Gregory of Nyssa, a prolific writer, dies …
Years: 395 - 395
Gregory of Nyssa, a prolific writer, dies in 395, leaving his Great Catechesis, a systematic outline of Christian theology, and a defense of the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity in his treatises On the Holy Spirit and Ad Ablabium (or Not Three Gods).
He designed his The Creation of Man, an interpretation of the Bible, to complete his brother Basil's Hexaemeron (Six Days).
In his Life of Moses, Gregory portrays the journey of the Israelites to the Promised Land as an allegory of the soul's progress toward God.
He also wrote such works on asceticism as On Virginity and a biography of his sister, Macrina (who will later be canonized).
Gregory’s mystical commentaries on the Psalms earn him posthumous renown as the father of mysticism.
