Servant of the servants of God

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File:Detail of Quo Primum tempore.JPG
The 1570 bull Quo primum of Pope Pius V in a Roman Missal. Below the name of the Pope Pius Episcopus (Pius Bishop) appears his title Servus servorum Dei. Not all papal documents begin in this way, but bulls do.

"Servant of the servants of God" (Template:Langx)[1] is one of the titles of the Pope and is used at the beginning of papal bulls.[2]

History

Pope Gregory I (pope from 590 to 604), the first Pope to use this title extensively to refer to himself,[3] deployed it as a lesson in humility for the archbishop of Constantinople John the Faster (in office 582–595), who had been granted the traditional title "Ecumenical Patriarch"[4] by a Council convened in Constantinople in 587.[5] Gregory reportedly reacted negatively to the Patriarch's title, claiming that "whoever calls himself universal bishop [the imprecise Latin translation of "Ecumenical Patriarch"],Script error: No such module "Unsubst". or desires this title, is, by his pride, the precursor to the Antichrist."[6]

References

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Bibliography

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  1. Gabriel Adeleye, Kofi Acquah-Dadzie, Thomas J. Sienkewicz, World dictionary of foreign expressions: a resource for readers (1999) "Servus servorum Dei", p. 361.
  2. Ian Robinson The papal reform of the eleventh century p. 326 - 2004 "Gregory bishop, servant of the servants of God, to the archbishops, bishops , dukes, counts and the greater and lesser men in the kingdom of the Germans, greeting and apostolic blessing."
  3. Template:CathEncy
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