By Fr. George Dorbarakis
Saint Constantine is a scandal to many with regard to his sainthood. How is it possible, they claim, that an emperor who by necessity waged wars, gave orders for the destruction of his opponents, even of his own people whenever he thought they opposed him, could ultimately become a saint and be honored as a saint by the fullness of the Church? Yet the question must be broadened: how is it possible for the Apostle Paul to be a saint and to be regarded as the greatest of the apostles, when he too committed many violent acts in his life, so much so that even his name alone functioned among the first Christians as a synonym for threat and murder? And not only Paul, but many others among the saints of our faith as well. What do those who hesitate regarding the sanctity of Constantine the Great — and of the others who used violence — fail to understand or sufficiently take into account? The power of repentance, and even more, the will of God Himself. For — to focus on the Equal-to-the-Apostles Saint — whatever violent acts Constantine committed, he committed while he was not yet a Christian, or after his conversion and certainly before his definitive entrance into the faith through holy baptism, acting in ignorance, while God Himself gave abundant signs of His will that Constantine should be near Him.







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