St. Callixtus I (died 222, Rome [Italy]; feast day October 14) was the pope from about 217 to 222, during the schism of St. Hippolytus, the church’s first antipope. Little was known about Callixtus before the discovery of Philosophumena by Hippolytus, a work that is in part a pamphlet directed against him.
Callixtus was originally enslaved. According to Hippolytus’s account, he was denounced as a Christian by the Jews, who had him sentenced to the Sardinian mines. On his return he was pensioned by Pope St. Victor I. Later he was ordained a deacon by Pope St. Zephyrinus and probably became his chief counselor.
After the death of Zephyrinus (217), Callixtus was elected pope but was opposed by his theological adversary Hippolytus, who attempted to supplant him and who accused him of favouring modalist, or Patripassian, doctrines, both before and after his election. (Callixtus, however, condemned and excommunicated Sabellius [fl. c. 215–c. 220], the most prominent champion of Modalistic Monarchianism, called Sabellianism, a heretical doctrine that denied personal distinctions within the Godhead.) Hippolytus also accused him of certain relaxations of discipline: it appears that Callixtus reduced the penitential severities against fornication and adultery, which the church had previously regarded as irremissible except by God.
Callixtus transferred the Roman Christian burial ground from the Via Salaria to the Via Appia (later called the Cemetery of Callixtus and finally the Cemetery). His own burial place is on the Via Aurelia. He was succeeded by St. Urban I.