 Cornelius
 was elected to the papal dignity during a time in which both the Church
 and civil society were in great turmoil. About the year 250, Rome was 
ruled by the Emperor Decius, who savagely persecuted Christians. He 
ordered all Christians to deny Christ by offering incense to idols or 
through some other pagan ritual. Many Christians refused and were 
martyred, among them St. Fabian, the Pope, while others burnt the 
sacrificial incense in order to save their own lives. In hopes that 
Christianity would fade away, Decius prevented the election of a new 
pope. However, he was soon compelled to leave Rome to fight the invading
 Goths and, in his absence, the papal election was held.
Cornelius
 was elected to the papal dignity during a time in which both the Church
 and civil society were in great turmoil. About the year 250, Rome was 
ruled by the Emperor Decius, who savagely persecuted Christians. He 
ordered all Christians to deny Christ by offering incense to idols or 
through some other pagan ritual. Many Christians refused and were 
martyred, among them St. Fabian, the Pope, while others burnt the 
sacrificial incense in order to save their own lives. In hopes that 
Christianity would fade away, Decius prevented the election of a new 
pope. However, he was soon compelled to leave Rome to fight the invading
 Goths and, in his absence, the papal election was held.
By 251, 
the Church had endured fourteen months without a pope when Cornelius was
 elected, much against his will. After the persecution, the Church 
became divided in two. One side, led by the Roman priest Novatian, 
believed that those who had stopped practicing Christianity during the 
persecution could not be accepted back into the Church even if they 
repented. Under this philosophy, the only way to re-enter the Church 
would be re-baptism. The opposing side, headed by Pope Cornelius, did 
not believe in the need for re-baptism. Instead, he believed the sinners
 should only need to show contrition and perform penance to be welcomed 
back into the Church. Novatian resisted Cornelius and declared himself 
Pope – thus becoming History's first antipope.
Later, during that
 same year, a synod of western bishops supported Cornelius, condemned 
the teachings of Novatian, and excommunicated him and his followers. 
When another persecution began in 253 under Emperor Gallus, Pope 
Cornelius was first exiled and then died as a martyr.
 
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