Maximus the Confessor
Festividad: January 21
Byzantine theologian and martyr who defended Christ's two wills and championed theosis in Christian life.
Patronazgo
General intercession, monks, theologians, confessors
Virtudes y rasgos
Biografía
Maximus the Confessor (c. 580-662) was an influential Byzantine theologian and ascetic whose works synthesized Eastern Christian theology with profound spiritual insight. Initially serving as secretary to the Byzantine Emperor, he abandoned his position to enter monastic life, eventually becoming a renowned spiritual father and theologian. Maximus articulated sophisticated understandings of Christology, particularly the union of divine and human natures in Christ, and developed the concept of theosis—deification or union with God—as the goal of Christian life. He vigorously opposed Monotheletism, the heretical position that Christ possessed only one will, even under severe persecution. For his resolute defense of Orthodox Christology, Byzantine authorities tortured him, severed his tongue and right hand, and exiled him. Despite these brutalities, he remained uncompromising in his witness. His writings, including the Mystagogia and numerous theological treatises, provided crucial intellectual foundations for Orthodox theology and Christian spirituality, emphasizing the transformation of the human person through union with Christ.