A HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN COUNCILS. CHAPTER II. SYNODS OF THE THIRD CENTURY
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A HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN COUNCILS
BOOK VII.THE SECOND GENERAL COUNCIL AT CONSTANTINOPLE IN 381.
Sec. 95. Convocation and Opening of the Council; its Members and
Presidents.
SINCE the death of the Emperor Constantius, Arianism in the West had
more and more declined; but in the Eastern Empire, especially under the Emperor
Valens, it had constantly increased in strength, and at the same time in
intolerance. The capital, Constantinople, formed a true picture of the state of
the Eastern Church. Here the Episcopal See had been for forty years in the
hands of the Arians, and this sect was so powerful and predominant that the
Catholics no longer possessed a single one of the many
churches in the city. Their attempt, in 370, again to choose another bishop for
themselves failed, for the Emperor Valens drove away their nominee, Evagrius (in 370), by force of arms. Thus the number of the orthodox in the capital, being without bishop, churches, or
services, almost daily became smaller. At the death of the Emperor Valens in
378, the East also came under the rule of Gratian, whose edict of toleration,
in 379, rendered it possible again to give the Catholics of Constantinople a
representative of their own (not a bishop, but a diocesan administrator) in the
person of one of the greatest Fathers of the Church of that time, S. Gregory of
Nazianzus. In order to be able to hold divine service
for the Catholics of the city who had remained faithful, Gregory converted the
house of one of his relatives into a church, to which he gave the significant
name of Anastasia, for it was in truth a resurrection of the orthodox community
of Constantinople, and the poor chapel grew afterwards into the famous church
of the Resurrection. But the more that Gregory, by his splendid sermons and his
great activity, established and spread the Nicene faith, so much the more did
he become the object of the hatred of the heretics, who not only overwhelmed
him with scorn and abuse, chiefly on account of his poverty, and what they
considered the rusticity of his manners, but made repeated attempts on his
life, and once even broke by force into the chapel of the Resurrection at
midnight when he was holding service. The altar was desecrated, the sacred wine
mingled with blood, and all kinds of barbarities committed. Gregory's false
friend, Maximus, occasioned him no less sorrow. He was by birth an Alexandrian, and professed to have been a confessor in a
time of persecution; he arrived in Constantinople almost at the same time as
Gregory, and there played the part of an ascetic, and (cynic) philosopher. As
he also pretended to great zeal for the Nicene faith, Gregory received him into
his house and at his table, reposing in him such unbounded confidence that he
even pronounced a public panegyric upon him. But after a short time he discovered him to be an intriguer, a hypocrite, and
a liar, who, with the help of a party in Constantinople, and of Peter,
patriarch of Alexandria, strove to make himself bishop of Constantinople, and
did in fact contrive to be secretly consecrated to that office. He was indeed
obliged by the people to leave the city; but Gregory, who was deeply grieved
and shaken in health by these events, was anxious to resign his office, and
only the constant entreaties of his flock, and more especially the exclamation
of a citizen, — “With yourself you banish also the Trinity (the orthodox faith
concerning the Trinity) from Constantinople” — induced him to promise to remain
until another bishop should be appointed.
About the same time that Gregory was summoned to Constantinople, the
Emperor Gratian conferred upon his former general, Theodosius, the dignity of
joint Emperor, with the government of the East. From his own inner conviction,
as well as from political reasons, Theodosius made it one of his chief duties
to secure the religious unity of the kingdom upon the basis of the Nicene
faith, and immediately upon his accession required of all his subjects the
confession of the orthodox faith. When in the autumn of 380 he came to
Constantinople, the Arians of that city were obliged to restore to the orthodox
all the churches and the whole of the Church property; and their former Bishop Demophilus, whom, as bishop of Beroea in Thrace, we have before repeatedly seen among the Arian leaders, was obliged
to leave the place, because, disregarding the Imperial command, he would not
consent to the Nicene Creed.
In order to arrange the affairs of the Church once more in the capital, and above all to
secure the triumph of the Nicene faith in the East also over Arianism, together
with its Pneumatomachian offshoot, Theodosius
summoned a large Synod to meet at Constantinople, which assembled in May 381,
under the Consuls Eucharius and Evagrius,
and subsequently ranked as the second Ecumenical Council. Theodoret remarks
that Theodosius only summoned the bishops belonging to his division of the
Empire; and this is indeed confirmed by the fact that only Orientals were
present. Hence it is probable that Pope Damasus, as belonging to Gratian's
division of the Empire, was never invited to the Synod, — as he was neither
present in person nor represented, — and that Theodosius only intended to have
a General Council for the East, and not an Ecumenical Council. Baronius and
others have tried to prove that Pope Damasus really summoned this Synod, since
its members had themselves said: “they had assembled in Constantinople in
accordance with a letter from Damasus to the Emperor Theodosius the Great”. We
do indeed find this in a Synodal Letter in Theodoret, which, however, does not
emanate from this, but from a second Constantinopolitan Synod of 382, as have
been already observed, and as we shall see further on. Baronius refers also to
a statement of the sixth General Council, that “when Macedonius spread the heresy concerning the Holy Ghost, Theodosius and (Pope) Damasus at
once withstood him, and Gregory of Nazianzus, and Nectarius his successor, then assembled a Synod in this royal city”. This passage is,
however, too vague and uncertain to permit the
conclusion that this Synod was organized by Pope Damasus; nay, the words, “Gregory
and Nectarius assembled a Synod”, contain an
historical error, as the Synod was called neither by the one nor the other,
certainly not by both together. It is only true that both presided at
Constantinople, and even this not from the beginning; and possibly the sixth
General Council means no more than this.
As at first there seemed hope that the Macedonians or Pneumatomachians might be again won over to the Church, the
Emperor invited their bishops also to the Synod, and thirty-six appeared, the
greater number from the countries on the Hellespont. Of these the most famous
were Eleusius of Cyzicus, often before mentioned, and Marcianus of Lampsacus. One
hundred and fifty bishops of the orthodox side were present, those from Egypt
and Macedonia arriving somewhat later than the rest. Of these the most famous
were Bishop Meletius of Antioch, who had arrived at Constantinople some time
before to appoint S. Gregory of Nazianzus bishop of that city, Timotheus of
Alexandria, Cyril of Jerusalem, his nephew Gelasius of Caesarea in Palestine, Ascholius of Thessalonica, whom the Emperor Theodosius had
shortly before baptized when he was ill, Helladius of
Caesarea, the successor of S. Basil the Great, Gregory of Nazianzus, Gregory of
Nyssa, S. Basil's youngest brother, S. Peter of Sebaste, Amphilochius of Iconium, Optimus of Antioch in
Pisidia, Diodorus of Tarsus in Cilicia, S. Pelagius
of Laodicea, S. Eulogius of Edessa, Acacius of Beroea in Syria,
Isidore of Cyrus in Syria, and others.
Meletius of Antioch at first presided, and after his death Gregory of
Nazianzus, and after he had resigned, his successor Nectarius,
Patriarch of Constantinople. Sozomen differs from
this, in stating that Timotheus of Alexandria held the presidency with Meletius
and Cyril of Jerusalem; and this would have been correct, as the Patriarch of
Alexandria ranked before the Patriarch of Antioch. But Timotheus was not
present at the commencement of the Synod, and therefore the right of Meletius
to rank first was undisputed. If, however, even after the arrival of the
Patriarch of Alexandria, he did not preside, but the Bishop of Constantinople,
this took place by the decision of the Synod itself, as in its third canon it
ranked the Bishop of new Rome immediately after the
Bishop of old Rome.
The Emperor was present at the opening of the
Synod, and loaded Meletius with especial honors. While still a general of Gratian’s,
he had dreamed that Meletius of Antioch presented him with the Imperial throne
and mantle, and not long afterwards he really became Emperor. Now, when the
bishops assembled for the Synod visited the Emperor,
he gave express orders that Meletius should not be presented to him, as he
wished to see whether he should recognise the man
whom he had seen in his dream. He knew him at once, and approaching him with
great reverence, he kissed his eyes, his breast, his head, and his hands, and
related to him the wonderful vision. He also treated the other bishops with all respect, and prayed them to give their fatherly
consideration to the subjects brought before them.
Sec. 96. First Act of the Council.
The first necessary act was to provide a bishop for the Church of
Constantinople. The ordination of the Cynic Maximus was therefore investigated,
and as it proved to be uncanonical and irregular, the Council declared that
Maximus had never been a bishop, and that consequently all the ordinations
performed by him were invalid. This was also expressly declared in the fourth
canon. They, however, did not deem it necessary or fitting to pronounce any
sentence against the deceased patriarch, Peter of Alexandria, who had appointed
Maximus. Gregory of Nazianzus was forthwith besieged by the Emperor and many
bishops of the Council with earnest entreaties that he would now accept the See
of Constantinople; but it was only after long hesitation and many refusals, and
in the view of being able, as bishop of the capital, the more easily to do away
with the Meletian schism and the consequent breach between the East and the
West, — always one of his greatest desires, — that he was persuaded to yield.
Gregory was now solemnly installed in the See of Constantinople by Meletius and
the other members of the Synod, as it was thought expedient for the greater
benefit of the Church to make an exception to the rule that no bishop (Gregory
had been Bishop of Sasime) should be transferred to
another See.
Soon afterwards S. Meletius died, shortly after the beginning of the
Synod, and exceptional honors were showered upon him even in his death; for
instance, Gregory of Nyssa, in his funeral oration (of which many were held),
spoke of him as a saint. It had already been agreed during the lifetime of
Meletius, that when either of the two orthodox Bishops of Antioch, Meletius or
Paul, died, no new bishop should be elected in his place, but the survivor
should be universally acknowledged. Notwithstanding this, some members of the
Council demanded that a successor to Meletius should be elected, while Gregory
of Nazianzus, who was now president, did all in his power to procure the
carrying out of the agreement. The younger bishops of the Synod, however,
violently opposed him, being of opinion that the recognition of Paul would be
too great a concession to the Latins; they succeeded in carrying away with them
older bishops also, and thus it came to pass that Flavian, hitherto a priest,
was chosen as the successor of Meletius by the bishops of the dioceses
(=patriarchates) of Antioch and Asia, and was confirmed by the Synod, whereby
the Meletian schism was perpetuated.
This grieved Gregory so much that he would no longer be present at the
meetings of the Council, and quitted the episcopal residence, and made his
intention of resigning more and more plain every day. Many of the most
influential men prayed and conjured him to remain; but as about the same time
the Egyptian bishops, who had then just arrived, declared themselves,
professedly on canonical grounds, dissatisfied with the promotion of Gregory to
the See of Constantinople, he one day appeared before the Synod, and announced
his resignation of the See, as for the sake of peace he would gladly, like
Jonas, be cast out. The majority of the Synod accepted his resignation, many of
the bishops even gladly, — the Emperor, on the
contrary, most unwillingly; and on the proposal of the bishops, Nectarius, formerly praetor of Constantinople, a very
worthy and illustrious man, who, however, had never been baptized, was now
raised by the Emperor, with the consent of the people, to the See of
Constantinople.
According to Socrates, the negotiations with the Macedonians had begun
earlier than this, before the election of Nectarius,
and the Emperor did all in his power to win them over
to the unity of the Church. He reminded them that they themselves had before, in
366, of their own accord offered to unite their faith with that of the Western
Church, and therefore had sent Eustathius of Sebaste and other deputies to Rome, that they had also accepted the Homousian
confession of faith, and thereupon entered into communion
with Pope Liberius and the Sicilian bishops. He
preached, however, to deaf ears; for, as Socrates expresses it, the Macedonians
“preferred to acknowledge the Arian rather than to agree to the Homousian
doctrine”. Socrates forgets to mention that with the Macedonians it was not now
a question merely of the omooúsios of the Son, but
also of the omooúsios of the Holy Ghost.
Sec. 97. The Tome and the Creed.
Socrates further relates that the Macedonian bishops had then left
Constantinople, and everywhere addressed letters to their adherents, warning
them against the acceptance of the Nicene faith; but that the one hundred and
fifty orthodox bishops who remained at Constantinople had confirmed the Nicene
faith. Sozomen and Theodoret express themselves as briefly.
The Synod of Constantinople of the following year, 382, however, relates that
the Council had put forth a Tome of its own, i.e. a special and particular
treatise on the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity, and it may be conjectured
that the Constantinopolitan Creed, which is still received, was no more than a
part of this Tome, its quintessence, as also that the present first canon
containing the anathema against heretics belonged to the Tome. From the
following statement of the fourth General Council at Chalcedon, in an address
to the Emperor, — “the bishops who at Constantinople
detected the taint of Apollinarianism, communicated to the Westerns their
decision in the matter”, — Tillemont, not without
reason, concludes that this Tome also treated of the heresy of
Apollinaris, and (at least in one copy) was addressed to the Latin bishops.
Nicephorus Callisti maintains that Gregory of
Nyssa was the author of the creed of this Council; but Marcus Eugenicus, at the Council of Florence in 1439, maintained
that it was the work of Gregory of Nazianzus. Both statements are, however, so
uncertain, and so little to be relied upon, that Tillemont,
as it seems to me rightly, thought himself justified in propounding quite
another hypothesis. He starts from the fact that Epiphanius, in his Ancoratus, adopted a similar creed, remarking that it was
everywhere in use, and must be learned by heart by all catechumens. But
his Ancoratus had already been written as
early as 374, as is expressly stated in several passages; consequently the
creed in question must have been in use in the Church at least ten years before
the second General Council, and it is probable that this Council did not
actually draw up a new creed, but only copied, and in some places altered, one
already in use, shortening it, as a comparison of the text in Epiphanius with
the actual creed of this Synod proves. It runs thus:
“We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Creator of heaven and
earth, and of all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the only begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all times (ages),
Light from Light, very God from very God, begotten, not created, of the same
substance with the Father, by whom all things were made; who for us men, and
for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost
of the Virgin Mary, and was made Man; who was crucified for us under Pontius
Pilate, suffered and was buried, and the third day He rose again according to
the Scriptures, and ascended into heaven, and sat down at the right hand of the
Father; and He shall come again with glory to judge both the living and the
dead; whose kingdom shall have no end. And we believe in the Holy Ghost, the
Lord and Life-giver, who proceedeth from the Father;
who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified; who spoke
by the Prophets. And in one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. We acknowledge
one Baptism for the remission of sins. We look for a resurrection of the dead,
and the life of the world to come. Amen”.
It is somewhat remarkable, and probably only to be accounted for by the
peculiar relation of Gregory of Nazianzus to this Synod, that this Father of
the Church, in writing to Cledonius shortly after the
close of the Synod of Constantinople concerning the rule of faith, only
mentioned the Nicene Creed and not that of Constantinople, although he admitted
the former to be incomplete with regard to the
doctrine of the Holy Ghost. Neither was this creed mentioned at the third
General Council at Ephesus; but the fourth General Council at Chalcedon had it
twice recited, and twice received it into its acts, thus solemnly approving it.
It was also repeated and accepted at the sixth General Council in 680. It is
printed among the acts of the first Council of Constantinople in all
collections of Councils. There are Latin translations of it in the collection
of Dionysius Exiguus and Isidore.
Sec 98. The Canons of the Second General Council.
Besides the decree of faith, the Synod of Constantinople also drew up a
few canons, to which in the old Greek codices the following heading is prefixed : “Canons of the one hundred and fifty holy Fathers
who assembled at Constantinople under the Consulate of those illustrious men,
Flavius Eucherius and Flavius Evagrius, on the 7th of
the Ides of July” — that is, the 9th of July. From this we may conclude that
this Synod, which, according to Socrates, begun in May 381, lasted until July
of that year.
The number of canons drawn up by the Synod is doubtful. The old Greek
codices and the Greek commentators of the Middle Ages, Zonaras and Balsamon, enumerate seven; but the old Latin translations —
viz. the Prisca, those by Dionysius Exiguus and
Isidore, as well as the Codex of Luna — only recognise the four first canons of the Greek text, and the fact that they agree in this
point is the more important as they are wholly independent of each other, and
divide and arrange those canons of Constantinople which they do acknowledge
quite differently.
Because, however, in the Prisca the canons of Constantinople
are only placed after those of the fourth General Council, the Ballerini brothers conclude that they were not contained at
all in the oldest Greek collections of canons, and were inserted after the Council of Chalcedon. But it was at this very Council
of Chalcedon that the three first canons of Constantinople were read out word
for word. As, however, they were not separately numbered, but were there read
under the general title of Synodicon Synodi Secundae, Fuchs concluded
that they were not originally in the form in which we now possess them, but, without being divided into numbers, formed a larger and
unbroken decree, the contents of which were divided by later copyists and
translators into several different canons. And hence the very different
divisions of these canons in the Prisca, Dionysius, and Isidore may be
explained.
The fact, however, that the old Latin translations all agree in only
giving the four first canons of the Greek text, seems to show that the oldest
Greek manuscripts, from which those translations were made, did not contain the
fifth, sixth, and seventh, and that these last did not properly belong to this
Synod, but were later additions. To this must be added that the old Greek
Church historians, in speaking of the affairs of the second General Council,
only mention those points which are contained in the first four canons, and say
nothing of what, according to the fifth, sixth, and seventh canons, had also
been decided at Constantinople. At the very least, the seventh canon cannot
have emanated from this Council, since in the sixth century John Scholasticus
did not receive it into his collection, although he adopted the fifth and
sixth. It is also missing in many other collections; and in treating specially
of this canon further on, we shall endeavor to show the time and manner of its
origin. But the fifth and sixth canons probably belong to the Synod of
Constantinople of the following year, as Beveridge, the Ballerini,
and others conjectured. The Greek scholiasts, Zonaras and Balsamon,
and later on, Tillemont,
Beveridge, Van Espen and Herbst, have given more or
less detailed commentaries on all these canons.
The canons are as follows : —
Can. 1. The confession of faith of the three hundred and eighteen
Fathers, who were assembled at Nicaea in Bithynia, shall not be abolished, but
shall remain, and every heresy shall be anathematized, especially that of the Eunomians or Anomoeans, the
Arians or Eudoxians, the Semi-Arians or Pneumatomachians, the Sabellians, Marcellians, Photinians,
and Apollinarians.
Can. 2. The bishops of another diocese shall not pass over to
foreign churches, and introduce confusion among them; but, in accordance with
the canons, the bishop of Alexandria shall govern the affairs of Egypt only,
and the Eastern bishops shall have charge of the affairs of the East only,
while the rights of the Antiochian Church, as declared in the sixth canon of
Nicaea, shall be preserved, and the bishops of the dioceses of Asia (Ephesus)
shall only have jurisdiction over Asia, those of the dioceses of Pontus over
Pontus, and those of the dioceses of Thrace over Thrace. Unless summoned, the
bishops shall not go beyond their own dioceses for the purpose of ordination,
or any other ecclesiastical function. While, however, the existing canon with regard to the dioceses is observed, it is clear that in
each eparchy (province) the Provincial Synod must rule in accordance with the
decisions of Nicaea. But the Churches of God among the barbarous nations shall
be governed according to the custom prevailing from the times of the Fathers.
Can. 3. The Bishop of Constantinople shall hold the first rank
after the Bishop of Rome, because Constantinople is New Rome.
Can. 4. With regard to the Cynic Maximus,
and the disorder occasioned by him in Constantinople, (it is declared) that
Maximus never became a bishop, and is not one now, neither are any of those
ordained by him to any grade whatsoever of the clerical office really ordained,
as everything performed about him (viz. his consecration) and by him is
pronounced invalid.
Can. 5. With regard to the treatise (Tome)
of the Westerns, we also recognised the Antiochians,
who acknowledge the oneness of the Godhead of the Father, the Son, and the Holy
Ghost.
Can. 6. Seeing that many, in order to disturb and destroy the order
of the Church, invidiously and wantonly invent accusations against the orthodox
bishops who govern the Church, for the sole purpose of injuring the reputation
of the priests, and bringing disquiet among the peaceable people, the Holy
Synod of the bishops assembled at Constantinople has decided that in future no
accuser shall be received without examination, that neither shall all be
allowed, nor all forbidden to bring accusations against the governors of the
Church. But, in the case of anyone bringing a private complaint against the
bishop, as having been defrauded by him, or in any other way unjustly treated,
neither the person nor the religion of the accuser shall be considered, for the
conscience of the bishop should be perfectly clear, and he who affirms that he
has been injured, of whatever religion he may be, must receive justice. If, however,
the complaint brought against the bishop is of an ecclesiastical offence, then
the persons of the accusers must be inquired into, so that, in the first place,
heretics may not be allowed to raise complaints concerning ecclesiastical
matters against orthodox bishops. And we designate as heretics both those who
have been formerly shut out from the Church, and those who have afterwards been
anathematized by us; and, in addition to them, those who indeed profess to
acknowledge the sound faith, but who separate themselves from the orthodox
bishops and hold assemblies of their own. In the next place, members of the
Church, who for certain reasons have been condemned or excommunicated, and have
been deprived of communion, whether of the clergy or laity, shall not be
allowed to bring an accusation against a bishop, until they have first cleared
themselves of the charge laid against them. In like manner, those who are
already under accusation shall not be allowed to bring a charge against the
bishop or any of the clergy, until they have cleared themselves from the
charges brought against them. If, however, persons who are neither heretics nor
excommunicated, nor condemned, nor accused of offences, bring a charge in
ecclesiastical matters against the bishop, the Holy Synod orders that such
shall first bring their complaints before the assembled bishops of the
province, and prove their charge before them. If, however, the comprovincials
are not in a position to punish the bishop for the offences with which he is charged,
they (the accusers) shall have recourse to the larger Synod of the bishops of
the diocese (patriarchate), who must be summoned for the purpose, and they
shall not bring forward their complaint until they have promised in writing to
undergo the same punishment (which would be incurred by the accused bishop),
if, on investigation, they are convicted of having brought a false charge. If,
however, any one, in contempt of what is here
prescribed, presumes either to importune the ears of the Emperor, or to trouble
the secular law courts, or an (Ecumenical Synod, and thus dishonours the bishops of the diocese (patriarchate), his charge shall most certainly not
be received, because he has contemned the canons and
violated the order of the Church.
Can. 7. Those who turn to orthodoxy, and from heretics to the
number of those who are being saved, we receive in the following manner. We
receive the Arians and Macedonians, the Sabbatians and Novatians, who call
themselves Cathari and Aristeori, also the Tetradites (Quartodecimans) and Apollinarians, on their
anathematizing in writing every heresy which is not in accordance with the Holy
Catholic and Apostolic Church of God, and, being first sealed or anointed with
the holy oil on the forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, and ears. And in sealing
them we say, “The seal of the gift of the Holy Ghost”. But the Eunomians, who only baptize with one immersion, and the
Montanists, who are here called Phrygians, and the Sabellians,
who teach the doctrine of the Fatherhood of the Son or err grievously in other
ways, and all other heretics — of whom there are many here, especially those
who come from Galatia, — all of those who are willing to turn from these
heresies to the orthodox faith, we receive (only) as heathen; on the first day
we make them Christians, on the second catechumens, on the third we exorcise
them by three times breathing on them on the face and on the ears; thus we
instruct them and make them frequent the Church for a long time, and listen to
the Holy Scriptures, and then we baptize them.
Sec. 99. The Second General Council receives the Imperial Confirmation.
Having so far considered the creed and the canons of the second
Ecumenical Council, there yet remains for our consideration one document
belonging to it, i.e. the short letter which the Synod
at its close addressed to the Emperor Theodosius the Great, in which it thanks
God and the Emperor, and gives the latter a summary of its proceedings. “In
obedience to your letters”, say the bishops, “we met together at
Constantinople, and, having first restored union among ourselves, we then made
short definitions confirming the faith of the Fathers of Nicaea, and condemning
the heresies which have risen in opposition to it. We have also, for the sake
of ecclesiastical order, drawn up certain canons: and all this we append to our
letter. We pray you now, of your goodness, to confirm by a letter of your piety
the decision of the Synod, that, as you have honoured the Church by your letters of convocation, you would thus seal the decisions”,
etc.
The Emperor Theodosius granted the wish here expressed, and from
Heraclea, on the 30th of July 381, he issued the command that “all the churches
were at once to be surrendered to the bishops who believed in the oneness of
the God-head of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and were in communion
with Nectarius of Constantinople, in Egypt with
Timotheus of Alexandria, in the East with Pelagius of Laodicea and Diodorus of Tarsus, in proconsular Asia and the Asiatic
diocese with Amphilochius of Iconium and Optimus of
Antioch (in Pisidia), in the diocese of Pontus with Helladius of Caesarea, Otreius of Melitene, and Gregory of
Nyssa, lastly (in Moesia and Scythia) with Terentius, the Bishop of Scythia
(Tomi), and with Martyrius, Bishop of Marcianople (now Preslaw in
Bulgaria). All who were not in communion witli the
above-named, should, as avowed heretics, be driven from the Church”.
Sozomen gives just the same account, but Socrates has misrepresented the matter, and
thereby occasioned many errors. First, according to his account, it was not the Emperor but the Synod which gave the above-mentioned
bishops special prerogatives; and, secondly, these bishops were thereby raised
to the dignity of patriarchs, whereas it was plainly only on account of their
personal worth, not on account of the dignity of their Sees, that they were
regarded as models of orthodoxy. It could certainly never have entered any
one's head to raise the little town of Nyssa into a patriarchate, and yet
Gregory of Nyssa is mentioned in the above list. On the other hand, the name of
Meletius of Antioch is wanting, although the special prerogatives of Antioch
had already been recognised at Nicaea,
and had never during the course of centuries been questioned. Most
assuredly, if there had been any question of patriarchates, Antioch would not
have been passed over. On the other hand, it could not possibly have been
mentioned for the purpose intended by the Emperor in
the above command, because at that moment two orthodox parties in Antioch were
disputing the possession of the See.
Sec. 100. The Authority of the Second General Council.
Lastly, to turn to the question of the authority of this Council, it
appears, first of all, that immediately after its close, in the same year, 381,
several of its acts were censured by a Council of Latins, namely, the
prolongation of the Meletian schism (by the elevation of Flavian), and the
choice of Nectarius as Bishop of Constantinople,
while, as is known, the Westerns held the (Cynic) Maximus to be the rightful
bishop of that city.
In consequence of this, the new Synod assembled in the following year,
382, at Constantinople, sent the Latins a copy of the decrees of faith composed
the year before, expressly calling this Synod ecumenical, and at the same time
seeking to justify it in those points which had been censured. Photius
maintains that soon afterwards Pope Damasus confirmed this Synod; but, as the
following will show, this confirmation could only have referred to the creed
and not to the canons. As late as about the middle of the fifth century, Pope
Leo I spoke in a very depreciatory manner of these canons, especially of the
third, which concerned the ecclesiastical rank of Constantinople, remarking
that it was never sent to the See of Rome.
Thus, as late as the year 600, only the creed, but not the canons of the
Synod of Constantinople were accepted at Rome; but on account of its creed,
Gregory the Great reckons it as one of the four Ecumenical Councils, which he
compares to the four Gospels. So also before him the
Popes Vigilius and Pelagius II reckoned this Synod among the Ecumenical
Councils.
The question is, from what date the Council of Constantinople was
considered ecumenical by the Latins as well as by the Greeks. We will begin
with the latter. Although, as we have seen, the Synod of 382 had already
designated this Council as ecumenical, yet it could not for a long time obtain
an equal rank with the Council of Nicaea, for which reason the General Council
of Ephesus mentions that of Nicaea and its creed with the greatest respect, but is totally silent as to this Synod. Soon
afterwards, the so-called Robber-Synod in 449 spoke of two (General) Councils,
at Nicaea and Ephesus, and designated the latter as the Second
Synod, as a plain token that it did not ascribe such a high rank to the
assembly at Constantinople. It might perhaps be objected that only the
Monophysites, who notoriously ruled the Robber-Synod, used this language; but
the most determined opponent of the Monophysites, their accuser, Bishop
Eusebius of Doylaeum, in like manner also brought
forward only the two Synods of Nicaea and Ephesus, and declared that “he held
to the faith of the three hundred and eighteen Fathers assembled at Nicaea, and
to all that was done at the great and Holy Synod at Ephesus”.
The creed of Constantinople appears for the first time to have been
highly honoured at the fourth General Council, which
had it recited after that of Nicaea, and thus solemnly approved it. Since then this Synod has been universally honoured as ecumenical by the Greeks, and was mentioned by the Emperor Justinian with
the Councils of Nicaea, Ephesus, and Chalcedon, as of equal rank. But in the
West, and especially in Rome, however satisfied people were with the decree of
faith enacted by this Synod, and its completion of the creed, yet its third
canon, respecting the rank of Constantinople, for a long time proved a
hindrance to its acknowledgment. This was especially shown at the Council of
Chalcedon, and during the time immediately following. When at that Council the
creed of Constantinople was praised, repeated, and confirmed, the Papal Legates
fully concurred; but when the Council also renewed and confirmed the third
canon of Constantinople, the Legates left the assembly, lodged a protest against it on the following day, and declared that
the rules of the hundred and fifty bishops at Constantinople were never
inserted among the Synodal canons (which were recognised at Rome). The same was maintained by Pope Leo himself, who, immediately after
the close of the Council of Chalcedon, wrote to Bishop Anatolius of
Constantinople: “that document of certain bishops (i.e. the third canon of Constantinople) was never brought by your predecessors to
the knowledge of the Apostolic See”. Leo also, in his 105th letter to the
Empress Pulcheria, speaks just as depreciatingly of this Council of
Constantinople; and Quesnel is entirely wrong in maintaining that the Papal
Legates at the Synod of Chalcedon at first practically acknowledged the
validity of the third canon of Constantinople. Bishop Eusebius of Doylaeum was equally mistaken in maintaining at Chalcedon
itself, that the third canon had been sanctioned by the Pope; and we shall have
occasion further on, in the history of the Council of Chalcedon, to show the
untenable character of both statements.
Pope Felix III took the same view as Pope Leo, when, in his letter to
the monks at Constantinople and Bithynia in 485, he only spoke of three General
Councils at Nicaea, Ephesus, and Chalcedon; neither did his successor Gelasius
(492-496) in his genuine decree, De libris recipiendis,
mention this Synod. It may certainly be said, on the other hand, that in the
sixth century its ecumenical character had come to be most distinctly
acknowledged in the Latin Church also, and, as we have seen above, had been expressly
affirmed by the Popes Vigilius, Pelagius II, and Gregory the Great. But this
acknowledgment, even when it is not expressly stated, only referred to the
decrees on faith of the Council of Constantinople, and not to its canons, as we
have already observed in reference to the third and sixth of them.
BOOK VIII.THE TIME BETWEEN THE SECOND AND THIRD GENERAL COUNCILS.
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READING HALL" JEWELS FROM THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION "THE TREASURE FROM OUR CHRISTIAN PAST |