'''Macarius Magnes''' is probably to be identified with the Bishop of Magnesia who, at the Synod_of_the_Oak in 403, brought charges against Heraclides, bishop of Ephesus, the friend of John_Chrysostom. He seems to have been the author of an apology against a Neo-Platonic philosopher of the early part of the fourth century, contained in a manuscript of the fifteenth century discovered at Athens in 1867 and edited by C. Blondel (Paris, 1876). This work agrees in its Dogmatics with Gregory_of_Nyssa, and is valuable on account of the numerous excerpts from the writings of the opponent of Macarius. These fragments are apparently drawn from the lost "Words against the Christians" of Porphyry or from the "Truth-Loving Words" of Hierocles. Like Macarius the Younger, this Macarius is frequently confused with Macarius_of_Egypt. ----- {{Schaff-Herzog}} Magnes, Macarius Magnes, Macarius Magnes, Macarius