Explore the Saints

St. Alexander of Alexandria

Alexander was born around the year 250 in Alexandria, Egypt. In his early years, he survived as a priest during violent persecutions that took the lives of many Christians in the Roman empire. In 313, he was named bishop of Alexandria, which was a center of learning in the ancient world.

During the time, a heretical strain of thought called Arianism was becoming popular. Arius, a popular teacher who fathered this heresy, was wrongly insisting that Jesus was not “consubstantial with the Father,” so Alexander excommunicated him in 321.

As tensions over the spreading heresy grew and pushed the Church to the brink of schism, Alexander responded by organizing the first council of Nicaea in 325, when the Church addressed our understanding of Jesus and articulated it in the Nicene creed that we pray on Sundays today.

In addition to his intellect and faithfulness, his contemporaries admired Alexander as a lover of God who was just and eloquent. He died in 328, and his relics rest in the reliquary chapel of the Basilica, and his image is used here with permission from Catholic.org.

St. Alexander of Alexandria, you fought for the faith declared in the creed we still use today, pray for us!


Image Credit: Our featured image of St. Alexander of Alexandria is in the public domain. Last accessed December 5, 2024 on Wikimedia Commons.