  
   Saints are not born with halos around their heads. Cyril, 
recognized as a great teacher of the Church, began his career as 
archbishop of Alexandria, Egypt, with impulsive, often violent, actions.
 He pillaged and closed the churches of the Novatian heretics (who 
required those who denied the faith to be rebaptized), participated in 
the deposing of St. John Chrysostom (September 13) and confiscated 
Jewish property, expelling the Jews from Alexandria in retaliation for 
their attacks on Christians. 
 
Cyril’s importance for theology and Church history lies in his 
championing the cause of orthodoxy against the heresy of Nestorius, who 
taught that in Christ there were two persons, one human and one divine. 
The
 controversy centered around the two natures in Christ. Nestorius would 
not agree to the title “God-bearer” for Mary (January 1). He preferred 
“Christ-bearer,” saying there are two distinct persons in Christ (divine
 and human) joined only by a moral union. He said Mary was not the 
mother of God but only of the man Christ, whose humanity was only a 
temple of God. Nestorianism implied that the humanity of Christ was a 
mere disguise.  
Presiding as the pope’s representative at the 
Council of Ephesus (431), Cyril condemned Nestorianism and proclaimed 
Mary truly the “God-bearer” (the mother of the one Person who is truly 
God and truly human). In the confusion that followed, Cyril was deposed 
and imprisoned for three months, after which he was welcomed back to 
Alexandria as a second Athanasius (the champion against Arianism).  
Besides
 needing to soften some of his opposition to those who had sided with 
Nestorius, Cyril had difficulties with some of his own allies, who 
thought he had gone too far, sacrificing not only language but 
orthodoxy. Until his death, his policy of moderation kept his extreme 
partisans under control. On his deathbed, despite pressure, he refused 
to condemn the teacher of Nestorius. 
   Comment:  Lives of the saints are valuable not only for the 
virtue they reveal but also for the less admirable qualities that also 
appear. Holiness is a gift of God to us as human beings. Life is a 
process. We respond to God's gift, but sometimes with a lot of 
zigzagging. If Cyril had been more patient and diplomatic, the Nestorian
 Church might not have risen and maintained power so long. But even 
saints must grow out of immaturity, narrowness and selfishness. It is 
because they—and we—do grow, that we are truly saints, persons who live 
the life of God. 
            Quote:  Cyril's theme: "Only if it is one and the same
 Christ who is consubstantial with the Father and with men can he save 
us, for the meeting ground between God and man is the flesh of Christ. 
Only if this is God's own flesh can man come into contact with Christ's 
divinity through his humanity. Because of our kinship with the Word made
 flesh we are sons of God. The Eucharist consummates our kinship with 
the word, our communion with the Father, our sharing in the divine 
nature—there is very real contact between our body and that of the Word"
 (New Catholic Encyclopedia). | 
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