S.
PETER OF SEBASTE.
THE
family of which S. Peter was descended was very ancient and illustrious, as we
are informed by S. Gregory Nazianzen. It has become famous for its saints, for
three brothers were at the same time eminently holy bishops, S. Basil, S.
Gregory of Nyssa, and S. Peter of Sebaste; and their elder sister, S. Macrina,
was the spiritual mother of many saints. Their father and mother, S. Basil the
elder, and S. Emilia, were banished for their faith in the reign of Galerius
Maximian, and fled into the deserts of Pontus.
The
grandmother of S. Peter was S. Macrina the elder, who had been instructed in
the way of salvation by S. Gregory the Wonder-worker. S. Peter of Sebaste, was
the youngest of ten children; he lost his father whilst still an infant, and
was therefore brought up by his mother and sister. When the aged Emilia was
dying, she drew her two children—the only two who were present—to her, and
taking their hands, she looked up to heaven, and having prayed God to protect,
govern, and sanctify her absent children, she said, "To Thee, 0 Lord, I
dedicate the first-fruits; and the tenth of my womb. This, my firstborn,
Macrina, I give thee as my first-fruits; and this, my tenth child, Peter, I
give thee as my tithe. They are thine by law, and thine they are by my free
gift. Hallow, I pray thee, this my first-born daughter, and this my tenth
child, and son." And thus blessing them, she expired, says S. Gregory
Nyssen.
S. Emilia had founded two monasteries, one for men, the other for
women; the former she put under the direction of her son Basil, the latter
under that of her daughter Macrina. Peter, whose thoughts where wholly bent on
cultivating the seeds of piety sown in his heart, retired into the house
governed by his brother, situated on the bank of the river Iris; and when S.
Basil was obliged to quit that post in 362, he left the abbacy in the hands of
S. Peter, who discharged this office for several years with great prudence and
virtue.
Soon after S. Basil was made Bishop of Cesarea, in Cappadocia, in 370,
he promoted his brother Peter to the priesthood. His brother, S. Basil, died on
Jan. 1st, A.D. 379, and Eustathius, Bishop of Sebaste, an Arian and a furious
persecutor of S. Basil, died soon after.
S. Peter was consecrated in his room,
in 380, to root out the Arian heresy in that diocese, where it had taken deep hold. In 3S1,
he attended the general council held at Constantinople, and joined in the condemnation of the Macedonian heresy.
His death happened in summer, about the year 387, and his brother, S. Gregory
of Nyssa, mentions that his memory was honoured at Sebaste by an anniversary
solemnity. " Peter," says Nicephorus, "who
sprang from the same parents as Basil, was not so well-read in profane
literature as his brother, but he was not his' inferior in the splendour of his
virtue."