of immense personal sacrifice, transformed a scattered monastic community into an autonomous patriarchal Church in full communion with Rome. Recognized as the first Maronite Patriarch (685–707), defender of Chalcedonian orthodoxy against imperial Monothelitism, organiser of armed resistance to invasion, and author of the earliest known Maronite liturgical and theological texts, he is venerated as the spiritual father of an entire people. His feast is celebrated on March 2 in the Maronite calendar and on February 21 in some local traditions. This comprehensive study draws upon the most ancient Syriac, Arabic, and Greek sources, the 10th-century Chronicle of Patriarch Stephen Douaihy (the “Father of Maronite History”), the 12th-century Vita by Patriarch Jeremiah of Dmalsa, Vatican archival documents, and modern critical scholarship to present the fullest portrait available of the man whom Maronites still call “Mar Abba Yuhanna Maroun – “Our Father Saint John Maron.”

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