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  1. Feastday: November 17. Patron: of against earthquakes, desperate causes, floods, forgotten causes, impossible causes, lost causes. Birth: 213. Death: 270. Author and Publisher - Catholic Online. Printable Catholic Saints PDFs. Shop St. Gregory Thaumaturgus. Gregory was of a distinguished pagan family.

  2. Gregory Thaumaturgus (c. 210–270) was an influential bishop and missionary in Neocaesarea, Pontus (modern Niksar), in northern Cappadocia. Through powerful miracles, Gregory converted the pagans of Pontus to Christianity. He had a profound effect on the later Cappadocian Fathers.

  3. Information on Gregory Thaumaturgus. Enrico Norelli writes, "We begin with the writings attributable with certainty to Gregory. The Canonical Letter is a set of eleven canons (the 11th being a later addition), addressed by Gregory the Wonderworker to another bishop, having to do with the attitude to be adopted in the church toward problems ...

  4. They began to call him “Thaumaturgus,” the “wonder-worker.” He was like a kind of opening onto heaven. But of all the miracles attributed to Gregory, perhaps the most memorable remains this: tradition states that this man, who was consecrated bishop of seventeen believers, left only seventeen non-believers in Neocaesarea at his death.

  5. the life of Gregory Thaumaturgus. AT ABOUT the time, in the early third century, when Gregory Thaumaturgus was born in the remote northeastern region of Asia Minor called Pontus, the em peror Caracalla was issuing the Constitutio Antoniniana, which conferred Roman citizenship upon practically everyone in the empire. As with so much else about.

  6. Gretory Thaumaturgus. Summary. Biography. Works By. Influence. Summary. Born. AD 213. Died. AD 270. Missionaries, Church history--Primitive and early church, Origen, Manichaeism, Christianity, … 21% Biography. Image Source: Wikipedia.

  7. GREGORY THAUMATURGUS, ST. Bishop of Neocaesarea in Pontus, the Wonder-worker; b. Neocaesarea, c. 213; d. there, c. 270. He was born Theodore into a well-to-do family, but was called Gregory. He studied rhetoric, Latin, and law. Then, with his brother Athenodorus, he spent five years (probably 233 – 238) as a disciple of origen at Caesarea in ...

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