I.
The Point of the Difficulty.
Much ink has been spilt in the cause of Pope Honorius. Some writers have
been chiefly occupied in defending or assailing the authenticity of the
documents, others in attacking or supporting the orthodoxy of Honorius. But the
inner sequence of events as described in the following sketch has never been
given in all this voluminous literature.
Though it will, I hope, be made clear in these pages that much has been
misunderstood or only half understood, yet the work of so many distinguished
writers has no inconsiderable value. Certainty has been attained on some
points. The authenticity of the documents is now above suspicion. It has been
made clear that Honorius’ meaning was far better than his expression, and that
his real mind was confused rather than unorthodox.
This is not, however, a very important point, since at the present day
no one is likely to teach that Honorius published his famous letters ex
cathedra. The real difficulty has been worded with admirable precision by
Bishop Gore in his Roman Catholic Claims. He says :
“Once again, whatever strong language may be quoted from a few later
Oriental writers on behalf of the Roman See, as from St. Theodore the Studite in the 8th century, nothing can override the
evidence of the formal action of the sixth General, Council in 689, when it
condemned Honorius the Pope among the Monothelite heretics. ‘With them we anathematize’, says the Council, ‘and cast out of the
Catholic Church, Honorius, who was Pope of the elder Rome, because we found
that he followed Sergius' opinion in all respects and confirmed his impious
dogmas’. Roman Catholic writers may endeavor to justify the actual language of
Honorius, they may protest that the contemporary Pope never intended to assent
to his condemnation except for negligence in opposing heresy—we are not
concerned at present with these contentions—but no one can possibly, with any
show of reason, contend that the insertion of the name of the Pope in a list of
formal heretics by an Ecumenical Council does not prove that the Bishops who
composed the Council had no, even rudimentary, idea of the papal
infallibility”.
As the history of Pope Honorius has been written up till now by Catholic
apologists, this indictment is unanswerable. Bishop Gore’s admission with
regard to St. Theodore the Studite might have
suggested to him that his conclusion was not certain, had not so many Catholic
writers made it seem that the Council in condemning Honorius was resisting the
Pope of its own day, and that the latter explained away a decision which he was
afraid of refusing to confirm.
In reality, as the history will appear from the original documents,
there is no difficulty at all. The Pope and the Council were in agreement as to
the necessity of condemning Honorius, and they were certainly right in doing so
under the circumstances.
It will also be made clear that there was no difference between Rome and
the East with regard to the force of papal decisions. We do not of course look
for the enunciation of the Vatican decree in set words by Eastern Bishops of
the 7th century. But evidence will be supplied to enable us to judge the
degree of development which the doctrine of papal infallibility had reached in
those times, and the whole history will stand out as an interesting and curious
page in the history of the evolution of the dogma.
I shall avoid controversy either with Catholics, Gallicans,
or Protestants. The facts will best speak for themselves, and I leave the
comparison with the views of former writers to be made or not by the reader as
he chooses, so as to avoid burdening these pages with tiresome arguments.
2.
The Beginnings of the Heresy.
A few words will explain the theological question. Monothelitism bears
the same relation to Monophysitism that the Spanish Adoptionism of the next
century bears to Nestorianism. Those who embraced it
held firmly the doctrine of the Council of Chalcedon that our Lord’s two
natures, divine and human, are united in Him without confusion, so that His
humanity remains perfect and complete, just as the Adoptionists held firmly the doctrine of the Council of Ephesus that the two natures belong
to one divine Person. But the Adoptionists did not
see that adoption is not of a nature but of a Person, and therefore they
wrongly taught that our Lord in His human nature might be called the adopted
Son of God. And, conversely, the Monothelites could
not see that activity and will belong to the nature and not to the Person, so
that they held Christ to have but one motive power—energy, activity, operation—and
one will, whereas in truth there must be a perfect operation and will of each
nature. As in the Trinity of three Persons in one Nature there is one
operation, ad extra, and one will, so in the two
natures of the one Person of Christ there are two operations and two wills—the
divine will common to the Son with the Father and the Holy Ghost, and a human
will, without which the human nature taken by the Son of God would be
incomplete.
The danger and the attractiveness of this wrong argumentation lay in the
fact that it went half way to meet the Monophysites. These heretics called the
orthodox Nestorians, and declared that they divided Christ in two. The unity of
will and operation was placed before the Monophysites as a proof that those who
accepted the Council of Chalcedon safeguarded the oneness of the Person of
Christ. The expression “one operation” was indeed a surrender of the perfect
distinction of the natures, and therefore was not far off from the more
moderate Monophysites, who professed simply to follow the doctrine taught by
St. Cyril against the Nestorians.
The origin of Monothelitism is thus told by Sergius. The Emperor
Heraclius, in a disputation held before him in Armenia in 622, had spoken of
“one operation in Christ”, and had later asked Cyrus, Bishop of Lazoe in Phasis, whether this was
correct. Cyrus replied that he did not know, and referred the question to
Sergius, Patriarch of Constantinople. Sergius was in favor of the expression,
and sent him a letter said to have been addressed by the Patriarch Mennas, his predecessor, to Pope Vigilius,
in which “one operation” was mentioned. Sergius declared that he intended no
absolute decision on the matter. Cyrus, however, was satisfied. About 630 he
became Patriarch of Alexandria, one of the strongholds of the Monophysites.
These were very much divided among themselves, and Cyrus induced one considerable
section of them to be reconciled with the Catholic Church by a sort of compromise,
which was nicknamed “the watery union”. The doctrine agreed upon was summed up
in nine propositions, which profess to render the teaching of Chalcedon, but
express themselves in Monophysite phraseology,
borrowed indeed from St. Cyril, but meant in a wrong sense by the heretics. The
seventh of these propositions anathematizes all who do not confess that the
same one Christ works both the divine and human works by “one theandric operation”. This expresses the main thesis of
Monothelitism.
Nothing could be more pleasing to the Emperor and Sergius than such a
union, and the latter wrote a joyful letter of congratulation to Cyrus. But the
Palestinian monk, Sophronius, was in Alexandria at the time, and he disapproved
of the teaching of “one operation” as contrary to the Chalcedonian doctrine. His reputation for sanctity was great, and Cyrus proposed that he
should lay his objections before Sergius. Sophronius accordingly proceeded to
Constantinople, and so far persuaded Sergius that he withdrew the “one
operation” for the sake of peace, and Sophronius promised to say no more. It is
evident that Sergius now distrusted this formula, but could not formally
withdraw it without imperiling the union of the Alexandrian heretics.
In this dilemma he took the obvious course of laying the whole matter
before the Pope.
3.
The Letter of Honorius.
His famous letter to Honorius begins by saying that he would desire,
were it possible, to bring all his actions day by day to the Pope’s cognizance
and receive his advice. He relates the circumstances, how very hard it seemed
to destroy the recent joyful union effected by Cyrus, with all its promises of
peace, “of those who once would not hear the name of the divine Leo and the
Council of Chalcedon, but who now proclaim them in a loud voice in the holy
mysteries”. Sophronius, he says, was not able to quote explicit testimonies of
the ancients for two operations; but it seemed that the term “one operation”
was novel, and he, Sergius, had therefore written to Cyrus to permit neither
one nor two operations to be spoken of, when once the union of the Monophysites
with the Church had been effected. Sophronius had agreed to this. At the end of
the letter Sergius quotes the celebrated words of Pope Leo, Agit enim utraque forma
cum alterius communione,
which obviously imply two operations; and he seems to have been orthodox enough
in meaning, though his expressions are incorrect. He has started from the Chalcedonian doctrine, but has made a sorry conclusion. He
does not openly support one will, which he only mentions in connection with the
supposititious letter of Mennas to Pope Vigilius, but he thinks “two operations” to be a misleading
expression. He concludes:
“We have thought it fitting and also necessary to give an account to
your Brotherhood and concordant Blessedness, by the copies which we are
sending, of what we have partially related above; and we beg your Holiness to
read the whole, and, following its meaning with your God-pleasing and full
charity, if there be anything wanting in what has been said, to fill this up
with the charity which God has given you; and with your holy syllables and with
your desirable assistance, to signify your opinion on the matter”.
The letter of Honorius, in reply, praises Sergius for his circumspection
in disapproving the new expression, “one operation”. So far so good. But he
goes on to admit one will, because our Lord took to Himself a human nature free
from the curse of original sin. The reason given implies that our Lord has a
human will, only not also a corrupt lower human will. This is in answer to
Sergius, who had argued that if two operations were admitted there would follow
two contrary wills. The Pope declares that to teach one operation will seem Eutychian, while to teach two will seem Nestorian. Both
expressions are consequently to be avoided.
Honorius is thus logically and theologically as much astray as Sergius,
though both are orthodox in intention. It would no doubt be uncharitable to
regard either the Pope or the Patriarch as a “private heretic”.
Unfortunately these letters were afterwards treated as if they were
definitions of faith. As definitions they are obviously and beyond doubt
heretical, for in a definition it is the words that matter.
It is, of course, absurd to regard the letter of Honorius as a
definition ex cathedra, as was done by Hefele, Pennacchi and others. It was natural to exaggerate at the
time of the Vatican Council, but today the decree is better understood. If the
letter of Honorius to Sergius is to be ex cathedra, a fortiori all papal
encyclicals addressed to the whole Church at the present day must be ex
cathedra, quod est absurdum.
The decision of Honorius was nothing more and also nothing less than an
approval given to the disciplinary arrangement suggested by Sergius. Both
believed that “one will” had been said, and said in an orthodox sense, by the
orthodox Mennas, unrebuked by Pope Vigilius, and neither was aware that “two
operations” and “two wills” could be shown to have been consecrated by the
usage of the Fathers. Sergius was at least doubtful, and set the matter before
the Pope. Honorius had a higher responsibility; he decided in haste to agree
with the conduct of Sergius, and he decided wrongly. The result of his letter
was the so-called heresy of Monothelitism, which up to this point can scarcely
be said to have as yet existed, except as an opinion under discussion.
4.
St. Sophronius of Jerusalem intervenes
At the time when these two letters were written, St. Sophronius had
already been promoted to the patriarchal Chair of Jerusalem, and on the
occasion of his enthronization had published the defence of two operations and
two wills which Sergius had demanded from him, but which the latter had not yet
received when he wrote to the Pope. It is a long document, afterwards read and
approved by the sixth Council, and it has the remarkable merit of being the
first complete exposition of the orthodox doctrine of the two wills and
natures. It was sent to all the patriarchs, and Sophronius declares that he is
ready to receive corrections. For our present purpose his reference to St. Leo
as speaking with Peter’s voice is of interest.
After detailing his assent to the five General Councils, he adds that he
accepts the divine writings of Cyril and the letters of Eastern prelates which
were received by Cyril.
“And also equally with these holy
writings of the all-wise Cyril I receive as holy and honored together with
them, and as propagating the same orthodoxy, the God-given and inspired letter
of the great and illustrious and saintly Leo, the light of the Roman Church, or
rather of the Church beneath the sun, which he, moved clearly by the Holy
Ghost, wrote against the wicked Eutyches and the
hateful and perverse Nestorius to the praiseworthy Bishop of the royal city, Flavian, which I denominate and define to be the pillar of
orthodoxy (following the holy Fathers, who rightly called it thus) as teaching
us all orthodoxy and destroying all heresy and driving it away from the
God-protected halls of our holy Catholic Church. And together with these
inspired syllables and characters, I accept all his letters and teachings as
proceeding from the mouth of Peter the Coryphaeus, and I kiss them and salute
them and embrace them with all my soul. Receiving these, as I have said, the
five holy and divine assemblies of the blessed Fathers and all the writings of
Cyril the all-wise, and especially those against the madness of Nestorius and the
letters of the Oriental Bishops, written to the same most divine Cyril, and by
him acknowledged to be orthodox, and whatever Leo, the most holy pastor of the
most holy Church of the Romans, has written, and especially what he composed
against the Eutychian and Nestorian abomination, I
recognize the latter as definitions of Peter and the former as those of Mark,
and besides all the heaven-taught teachings of all the chosen mystagogues of our Catholic Church”, &c.
If St. Sophronius extends the idea of Peter speaking by Leo to St.
Cyril, so that he embraces the words of that doctor as the words of St. Mark,
this does not detract from the importance of his testimony as an Eastern Bishop
that the words of a Pope are to him as the words of a greater than Mark—of the
Coryphaeus of the apostles.
The Saint lived only until 638. Before his death a memorable scene
occurred which has been vividly described for us by the other actor in it,
Stephen, Bishop of Dora in Palestine, within the Saint’s patriarchate. He speaks
as follows in a document which he presented in person to Pope St. Martin at the
Lateran Council of 649. He is speaking of the troubles brought upon the
patriarchate of Sophronius by Monothelitism.
“And for this cause, sometimes we asked for water to our head and to our
eyes a fountain of tears, sometimes the wings of a dove, according to holy
David, that we might fly away and announce these things to the Chair which
rules and presides over all, I mean to yours, the head and highest, for the
healing of the whole wound. For this it has been accustomed to do from of old
and from the beginning with power by its canonical or apostolical authority, because the truly great Peter, head of the apostles, was clearly
thought worthy not only to be entrusted with the keys of heaven, alone apart
from the rest, to open it worthily to believers, or to close it justly to those
who disbelieve the Gospel of grace, but because he was also first commissioned
to feed the sheep of the whole Catholic Church; for “Peter”, said He, “lovest thou Me? Feed My sheep”; and again, because he had
in a manner peculiar and special, a faith in the Lord stronger than all and
unchangeable, to be converted and to confirm his fellows and spiritual brethren
when tossed about, as having been adorned by God Himself, incarnate for us,
with power and sacerdotal authority”.
Nothing could be more confident than this beautiful exposition of the
writer’s faith in the promises of Christ to Peter. It is noticeable that all
the three principal Petrine texts are quoted, showing
that then as now they were recognized as the loci classici upon the point. And Stephen
goes on to assert that this was the faith of St. Sophronius himself, as,
indeed, was indicated by the words of that saint.
“And Sophronius of blessed memory, who was Patriarch of the holy city of
Christ our God, and under whom I was Bishop, conferring not with flesh and
blood, but caring only for the things of Christ with respect to your Holiness,
hastened to send my nothingness without delay about this matter alone to this
Apostolic and great See”.
Sophronius had nobly resisted the heretics while he lived, but only
succeeded in raising against himself a storm of detraction. But for all this
he was confident as a lion :
“Being full of divine zeal and courage, he took me unworthy, and set me
on holy Calvary, where for our sakes He who by nature is God above us, the Lord
Jesus Christ, voluntarily deigned to be crucified in the flesh, and he bound me
with bonds not to be undone, saying : “Thou shalt give an account to the God
who was crucified for us in this holy place, in His glorious and awful advent,
when He shall come to judge the living and the dead, if thou delay and allow
His faith to be endangered, since, as thou knowest, I
am myself let, on account of the invasion of the Saracens which has come upon
us for our sins. Swiftly pass, therefore, from one end of the world to the
other, until thou come to the Apostolic See, where are the foundations of the
holy doctrines. Not once, not twice, but many times, make clearly known to all
those holy men there all that here has been done; and tire not instantly urging
and beseeching, until out of their apostolic wisdom they bring forth judgment
unto victory. . .
“I, therefore, trembling and confounded at the tremendous adjuration
laid on me in that venerable and awful spot, and considering the episcopal
dignity which by God’s permission was mine, and because I was urged by the
requests of almost all the pious Bishops of the East, in agreement with the
departed Sophronius (I being the first in the jurisdiction of Jerusalem), I gave
not, to speak graphically, sleep to mine eyes, nor slumber to mine eyelids, nor
rest to my temples, for the sake of the fulfillment of this beloved command.
Without delay I made this journey for this purpose alone; and since then thrice
have I run to your apostolic feet, urging and beseeching the prayer of
Sophronius and of all, that is, that you will assist the imperiled faith of
Christians. . .”
Such is the witness of Stephen to the belief of the patriarchate of
Jerusalem. We shall hear more of him presently.
The synodal letter of Sophronius does not
appear to have had any effect upon Sergius, but we have no further knowledge of
his conduct. Of Honorius we have two fragments of a letter which were produced
and read at the sixth Council. He writes to Sergius telling him that he has
informed Cyrus of Alexandria that the new expressions “one or two operations”
are to be dropped, the use of such expressions being most silly. This was
naturally condemned as heresy by the Council. But in this second fragment,
Honorius implicitly teaches two operations, for he says rightly that the two
natures work each what is proper to it, thus stultifying his own decision. The
fragments read as if, after seeing the arguments of Sophronius, the Pope was
trying to bolster up his wrong decision with orthodox arguments.
5.
The “Ecthesis” of Heraclius.
In one of the last four months of 638 the Emperor Heraclius issued the
famous “Ecthesis”, composed for him by Sergius. It
enforces the decision of Honorius. All the Emperor’s subjects are to confess
one will of our Lord, but to avoid the expressions “one or two operations”. We
have seen that Sergius was in doubt when he wrote to the Pope. Now, having
received the reply, he causes the teaching of the See of Rome to be proclaimed
by the Emperor. Before his death, in December of the same year, he further held
a great Synod at Constantinople. Its decision has been preserved, in which the ecthesis is acclaimed as “truly agreeing with the apostolic
preaching”. This is apparently a reference to its being based upon the letter
of Honorius. “These are the doctrines of the Fathers, these are the supports of
the Church”, &c. The decisions were sent to absent Bishops, and Cyrus
received them with great rejoicings. The See of Antioch was occupied by a
Patriarch who had been uncanonically appointed by
Sergius himself. St. Sophronius was dead, and his Chair was usurped by a
supporter of the ecthesis. Pope Honorius had also
died before its publication. The new Pope, Severinus,
who only reigned two months, is said to have had time to reject it.
On the arrival of the envoys from Rome to ask for the Emperor’s
confirmation of Severinus’s election according to
custom, the clergy of Constantinople (there was as yet no new Patriarch) presented
them with the ecthesis, declaring that they would
give them no assistance in the matter for which they had made so long a voyage,
unless the envoys would promise to persuade, the new Pope to subscribe the
document without delay. St. Maximus tells us that he was informed of the event
by his friends at Constantinople. He writes :
“Having discovered the tenor of the document, since by refusing they
would have caused the first and mother of Churches and the City to remain so
long a time in widowhood, they replied quietly : We cannot act with authority
in this matter, for we have received a commission to execute, not an order to
make a profession of faith. But we assure you that we will relate all that you
have put forward, and we will show the document itself to him who is to be
consecrated, and if he should judge it to be correct, we will ask him to append
his signature to it. But do not therefore place any obstacle in our way now and
do violence to us by delaying us and keeping us here. For none has a right to
use violence, especially when faith is in question. For herein even the weakest
waxes mighty, and the meek becomes a warrior, and by comforting his soul with
the divine word, is hardened against the greatest attacks. How much more in the
case of the clergy and Church of the Romans, which from old until now, as the
elder of all the Churches which are under the sun, presides over all?Having surely received this canonically, as well from
councils and the apostles, as from the princes of the latter, and being
numbered in their company, she is subject to no writings or issues of synodical documents, on account of the eminence of her
pontificate, even as in all these things all are equally subject to her
according to sacerdotal law.
“And so when, without fear but with all holy and becoming confidence,
those ministers of the truly firm and immovable rock, that is of the most great
and Apostolic Church at Rome, had so applied to the clergy of the royal city
[Constantinople] it was seen that they had conciliated them and had acted
prudently, that the others might be humble and modest, while they themselves
made known the orthodoxy and purity of their own faith from the beginning. But
those of Constantinople, admiring their piety, thought that such a deed ought
rightly to be recompensed; and ceasing from offering them the document, they
promised to procure by their own care the issue of the Emperor’s order with
regard to the episcopal election. When this was accomplished, the apocrisiarii dear to God thankfully returned home.
“Of this document, divinely honored Father, a copy has been sent to me
also. They have explained in it the cause for being silent about the natural
operations in Christ our God, that is in His natures, of which and in which He
is believed to be; and how in future neither one nor two are to be mentioned.
It is only to be allowed to confess that the divine and human [works] proceeded
from the same word of God incarnate and are to be attributed to one and the
same”.
This evidence with regard to the papacy is very remarkable as proceeding
from the Saint’s orthodox friends at Constantinople. The Roman envoys claim
absolute immunity from all synodal decisions, and
declare that their Church is above all others, propter pontificatus provectionem.
These rights are from Councils, from apostles, and from the princes of the
apostles. Such claims we expect from Rome. But the clergy of Constantinople so
amply admit them that they are even touched by the boldness of the envoys. St.
Maximus and his friends are exultant : the Church of Rome is truly the
immovable rock. We see then that it is a doctrine of Constantinople, as well as
of Jerusalem, that “in Rome are the foundations of the holy doctrines”.
6.
The Apology of John IV.
Severinus was not able to be consecrated until May, 640. He was succeeded in December by
John IV. The new Pope, before the death of Heraclius (February, 641), held a
Synod against Monothelitism. He informed the new Patriarch of Constantinople,
Pyrrhus, of his condemnation of the ecthesis, and the
Emperor before his death excused himself, laying the blame on Sergius, and
wrote to John IV a letter, in which he disowned his own ecthes.
The Pope sent an epistle to the elder son of Heraclius, declaring that he was
sure the ecthesis would now be withdrawn, and that
the whole West rejected the new heresy. This document has become well known as
the Apology for Honorius.
The Pope says that he hears the new patriarch Pyrrhus has been confusing
men’s minds with his novel teachings, and supporting them by the name of
Honorius. The defence which follows is a very lame one. It points out quite
truly that both Sergius “of reverend memory” and Honorius only used the
expression “one will” because they would not admit contrary. But the whole
argument of the letter of John IV shows that his predecessor was wrong in
admitting the expression. What is most remarkable is that not a word is said
about the prohibition by Honorius of both one and two operations, the very
point for which St. Maximus and Pope St. Martin were to lay down their lives.
It is clear that Pyrrhus taught one will in the heretical sense. But,
after the death of Constantine and the exile of his younger brother, Heracleonas, Pyrrhus was himself exiled to Africa, and a
successor, Paul, was set up uncanonically in his
stead.
John IV died on October 11, 642. Theodore I, his successor, wrote to
Paul refusing to confirm his election as he had requested, until Pyrrhus had
been properly deposed by a Synod to be held in presence of two papal
representatives. “Why has he allowed the ecthesis to
remain on the wall, though it had been disowned by the late Emperor and
condemned by the late Pope?”. The heresy of Pyrrhus is made manifest by his
praise of Heraclius, and by his signing, and causing others to sign, the ecthesis.
7.
The Recantation of Pyrrhus.
Pyrrhus was now in Africa, and being no longer at court, had no
temptation to remain in heresy, for the Africans were orthodox. In July, 645,
probably at Carthage, a great disputation took place in presence of Gregory,
the governor, and of many Bishops, between Pyrrhus and St. Maximus Confessor,
who had become, since the death of St. Sophronius, the protagonist of orthodoxy
in the East. This illustrious saint, born at Constantinople, had been the
first secretary of Heraclius, but, leaving the world, had betaken himself to a
monastery at Scutari, where he became abbot. The minutes of the disputation are
interesting. Pyrrhus was eventually convinced, his quotations from the Fathers
being refuted by Maximus, who declared further that the letter of Mennas to Vigilius was a forgery.
Pyrrhus gives up Vigilius. But what of
Honorius, who plainly taught one will? Maximus replies that his letter must be
interpreted by the writer of it, who was the same as the writer of the apology
of John IV, viz., John Symponus. Pyrrhus can only
reply: “My predecessor accepted it too simply, considering the wording alone”.
Maximus answers that what he dislikes about Sergius is his changeableness :
“You never know where to have him”. Pyrrhus then renounces the “one operation”,
and asks pardon for himself and his predecessors, as having failed by
ignorance. “Is there no way of saving their memory while rejecting their
doctrine?”. “There is no other way”, Maximus answers, “but to keep silence as to
their persons, yet to anathematize the heresy”. Pyrrhus laments that so the
great Synod he had held will be condemned. Maximus replies that it was no
Synod.
Pyrrhus: “If there is no other way than this, I am ready to place my own
salvation before everything else; and to do this with completeness, I only beg
that I may in consequence be deemed worthy of [approaching] the apostolic
seats, or rather the princes of the apostles themselves, and of seeing the
face of the most holy Pope, and of presenting him with a libellus with respect to the absurdities which have been committed”.
Maximus and Gregory the Patrician said : “Since your proposal is good
and useful to the Church, so be it.
Thus end the Acts. A contemporary has added the note :
“Therefore, when he was with us in this famous city of Rome, he
fulfilled his promise, and condemned the dogmas of the impious ecthesis, and joined himself to the Catholic Church by a
right profession, by the grace and cooperation of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ, to whom be glory for ever and ever.
Amen”.
In the following year the Bishops of Africa and the adjoining islands
held Synods against the Monothelites by the counsel
of St. Maximus. According to rule they sent their decisions to Rome, and four
of their letters are still extant in the Acts of the Lateran Council, at which
they were read. The first of these is a joint letter from the Primates of
Numidia, Byzacene, and Mauritania, in the name of
three provincial Councils which they had respectively held.
They have heard that the heresy is spreading, and have read the libellus which Pyrrhus had presented to the Pope; and in
consequence they have decided to send a remonstrance to Paul, the Bishop of
Constantinople, beseeching him with tears to remove from his Church and himself
the new heresy which Pyrrhus had already rejected, and to have the ecthesis taken down from the doors of the churches, where
it scandalized the orthodox people of his city. Since the conference of Maximus
with Pyrrhus, the patrician Gregory had revolted and made himself Emperor of
Africa. In the next year he was vanquished by the Saracens, and for this
reason the Africans were afraid to write directly to Constantinople. They
therefore enclose their letters to the Pope.
8.
The Condemnation of Paul, and the Relapse of Pyrrhus.
In accordance with the desire of these Councils Pope Theodore addressed
a letter to Paul of Constantinople, which has not been preserved. The reply of
Paul commences with professions of the love of union, of charity, of humility,
of silence. He relates that the Papal envoys, after much discussion, at last
begged him to write his explanation of the will of Christ, and to send it to
the Pope. He therefore exposes his views, which are those of the ecthesis. He quotes in his own favor Gregory Nazianzen, Athanasius and Cyril, “with which testimonies
Sergius and Honorius of pious memory are in agreement and accord, who adorned
respectively the Sees of new and elder Rome”. Paul
seems to be more settled in his heresy than were Sergius and Pyrrhus. Upon
receipt of this letter Pope Theodore pronounced a sentence of deposition
against him.
Meanwhile Pyrrhus had returned, as St. Martin says, like a dog to his
vomit. It may have been in this year, 648, that St. Maximus wrote a letter to a
high official in the East, called Peter, of which parts have been preserved. In
it he denounces the ecthesis as worse than the old Monophysite doctrine. Yet he defends Honorius once more :
“In this regard the wretches have not conformed to the sense of the
Apostolic See, and, what is laughable, or rather lamentable, as proving their
ignorance, they have not hesitated to lie against the Apostolic See itself; but
as though they were in its counsel, and as if they had received a decree from
it, in the acts they have composed in defence of the impious ecthesis, they have claimed the great Honorius on their
side”.
He appeals to Sophronius, to Arcadius (the
late Metropolitan of Cyprus and predecessor of Sergius, whose letter had been
cited in a note), and to the Popes :
“What did the divine Honorius do, and after him the aged Severinus, and John who followed him? Yet further, what
supplication has the blessed Pope, who now sits, not made? Have not the whole
East and West brought their tears, laments, obsecrations,
deprecations, both before God in prayer and before men in their letters? If the
Roman See recognizes Pyrrhus to be not only a reprobate but a heretic, it is
certainly plain that everyone who anathematizes those who have rejected
Pyrrhus, anathematizes the See of Rome, that is, he anathematizes the Catholic
Church. I need hardly add that he excommunicates himself also, if indeed he is
in communion with the Roman See and the Catholic Church of God. I beseech you,
therefore, blessed Lord, to order that no one should speak of Pyrrhus as sanctissimus or almificus, for
the holy canon does not allow him to be so styled. For he who has willfully
separated from the Catholic Church has fallen from all holiness. For it is not
right that one who has already been condemned and cast out by the Apostolic See
of the city of Rome for his wrong opinions should be named with any kind of
honor, until he be received by her, having returned to her, nay, to our Lord,
by a pious confession and orthodox faith, by which he can receive holiness and
the name of holy.
Therefore, if he wishes neither to be a heretic nor to be
accounted one, let him not make satisfaction to this or that person, for this
is superfluous and unreasonable. For just as all are scandalized at him when
one is scandalized, so also, when satisfaction has been made to one, all
without doubt are satisfied. Let him hasten before all things to satisfy the
Roman See, for if it is satisfied, all will agree in calling him pious and
orthodox. For he only speaks in vain who thinks he ought to persuade or entrap
persons like myself, and does not satisfy and implore the blessed Pope of the
most holy Church of the Romans, that is, the Apostolic See, which from the
incarnate Son of God Himself, and also by all holy synods, according to the
holy canons and definitions, has received universal and supreme dominion,
authority, and power of binding and loosing over all the holy Churches of God
which are in the whole world. For with it the Word who is above the celestial
powers binds and looses in heaven also. For if he
thinks he must satisfy others, and fails to implore the most blessed Roman
Pope, he is acting like a man who, when accused of murder or some other crime,
does not hasten to prove his innocence to the judge appointed by law, but only
uselessly and without profit does his best to demonstrate his innocence to
private individuals, who have no power to acquit him from the accusation.
Wherefore, my blessed Lord, extend yet further the precept which it is known
that you have made well and according to God’s will, by which Pyrrhus is not
allowed to speak or misspeak with regard to dogma. But discover clearly his
intention by further inquiry, whether he will altogether agree to the truth.
And if he is careful to do this, exhort him to make a becoming statement to the
Roman Pope, so that by his command the matter concerning Pyrrhus may be
canonically and suitably ordered for the glory of God and the praise of your
sublimity”.
The doctrine of this passage is explicit enough. We have already seen
that Maximus was not the only Constantinopolitan who held it. Indeed, he
clearly assumes it to be well known and admitted by all.
Consequently we can understand that the rejection by the Pope of Paul’s
confession of faith was felt by him as a serious blow. At first, indeed, the supplanter of Pyrrhus showed nothing but anger, and wreaked
his wrath on the Roman apocrisiarii who had brought
the papal sentence of deposition to the East. He revenged himself by destroying
the altar in the chapel which belonged to the Holy See in the palace of
Placidia at Constantinople, “in order that the envoys should be unable to offer
the immaculate, adorable, and spiritual sacrifice, and be partakers of the
divine and life-giving sacraments”. In reply to their admonition to him to
renounce his heresy, “he persecuted them together with other orthodox men and
venerable priests, casting some of them into prison, sending others into exile,
and subjecting others to stripes”. This information we have from the speech of
St. Martin at the Lateran Council a few months later.
9.
The “Typus” of Constans and Paul.
But Paul did not intend to break with the Holy See and with Catholicity
altogether, as we learn from his next move, which was nothing less than the
final withdrawal of the ecthesis, which his appeal to
the name of Pope Honorius had not availed to defend. Up to this time the great
objection to the ecthesis on the part of the orthodox—of
St. Sophronius, of St. Maximus, and especially of successive Popes—had been its
assertion of the one will. It had been confidently asserted that the meaning of
Honorius in acknowledging one will had been misunderstood and that his
secretary was alive to establish his real intention. This point therefore Paul
simply withdrew. But the main idea of the ecthesis was not so much its half-hearted defence of one will as its prohibition of both
the expressions “one operation” and “two operations”, and here at least it
could not possibly be said to misrepresent the teaching of Honorius. It was
indeed logically necessary to apply the same prohibition to “one will” and “two
wills”, for it was inconsistent to permit “one will” but to forbid “one
operation”.
Paul therefore persuaded the Emperor Constans to substitute for the ecthesis or exposition of faith
an imperial decree, approving neither doctrine, but forbidding the naming of
one or two wills equally with one or two operations.
“We declare [says the Emperor] to our orthodox subjects that from the
present moment they no longer have permission in any way to contend or quarrel
with one another over “one will” and “one operation” or “two operations” and
“two wills”. No one is to add anything to the usages or words of the holy
Fathers, but the form of doctrine is to be preserved everywhere as it was
before the rise of the said controversies, as though no disputes had arisen,
and no blame is to attach to any one of all those who have up till now taught
one will and one operation, or two wills and two operations”.
For the sake of the union of all, Constans has
ordered the ecthesis to be removed from the narthex
of Sta Sophia, where it was still posted.
This document is known to history as the typus of Constans. Severe penalties were attached to its
contravention :
“Whosoever ventures to transgress the command now given is subject
before all to the judgment of God, but he will also be liable to the punishment
of the despisers of the imperial commands. If he is a Bishop or cleric, he
shall be deposed; if a monk, excommunicated and banished from his monastery; if
he is a civil or military official, he shall lose his office and dignity; if he
is a private person, he shall, if of the upper class, be mulcted in his
property, if lowly, be chastised with corporal correction and permanent exile”.
Thus heresy is to go without blame, while the truth is to be forbidden.
It was clearly impossible for the Holy See to accept the typus.
Theodore, John IV, and probably Severinus, had all
asserted the two operations and had made the expression a term of communion.
But the Patriarch’s move was a subtle one. He did not oblige himself to unsay
anything that he had said, yet he withdrew, so that he could appear to have
some deference to the papal censure. He seemed in effect to say : “I am afraid
there is a misunderstanding. These controversies are fruitless; let us be
united as we were before they arose”. If then the Pope should try to insist on
the two operations and wills, the answer was ready : “Your predecessor pointed
out that we had misunderstood the words of Pope Honorius about the one will. I
am willing to admit this. Hence the Emperor has issued this disciplinary
measure, absolutely according to the true mind of Pope Honorius, and he has
withdrawn the exposition of Faith. No man’s conscience is bound by the new
document; the Emperor merely follows the papal decision in imposing silence
for the sake of peace”.
It is certain that at Rome it was well understood that Paul had scored
heavily. From this time forward not a word is ever again said in defence of
Honorius. Until now even Sergius had not been condemned. Maximus had indeed
accused him of shiftiness, but he had lived and died in communion with the
Holy See. Honorius had approved his letter, and John IV had called him “Sergius
of reverend memory”. Now this was all necessarily to be changed. It was not
imperative to condemn Honorius at once by name, but Sergius is no longer
spared. The typus is condemned, and Sergius with it,
and by implication Honorius also. The issue of the typus falls in the Constantinopolitan year between September, 648, and September,
649. Pope Theodore died May 5th, either before he could see the typus, or at least before he could take action against it.
He was succeeded on July 1st or July 2th by the illustrious saint and martyr,
Martin I. The grave state of affairs demanded that Rome should at last give a
solemn and final decision. The preceding Popes had indeed supported the
orthodox in every part of the world; they had condemned the ecthesis,
and had deposed its partisans. But no Pope had yet issued a definition to the
world, or had given a formal exposition of the true answer to the questions
that had arisen. The evil had ever grown, and the new decree of the Emperor,
intolerantly enforcing mutual toleration, made a protest unavoidable. We are
not surprised to find that St. Martin determined to call a Council at Rome at
the earliest opportunity. Just three months after his accession he opened in
the Lateran Basilica a Council in importance the rival, in authority the equal,
of ecumenical Synods, and in interest the superior of many of them. A hundred
and five Bishops were present, chiefly from Italy and its dependencies.
10.
St. Martin’s Lateran Council of 649.
The proceedings were inaugurated by the “chief notary of the Apostolic
See”, who in a set speech invited the Pope to declare his reasons for
“summoning the holy Bishops here assembled and presiding, above whom you
shine-forth by your great and Apostolic Presidency over the Bishops who are in
the whole world”. St. Martin then exposed the Catholic doctrine of two wills
and two operations, relating how it had been denied in the “nine propositions”
of Cyrus of Alexandria, how these had been approved by Sergius, who afterwards
composed the ecthesis, fixed it at his church door
and deceived Bishops into signing it; how Pyrrhus imitated him, but repented
and offered a libellus with his signature to the
Apostolic See, condemning his own acts and writings; how he went back to his
vomit and was justly deposed; finally, how Paul for his letter to the Apostolic
See was also deposed. “This last, to cover his error, imitating Sergius in this
also, deceived and persuaded the Emperor to publish a typus which destroyed the Catholic dogma. For in this typus he cast out all expressions of the holy Fathers, together with those of the
unspeakable heretics, since he decreed that neither one nor two wills were to
be confessed”. He had destroyed the altar of the Holy See at Constantinople,
and had insulted the papal envoys. St. Martin adds that many of the orthodox
from various parts of the world had made complaints to the Pope in person or by
writing, that by apostolic authority the sickness of the Catholic body might be
purged.
“Our predecessors have not been wanting both with and without writing at
divers times in sending to these aforesaid men with due prudence, both
entreating them and canonically rebuking them, and by envoys admonishing them
and adjuring them”, &c.
And now he has thought it needful to call this Council together for common
consultation and decision.
The speech is a fine one. It is remarkable for what it says and for what
it leaves unsaid. The ecthesis is condemned, and so
are Cyrus, Sergius, Pyrrhus, Paul, and the typus.
Sergius is condemned for his letter approving the nine propositions of Cyrus,
but the letter to Honorius in which Sergius withdrew the worst part of the
other—the letter which Honorius approved—is passed over. The ecthesis is represented rather unfairly as implying not
merely one will, but even one operation, and as thus going beyond the words of
Honorius. But of Honorius himself not a word is said. To defend him would
necessitate the acceptance of the typus, since its
only fault—rightly called heresy—was its prohibition of the orthodox together
with the heretical formula, after the example of Honorius.
The Pope betrays his consciousness that he was implicitly condemning one
of his predecessors, when he declares that these had repeatedly besought and
rebuked the heretics, for he does not give the names of those who had done so :
it would have been too striking to mention Severinus,
John, Theodore, and omit Honorius. Throughout the Council the same conspiracy
of silence on this awkward subject is maintained. None of the documents mention
Honorius, none of the speakers breathe his name.
We are manifestly half way between the apology of John IV and the condemnation
by Leo II.
The second session commenced with the reading of the memorial of Stephen
of Dora. After the Pope had accepted the document with words of sympathy, a
deputation of thirty-seven Greek abbots, priests, or monks residing in Rome was
introduced. Apparently the irruption of the Saracens had driven them from their
own countries. One abbot was from Jerusalem, another from a Greek Laura in
Africa; one was an Armenian, another a Cilician. A memorial signed by them all
was read: it demanded an anathema on Sergius, Pyrrhus, Paul, and Cyrus, the
condemnation of the typus and the solemn assertion of
two wills and two operations. The words as to the papacy alone concern us here.
The petition is addressed to the holy Synod “assembled according to the holy
Command and request of him who by divine choice is the President and Exarch of
you all, the Bishop of bishops and Father of fathers, our Lord Martin, the
thrice-blessed Pope”. For the confession of the faith they have of necessity
appealed, together with every province and city, to the apostolic and head See
against the heretics; they implore the Fathers Of the Synod, that is, the
apostolic and head See, not to despise the prayers of all Christians. They ask
that the typus “may be anathematized as the work of
Paul, who has already been deposed by your Holiness’s predecessor, Theodore”.
The letters of the African Councils above mentioned were also read. In
the third session, October 17th, were read passages from a letter of Theodore
of Pharan, the seventh proposition of Cyrus, the
letter of Sergius to Cyrus (but not his milder letter to Honorius); all these
were disapproved. Next came the ecthesis, some
excerpts from Synods held, by Sergius and Pyrrhus, and the approval of the ecthesis by Cyrus, which was considered particularly
damning. The Pope remarks that Sergius and Pyrrhus were disappointed, “for the ecthesis [exposition] of their impious and
presumptuous novelty was not accepted or acknowledged by any means according to
their vain expectation, but was rather anathematized and condemned by
apostolic authority”.
The fourth session contains a long speech by St. Martin, in which he
shows the heretical nature of the documents already read. Some of his strong
language against the ecthesis applies, as he surely
was aware, just as well to the letter of Honorius. Afterwards the letter of
Paul to Pope Theodore is read. The appeal by Paul in this letter to Sergius and
Honorius, quoted above, is the only occasion on which that Pope’s name was
pronounced in the Council. The Bishop of Cagliari pointed out that Paul had
been admonished by preceding Popes in writing and by messengers and asked for
the typus to be read.
The Synod on hearing it declared that its contents are not consonant
with its good intention (this was to spare the Emperor while condemning Paul);
it is good to cut short altercations and discussions, but not to destroy the
good with the bad; the heretics had begun by declaring one will and one
operation (Cyrus), then they changed and said neither one nor two operations
(Sergius), now they go further and say neither one nor two wills (Paul), and
there is no knowing what they hold; against this the truth of two operations
and two wills must be asserted. Again not a word of Honorius, though the whole
story had depended on his declaration. The symbols of Nicaea and Constantinople
and the decisions of the third, fourth, and fifth Councils were read. Then
Maximus of Aquileia sums up the condemnation of Cyrus, Sergius, Pyrrhus, and
Paul.
In the fifth session (October 31st) a quantity of excerpts from the
Fathers were read, teaching two wills and two operations, and after these a
series of excerpts from older heretics, teaching one will and one operation.
After the former series, the Council points out the fallacy of the appeal of
the Monothelite leaders to the Fathers; after the
second series St. Martin shows the parallel between the teaching of the modem
heretics with that of the older heresiarchs. After several long speeches comes
a resolution and a set of twenty canons. The eighteenth of these condemns
Theodore of Pharan, Cyrus of Alexandria, Sergius of
Constantinople and his successors Pyrrhus and Paul, also the ecthesis of Heraclius and the typus of Constans.
The signatures of the Pope and all the Bishops follow. A letter to the
Emperor was also signed by all.
11.
Publication of the Lateran Decree
The encyclical letter sent with the Acts throughout Christendom is
addressed by St. Martin and his Council to “all our spiritual brethren,
bishops, priests, deacons, abbots of monasteries, monks, ascetics, and to the
entire sacred fullness of the Catholic Church”. Thus at last was an infallible
decision of Rom on the subject published, to the world.
After the Lateran Council St. Martin wrote, to John, Bishop of Philadelphia,
in Palestine, who had been highly recommended by Stephen of Dora, appointing
him his Vicar in the East in all ecclesiastical functions and offices, bidding
him “stir up the grace of God that was in him by the imposition of the
sacerdotal dignity and of our Apostolical Vicarship”. He is to appoint bishops, priests, and deacons
in all the cities subject to the Patriarchates of Jerusalem and Antioch. The
Sees are to be filled at once. The Holy See had intended this to be done;
earlier by Stephen. But those who were to inform him of the powers conferred
upon him had only told him of the right to depose, bishops, and had kept back
from him the injunction to nominate the successor as well. The Pope wrote, also
“to the, Churches of Jerusalem, and Antioch”, informing these two
Patriarchates that he had condemned the five heretics, and had appointed a
papal Vicar, the appointments of Macarius of
Antioch’s and of Peter of Alexandria being null.
The Pope also wrote to the illustrious Peter, St. Maximus’s
correspondent, to support his Vicar. It should be remembered that Alexandria
had been in the hands of the Saracens since, 640. At the same time St. Martin
deposed John, Archbishop of Thessalonica.
It was probably soon after the Lateran Council that St. Maximus wrote
from Rome a letter, part of which has been preserved in Greek :
“For the extremities of the earth, and all in every part of it who
purely and rightly confess the Lord, look directly towards the most holy Roman.
Church and its confession and faith, as it were to a sun of unfailing light,
awaiting from it the bright radiance of the sacred dogmas of our fathers,
according to what the six inspired and holy Councils have purely and piously decreed,
declaring most expressly the symbol of faith. For from the coming down of the
incarnate Word amongst us, all the Churches in every part of the world have
possessed that greatest Church alone as their base and foundation, seeing that,
according to the promise of Christ our Saviour, the
gates of hell do never prevail against it, that it possesses the keys of a
right confession and faith in Him, that it opens the true and only religion to
such as approach with piety, and shuts up and locks every heretical mouth that
speaks injustice against the Most High”.
The scene now changes, and the era of persecution begins.
12.
Persecution and Martyrdom of the Pope.
The Emperor did not confirm Pope Martin’s election, but sent his
chamberlain Olympius as Exarch to Rome, with orders
to force the Pope to accept the typus. The Liber
Pontificalis tells the well-known story how the Exarch plotted to have the life
of the Pontiff taken while he was giving him Holy Communion. The assassin’s
eyes were held so that he could not see the Pope as he offered the sacred Host
to Olympius. He published the miracle, and the Exarch
did not dare to try again. On June 15, 653, a new Exarch, Theodore Calliopas, arrived with an army. The Pope, who was sick,
had his bed set in the Lateran basilica before the high altar. But the holy
place was no protection, and the Saint was torn from the sanctuary at midnight
by an armed force. Within a few days he was put on board ship and removed from
Rome. After a year’s delay in Naxos, and after grievous sufferings, the Pope
arrived in Constantinople on September 17, 654. For the whole of the first day
he was lying sick in the ship, subjected to the jeers of the passers-by, until
he was carried to prison. It had been declared at the time of his seizure that
he had been uncanonically elected and was no true
Pope, but a heretic and a rebel. When after three months he was brought to
trial, he was too weak and ill to stand without assistance. He was exhibited to
the people, stripped of almost all his garments and loaded with heavy chains,
and then dragged through the city, to be confined in another prison. He
suffered terribly from the cold, and in the evening some food was brought to
him “lest he should succumb”. At the same time the Patriarch Paul, was dying.
On being told next day by the Emperor what had taken place, Paul begged the
latter to proceed no further.
In March, 655, St. Martin was exiled to the Crimea, near Inkerman, and there he died on September 16th. We still
possess an Account of his sufferings in his own letters, which show the heroism
of his soul. The mistake of Honorius had been nobly expiated. If in anyway the
prestige of Roman purity of faith had suffered, the unconquered constancy of
St. Martin had more than made up for the incautiousness of his predecessor.
13.
The Trial of St. Maximus at Constantinople.
The cruelty of the Emperor to the Pope who had condemned his typus was naturally extended against Abbot Maximus, the
leader of the orthodox in the East. He was brought to Constantinople in 653,
about the same time as St. Martin, but his examination was delayed till 655. He
was accused of having conspired with Pope Theodore and the African usurper
Gregory against the Emperor, and it was said that Egypt, Alexandria, Pentapolis, and Africa had been lost through his means.
When asked about his doctrine, the Saint replied that he had none but that of
the Catholic Church.
“Do you communicate with the See of Constantinople?”
“I do not”.
“Why not?”
“Because they have cast out the four holy Councils by the propositions
made at Alexandria, by the ecthesis perpetrated in
this city by Sergius, and by the new typus, ... and
because the dogmas which they asserted in the propositions they damned in the ecthesis and what they proclaimed in the ecthesis they annulled in the typus,
and on each occasion they deposed themselves. What mysteries, therefore, I
ask, do they celebrate, who have condemned themselves, and have been condemned
by the Romans and by the [Lateran] Synod and stripped of their sacerdotal
dignity?”
This was not conciliating. He is told that envoys who had come from the
new Pope Eugenius would communicate with the Patriarch on the morrow. He
replies that this will cause no prejudice to the Roman See, for the envoys
brought no letter to the Patriarch. His judges insist: “But what will you do if
the Romans do unite with us?”. He answers : “The Holy Ghost anathematizes even
angels, should they command aught beside the faith”.
The holy Abbot managed to write to his disciple Anastasius the monk,
that the Patriarch had sent him a message : “Of what Church are you? Of Constantinople,
of Rome, of Antioch, of Alexandria, of Jerusalem? Behold, all are one and
united, together with their subject provinces”. He had replied that God had
declared the Catholic Church to be the true and saving confession of Himself,
when He called Peter blessed for his good confession. What then was the
confession by which this union had been consummated? He was told, “We confess
two operations on account of their diversity, one on account of the union”.
This St. Maximus rejects on the ground that the union is not a substance, and
cannot have an operation of its own.
“Therefore hear”, said they, has been decided by the “Emperor and the
Patriarch, by order of the Roman Pope, that you shall be anathematized unless
you obey, and shall suffer the death to which they have condemned you”.
“Let that be consummated”, I replied, “which has been predestined by God
before the ages”.
St. Anastasius, on receipt of this letter was able at once to write
privately to the monastery of exiled Greek monks at Cagliari in Sardinia, whose
Abbot had been present at the Lateran Council, informing them of the new phase
of affairs. He shows that the change from the “neither two nor one” of the typus to “both two and one” is absurd. He states that the
Roman envoys had been forced into agreeing, and were being sent back to Pope
Eugenius with deceitful letters. By this the whole Catholic Church was set in
great peril. Anastasius begs the monks if possible to cross over at once on
some other pretext “to the men of elder Rome, firm as a rock, who indeed
together with you are ever our patrons and most fervent defenders of the
truth”, and beseech them with tears that they may deserve the Lord’s reward for
preserving the orthodox faith. The letter referred to was from the new
Patriarch, Peter, and the Liber Pontificalis tells us that it was very obscure,
and made no mention of two operations. The Roman people was indignant at it,
and made a tumult in Sta Maria Maggiore at a Papal
Mass, not allowing the Pope to commence until he had promised not to accept the
letter.
14.
Exile and Death of St. Maximus and his Companions.
On the day following the second examination of Maximus, a council of
clergy was held, and the Emperor was persuaded by them to condemn him to exile
at Byzia in Thrace, and his disciples to other
regions. They suffered greatly from cold and hunger.
On September 24, 656, Theodosius, Bishop of Caesarea in Bithynia,
visited St. Maximus by command of the Emperor, accompanied by the consuls
Theodosius and Paul. The discussion turned chiefly on the authority of the
Fathers, and Maximus had the best of it. At last he knelt down and said : “Do
your worst with your servant; I will never communicate with those who receive
the typus”.
“And as though they had been frozen by this speech, they bent their
heads and were silent for a long space. And raising his head and looking at
Abbot Maximus, the Bishop said; We declare to you in response, that if you will
communicate, our master the Emperor will annul the typus”.
Maximus replied that the ecthesis itself had
not been disowned, though it had been taken down. The canons of the Roman
Council must be formally accepted before he will communicate. The Bishop’s
reply is characteristically Byzantine in its unblushing Erastianism.
“The Synod is invalid, since it was held without the order of the Emperor”.
Maximus retorts with vigor : “If it is not pious faith but the orders of the
Emperor that validate Synods, let them accept the Synods that were held against
the Homoousion at Tyre, at Antioch, at Seleucia, and the
Robber Council of Ephesus”
Eventually St. Maximus takes up the acts of “the holy and Apostolic
Roman Synod”, and proves from them that the Fathers spoke of two wills and two
operations. The Consul Theodosius reads the testimonies for himself, while the
Bishop declares that whatever the Fathers say he says. He is ready at once to
write down two wills and two operations. Will not Maximus then consent to
communicate? The Saint replies that he is but a monk and cannot receive the
Bishop’s declaration; the Bishop, and also the Emperor, the Patriarch and his
Synod must all send to the Pope, supplicating that if it be possible he should
make terms with them. The Bishop says : “If I am sent to Rome, promise to come
with me”. Maximus replies that his exiled disciple, the Roman Anastasius, would
be a more suitable companion, as knowing the language.
“Then all arose with joy and tears, and knelt down and prayed. And each
of them kissed the holy Gospels and the precious Cross and the image of our God
and Saviour Jesus Christ and of our Lady who bare
Him, the all-holy Mother of God, placing their own hands on them to confirm
what had been done”.
Maximus then further instructs them in the faith. Finally, they all
embrace, and the Consul Theodosius asks : “But do you think that the Emperor
will make a supplication to Rome?”. “Yes”, replies the Abbot, “if he will
humble himself as God has humbled Himself.” “I hope”, adds the Consul, “that
God will assist my memory, that I may repeat this speech to him”. The Bishop
presented Maximus with money and a tunic and a cloak. But when they were gone,
the Bishop of Byzia at once seized the tunic. Thus
the holy Abbot had won a greater victory in his cruel exile than in his famous
conference with the insincere Pyrrhus. An extreme anxiety is shown to win over
a man so influential by his sanctity and his writings. The typus even might be sacrificed, and it had evidently been already dropped in the
arrangement made with the envoys of Pope Eugenius. But the Lateran Council had
set down the typus as heretical. Would the Emperor
and the Patriarch humble themselves so far as to accept this? It is probable
that Maximus had little hope that Rome would modify the personal censures
passed on former patriarchs; but much would be gained if Peter would at least
admit two operations, withdraw the typus, and open
negotiations with the Pope.
But Bishop Theodosius had not reckoned with the obstinacy of Constans and Peter. On September 9th Maximus was honorably
sent to Rhegium, and next day two patricians arrived
in state with Bishop Theodosius, and offered the Saint great honor, if he
would accept the typus and communicate with the
Emperor. The Abbot turned to Theodosius, and solemnly reminded him of the day
of judgment. The Bishop in a low voice gave the characteristic reply: “What
could I do if the Emperor took another view?”. “Then why did you touch the
Gospels?” asked the Saint. All present then struck him and spat upon him, in
spite of the remonstrance of the Bishop. The patrician Epiphanius admitted that all agreed to two wills and two operations, and that the typus was but a compromise. Maximus reiterated the Roman
view that to forbid an expression was to deny its truth.
Thus the Emperor adhered to his policy. He had still Honorius for his
warrant. He admitted the Catholic doctrine defined by Rome, though he chose to
deny the validity of the Lateran Council. We see that the ecclesiastics obeyed
him through fear alone. The mind of the new Pope was known; the verdict of the
Fathers was not doubtful. No one at Constantinople ventured to support one will
or one operation.
Next morning, September 10th, the Saint was stripped of all the money he
possessed, and even of his miserable stock of clothes, and was conveyed to Salembria. The officers told him that if only there were
repose from the wars, they would deal with Pope Eugenius and all his adherents
and with Maximus himself and his two disciples as they had dealt with Pope Martin.
In 662 the three confessors were brought to Constantinople. A trial was
held. Maximus, his two disciples, St. Martin, St. Sophronius, and all the
orthodox were anathematized. The Prefect was ordered to beat the accused, to
cut out their tongues and lop off their right hands, to exhibit them thus
mutilated in every quarter of the city, and then to send them into perpetual
exile and imprisonment. A letter of the Roman Anastasius has preserved the
details of their barbarous treatment. Each was confined in a different fortress
in Colchis. The monk Anastasius died on July 24, 662, and Maximus on August
13th. The Roman Anastasius lived on until 666. They have always been revered in
East and West as saints.
When St. Jerome spoke tremendous words about the Pope, we are asked to
believe that he was exaggerating, or even that he was sarcastic. When the
Council of Chalcedon wrote in a like strain to St. Leo, we are to put down its
words as empty Oriental flattery. Whatever may be thought of such comments, they
cannot be applied to the words in which we have heard St. Maximus again and
again set forth the privileges of Rome. Men do not shed their blood to blunt a
sarcasm or to justify a compliment.
Pope Eugenius was succeeded in 657 by Vitalian.
The election was well received by the Emperor. The Pope wrote to Peter in a
conciliatory tone, and the Patriarch wrote back a letter full of garbled
quotations from the Fathers. This was probably rejected. The Emperor left
Constantinople on account of the unpopularity he had incurred by his cruelty
and want of orthodoxy, and came to Rome in the guise of an orthodox son of the
Church. It may have been politic on his part to conciliate the Monophysites in
the East; it was certainly politic to be at peace with the Pope in the West.
Though the mutilation and exile of St. Maximus had been carried out but a few
months before, yet now the typus was buried in
silence. The Pope received his sovereign with all honor, and accepted his
presents to the churches. He did not even venture to protest against the
spoliation of some churches by the tyrant. The Emperor had the name of Vitalian inscribed on the diptychs of Constantinople.
15.
The Convocation of the Sixth Ecumenical Council
The murderer of Martin and Maximus was himself murdered in 668. His son
Constantine Pogonatus was desirous of uniting East
and West once more. The peoples of the East were orthodox; and if their Bishops
were silent under the whip of the typus, it was not that
they were Monothelites. But it was not till 678 that
the Emperor made peace with the Saracens and was able to turn his attention to
ecclesiastical affairs. It is probable that the typus had been a dead letter since the death of Peter in the same year as Constans.
The Emperor determined to summon a Council, and wrote to Pope Bonus on
the subject. But Bonus was already dead. The new Pope, St. Agatho,
collected a preliminary Synod at Rome, and ordered others to be held in the
West. This caused a considerable delay, so that the papal legates to the
General Council of Constantinople were unable to arrive until October, 680.
This interval of two years caused the heretical Patriarch Theodore and the
equally heretical Macarius of Antioch to complain to
the Emperor that the Pope despised the Easterns and
their monarch, and they asked that the name of Vitalian might be removed from the diptychs. This he refused to do.
Constantine’s letter had been written under the influence of the
heretical Patriarchs. He declares before God that he will show no favor to
either side, and if no agreement is reached, the papal commissioners shall be
allowed to depart in peace. He clearly regards the matter as a quarrel between
the two Romes rather than as a question of faith.
Before the Council met the Patriarch Theodore was sent into exile.
Perhaps the Emperor had found out that he would be an obstacle in the way of
peace.
The first session of the sixth ecumenical Council took place on November
7, 680. The proceedings were opened by the papal legates, who sat in the place
of honor on the left hand of the Emperor, who was the president, the legates
being the ecclesiastical presidents. They say that they have been sent,
together with two letters, at the Emperor’s request. For some forty-six years
four successive Patriarchs of Constantinople, Sergius, Pyrrhus, Paul, and
Peter, and also Cyrus of Alexandria, Theodore of Pharan,
and others, have greatly disturbed the world by new and unorthodox expressions,
in spite of frequent remonstrances “from your servant
the Apostolic See”. Those who are on the side of Constantinople must explain
the origin of this novelty.
The new Patriarch of that city did not budge. But Macarius,
with his disciple Stephen, priest and monk, and two Bishops, arose on behalf of
Antioch and protested :
“We did not publish new expressions, but what we received from the holy
and ecumenical Synods, and from holy approved Fathers, from the prelates of the
royal city, that is from Sergius, Paul, Pyrrhus, and Peter, and also from
Honorius, who was Pope of old Rome, and Cyrus, who was Pope of Alexandria, with
regard to the operation and will. Thus we have believed and do believe and
preach, and we are ready to offer proof”.
This was a nasty hit. Macarius quotes the same
names as the legates, and adds to them that of Honorius!
The Emperor replies : “If you mean to prove this, you must do so, as you
have said, from the ecumenical Synods and approved Fathers”. This Macarius tried to do. The acts of the third, fourth, and
fifth Councils were read. The letter of Mennas to
Pope Vigilius, and two letters of the latter, to
which Macarius had appealed, were shown to be
forgeries. So far Macarius had always had the worst
of it. George, the new Patriarch of Constantinople, seems at last to have made
up his mind. He comes forward with all his suffragans and asks that the letters from Rome be now read. This was accordingly done on
November 15th.
16.
The Letter of Pope Agatho to
the Sixth Council.
The dogmatic letter of St. Agatho is very
long. It goes into the whole question, and adds quotations from the Fathers.
He emphasizes two points. In the first place, he makes it clear that he is
declaring the faith as it is to be held, and as the Roman Church holds it, and
that there is no room for discussion. In the second place, he repeatedly
insists that the Roman See has never taught any other doctrine, but has kept
the truth undefiled. This was necessary when the heretics were quite sure to
appeal to Honorius as having explained the faith of the Roman Church.
“In order that we may briefly explain to your divinely instituted piety
what is the vigor of our apostolic faith, which we have received from apostolic
tradition, and from that of apostolic pontiffs and that of the five holy
general Synods by which the foundations of the Catholic Church of Christ have
been strengthened and confirmed, this then is the condition of the evangelical
and apostolical faith and the regular tradition, that
believing one, holy, and indivisible Trinity”, &c.
After asserting two natures and two operations, the Pope continues:
“This is the true and undefiled profession of the Christian religion,
which no human cleverness invented, but which the Holy Ghost taught by the Prince
of the Apostles. This is the firm and irreprehensible doctrine of the apostles,
&c.
“And therefore, with a contrite heart and flowing tears, prostrate in
spirit, I beseech you, deign to stretch forth the right hand of your clemency
to the apostolic doctrine which the cooperator of your pious labors, Peter the
Apostle, has handed down, that it be not hidden under a bushel, but be
proclaimed more loudly than by a trumpet in the whole world : because his true
confession was revealed from heaven by the Father, and for it Peter was
pronounced blessed by the Lord of all; and he received also, by a threefold
commendation, the spiritual sheep of the Church from the Redeemer of all to be
fed. Resting on his protection, this Apostolic Church of his has never turned
aside from the way of truth to any part of error, and her authority has always
been faithfully followed and embraced as that of the prince of the apostles by
the whole Catholic Church and all Councils, and by all the venerable Fathers
who embraced her doctrine, by which they have shone as most approved, lamps of
the Church of Christ, and has been venerated and followed by all orthodox
doctors, while the heretics have attacked it with false accusations and hatred.
This is the living tradition of the apostles of Christ, which His Church holds
everywhere, which is above all things to be loved and cherished and faithfully
preached...
“This is the rule of the true faith, which in prosperity and adversity
this spiritual Mother of your most serene Empire, the Apostolic Church of
Christ has ever held, and defends; and she, by the grace of almighty God, will
be proved never to have wandered from the path of apostolic tradition, nor to
have succumbed to the novelties of heretics; but even as in the beginning of
the Christian faith she received it from her founders, the princes of the
apostles of Christ, so she remains unspotted to the end, according to the
divine promise of our Lord and Saviour Himself, which
He spoke to the prince of His disciples in the holy Gospels: “Peter, Peter, saith He, behold Satan hath desired to have you, that he
might sift you as he who sifts wheat; but I have prayed for thee, that thy
faith fail not, and thou one day being converted, strengthen thy brethren”. Let
your clemency therefore consider that the Lord and Saviour of all, to whom faith belongs, who promised that the faith of Peter should not
fail, admonished him to confirm his brethren; and it is known to all men that
the apostolic pontiffs, the predecessors of my littleness, have always done
this with confidence. These my lowliness desires to follow, though unworthy
and small, yet in accordance with the ministry which I have received by the
divine mercy”.
“For who is me”, he goes on, “if I neglect to preach the truth of my Lord,
which they preached with sincerity. Who is me, if I cover the truth in silence,
when I am bidden to deliver it to the moneychangers, that is to instruct the
Christian folk therewith. What shall I say in the future judgment of Christ
Himself, if here, which God forbid, I should be ashamed to proclaim the truth
of His words! ... Wherefore also the predecessors of my littleness, of
apostolic memory, being furnished with the teachings of the Lord, ever since
the prelates of the Church of Constantinople have been trying to introduce
heretical novelties into the immaculate Church of Christ, have never neglected
to exhort them, and to warn them with entreaties to desist from the heretical
error of the false teaching, at least by silence”.
Again he explains at great length the doctrine of “the Apostolic Church
of Christ, the spiritual mother of your God- founded authority”. He adds a few
instances both from Greek and Latin Fathers, and shows that “one operation” is
a Monophysite phrase. Cyrus and Theodore of Pharan, and Sergius in his letter to Cyrus, had used the
expression. Sergius inserted “one will” in the ecthesis.
Pyrrhus confirmed the ecthesis, but afterwards
confessed two wills and two operations in the libellus which he offered in the confession of the Prince of the Apostles. Paul declared
for one will in his letter to Pope Theodore, and then in the typus forbade the mention of either one or two. Peter,
writing to Pope Vitalian, professed to hold “one-two
wills” and “one-two operations”. See how they contradict themselves and one
another!
17.
The Pope gives his orders to the Council.
Agatho continues :
“Consequently, the holy Church of God, the Mother of your most Christian
Empire, must be freed from the errors of teachers like these, and the whole
number of prelates and priests, and clergy and people, in order to please God
and save their souls, must confess with us the formula of truth and Apostolic
tradition, the evangelical and Apostolic rule of faith, which is founded upon
the firm rock of blessed Peter, the Prince of the Apostles, which by his favor remains
free front all error”.
He concludes by declaring that, “if the prelate of the
Constantinopolitan Church shall elect to hold with us, and to preach this
irreprehensible rule of the Apostolic teaching of the Holy Scriptures, of the
venerable Synods, of the spiritual Fathers, according to their evangelical
interpretations, by which the formula of the truth has been shown to us
through the revelation of the Holy Ghost, then there will indeed be peace. But
if he should refuse, let him know that of such contempt he will have to make
satisfaction to the divine judgment of Christ before the Judge of all, who is
in heaven, to whom we ourselves shall give an account, when He shall come to
judgment, for the ministry we have received”.
Later Councils (as, for instance, that of Trent), have had the office of
defining the faith. In the present case it is certain that the Pope has no idea
of permitting any such thing. He writes as St. Leo wrote to Chalcedon, and as
Hadrian was to write to the seventh Council at Nicaea. St. Agatho leaves no deliberation to the assembled Fathers. All are to accept his ruling
at their peril.
The way in which he appeals to his infallibility is the ancient way, so
often used by his predecessors. He speaks of the tradition from St. Peter, of
which successive Popes are the witnesses and the exponents. Today, a Pope would
rather speak of the tradition of the whole Church. It is obvious that in the
7th century a way of speaking which had been natural in the 2nd had already
become somewhat strained. When for many ages the Church has received its faith
from Rome, there can evidently no longer be any peculiar tradition at Rome
which is not known and accepted by the Church at large. It is true that the
East had so often been divided from the West, that the antique formula was
still not wholly inapplicable. But the inerrancy of the Roman prelates in
declaring the Petrine tradition was already really
the main point, then as now.
It should be noticed how St. Agatho insists,
again and again, on the continued appeals made by his predecessors. It is as
much as to say : “The heretics have followed some passing expressions imprudently
set down by one Pope, who made no appeal to his papal authority, nor to
tradition from St. Peter. Against this I put the repeated, the continuous
protest of Pope after Pope, authoritative, grave, deliberate. Their voice was
intended to be, and was, the voice of the infallible Roman Church”.
Thus the claims made on behalf of Rome by the orthodox in the East, by
Stephen of Dora and the Palestinians, by Maximus and the Byzantines, are fully
taken up by Agatho. He does no less than they would
have expected of him. He proposes no terms, and will have nothing but
unconditional surrender.
The letter of the Roman Council is similar to that of the Pope, but
shorter. It concludes with the expression of the hope that the Emperors will
show themselves to be like their predecessors who patronized the preceding
Councils—Constantine, Theodosius, Marcian — “who embraced
the tome of the holy Pope Leo, which by his words Peter the Apostle had
published”—and Justinian, greatest of all, and will succor the Catholic Church,
“so that it may be more perfectly united in the unity of the true and Apostolic
confession which the holy Roman Church now preserves with us”.
18.
The Council deposes Macarius of Antioch.
The fifth session of the Council was held on December 7th. Macarius continued his defence. He had tried the Synods,
now he tries the Fathers, and produces two volumes of quotations, which were
read but not entered in the acts. In the next session a third volume of
testimonies was read. The three tomes were sealed by the Emperor’s assessors,
by the papal legates and Constantinopolitan deputies, in order that they might
be compared with the originals in the Patriarchal Library. The legates declare
that some of the citations are falsified and curtailed : they have themselves
brought a book of testimonies from the Fathers in favor of “two wills and
operations”, and from heretical writers in favor of one will and operation.
These are read next day in the seventh session. The legates ask George of
Constantinople and Macarius whether they and their suffragans accepted these testimonies as agreeing with the
letters of Agatho and the Roman Council. But it is of
course first necessary in justice to verify them in the same way as those of Macarius. Copies are therefore given to the two patriarchs,
and the original is sealed.
After three weeks the eighth session is held on March 7th. The Emperor
simply asks “whether they agree with the letter of pope Agatho”.
Georges replied that he had found the papal testimonies to be accurate, “and so
I profess and believe”. He was followed by the bishops subjected to him,
beginning with the metropolitans of Ephesus and Heraclea. Fifteen gave their
adherence individually, and then the rest arose together and assented in a
body.
Georges then asked the Emperor’s leave to restore the name of Vitalian to the diptychs, from which it had evidently been
removed under his heretical predecessor, Theodore, in spite of the Emperor’s
promise to the contrary. To this the Emperor agreed. So in this session the
union of Rome and Byzantium was consummated. The Council proceeded to make
acclamations to the Emperor, “The new Constantine, new Theodosius, new
Justinian” (taking these titles from the letter of the Roman Synod), and also
acclamations to Agatho and George.
It was now the turn of Macarius to reply to
the Emperor’s question. His answer was categorical and bold enough : “I do not
say two wills or two operations in the economy of the Incarnation of our Lord
Jesus Christ, but one will and a theandric operation”. Macarius, therefore, does not take his
stand on the compromise of the ecthesis or the typus, but goes in for undiluted Monothelitism. He is
almost the only certain representative of this heresy since the nine
propositions of Cyrus.
The Synod resolved : “Since the most holy Macarius does not consent to the tenor of the orthodox letters sent by Agatho the most holy Pope of Rome, which have been already
read to your piety, we judge that he arise from his seat, and make reply”.
Four of the Bishops of Macarius’ own province
of Antioch then rose, and adhered to the letter of Agatho.
The testimonies given in by Macarius were unsealed.
He read his profession of faith, in which he identified the teaching of two
wills and operations with Nestorianism. When in his
enumeration of the heretics whom he anathematizes he arrives at Theodore of Mopsuestia, he calls him “the accursed teacher of the
heresy of Maximus” ; and he adds “to all these heretics the ill-named Maximus,
who lately joined their number, with all his impious disciples, who taught
Manichaeism and the tearing of the humanity of Christ, and his dogma of
division which was rejected before our time by our blessed Fathers, I mean
Honorius and Sergius and Cyrus, and the subsequent leaders and exarchs of this
Church, and Heraclius of pious memory, your great grandfather”."In answer to the Emperor, Macarius declares that he will
never acknowledge two wills or two operations, even if he is to be cut limb
from limb, and cast into the sea.
His testimonies are then read and shown to be unfairly quoted. He can
only reply that he quoted them in such a way as to prove his own view. Upon
this the Synod cried out : “Anathema to the new Dioscorus,
the new Apollinarius!”. He was stripped of his omophorion,
and made to stand in the midst. On the next day the reading was concluded, and Macarius was deposed, together with his disciple. Abbot
Stephen.
The patristic testimonies brought from Rome and (at the request of the
deputy of the Patriarch of Jerusalem) the synodical letter of St. Sophronius were also read.
Then the Emperor asks the legates if there is any more business. They
ask for certain writings of Macarius and Stephen to
be examined, and parts of these are read. One excerpt speaks of the opposite
party (the Lateran Council?) as having “anathematized absolutely all those who
held one will of the Lord, of whom one was Honorius of the Romans, who most
clearly taught one will”. Thus Honorius is appealed to for the third time by Macarius.
19.
Pope Honorius is condemned as a Heretic.
In the twelfth session, March 12th, other documents were introduced,
which had been sent by Macarius to the Emperor, but
had not been read by the latter. The seal of the packet was broken, and the
documents read. The first was the letter of Sergius to Cyrus, then came the
supposed letter of Mennas to Vigilius.
Then for the first time appeared the letter of Sergius to Honorius (which had
not been read at the Lateran Council) and that Pope’s reply. The Emperor had no
knowledge of the contents of the packet, so that the reading of Pope Honorius’s
letter was doubtless unexpected by the papal legates who presided, though Macarius had thrice appealed to its authority, and had
already been condemned as a heretic. All these pieces were now sent to Macarius, in order that he might acknowledge them as his,
and this he did. It was decided that Macarius could
not now be restored, even if he repented, but that a new Patriarch of Antioch
must be made.
On March 28th the decision was given on the letters previously read.
First, those of Sergius to Cyrus and Honorius are condemned as alien from the
orthodox faith, and as following the false doctrines of heretics. Then, “those
whose impious dogmas we execrate, we judge that their names shall also be cast
out of the holy Church of God, that is, Sergius, who was prelate of this
God-protected and royal city, and was the first to write about this impious
dogma, Cyrus of Alexandria, Pyrrhus, Paul and Peter, who presided on the throne
of this God-protected city, and who held the same views as the others, and also
Theodore, who was Bishop of Pharan; all which persons
were mentioned by Agatho, the most holy and blessed
Pope of elder Rome, in his letter to the most pious and divinely strengthened
and great Emperor, and were cast out by him, as holding views contrary to our
orthodox faith; and these we define to be subject to anathema. And in addition
to these we decide that Honorius also, who was Pope of elder Rome, be with them
cast out of the holy Church of God, and be anathematized with them, because we
have found by his letter to Sergius that he followed his opinion in all things
and confirmed his wicked dogmas”.
The words of the Council are accurate. The Roman legates raised no
objection. It is clear that St. Agatho had not wished
to provoke the condemnation of his predecessor; but the resolution must have
been proposed to the Council by his legates, who were its presidents, and they
must have known that he would not disapprove.
On the other hand the condemnation of Honorius might never have been
proposed or deemed needful, had not his letters been read among the documents
presented by Macarius to the Emperor, and which the
Emperor had not looked at. It was almost an accident, but so far as justice was
concerned, a happy accident, however we may regret the unfortunate
controversial uses to which the condemnation has been put in modern times.
The representatives of the Emperor now had other writings of the
heretics read, though the Council declared it to be unnecessary, since Pope Agatho “in his letter had revealed their contrary view, or
rather had made it plain that they agreed with Sergius ... Wherefore the holy
Pope cast these out by his own letter”. The fragment of Honorius’s second
letter was among these additional documents. The Council ordered the whole lot
to be burned “as agreeing in one impiety and hurtful to the soul”.
On Easter Day, April 14th, the papal legate, John, Bishop of Portus, celebrated Mass according to the Latin rite in the
Church of Sta Sophia, in the presence of the Emperor
and the Patriarch.
A curious incident enlivened the proceedings at the fifteenth session
on April 28th. A priest named Polychronius promised
to restore a corpse to life by placing upon it his confession of one will and
one operation. A corpse was provided; but after much whispering in its ear in
the presence of a great throng of people, he failed ignominiously, and was
thereupon deposed and anathematized.
During the summer the meetings of the Council were in abeyance. On
August 9th the sixteenth and last session took place. In it George of
Constantinople, together with a few of the bishops subject to him, made a
petition “for an economy, that, if it were possible, the persons be not
anathematized by name, that is, Sergius, Pyrrhus, Paul, and Peter”.
He names only his own predecessors, since for them alone was it his
place to speak. But the same indulgence must necessarily have been extended to
the rest of the condemned. Here was an obvious opening to save Honorius, had
the legates had any desire to do so. But the Synod replied simply in the
negative.
The final acclamations follow, first to the Emperor, as before, the “new
Constantine, Marcian, Theodosius, Justinian”. Then
“many years” to Agatho, George, Theophanes (the new
Patriarch of Antioch). Anathema to Theodore the heretic, to Sergius the
heretic, Cyrus the heretic, Honorius the heretic, Pyrrhus the heretic, Paul the
heretic, Peter the heretic, Macarius the heretic,
Stephen the heretic, Polychronius the heretic, Apergius of Perga the heretic.
20.
The Council’s Formal Decree accepting the Pope’s
Letter as he had demanded.
It has been said of this Council that it condemned a Pope against the wish
of Rome. At least not, we saw, against the will of the Roman legates.
It has also been said that the Council accepted the dogmatic letter of
the Pope only after having examined it and compared it with the Fathers. We
saw, it is true, that the Pope’s book of citations from the Fathers was
carefully verified. But this was inevitable, as the same had been done to those
of Macarius. The real question is rather : Did the
Council ratify merely the dogmatic decision of Agatho,
or did it accept his whole letter, including the reiterated statements of Roman
inerrancy and the right of the Pope to declare the faith, and the duty of all
to accept the faith of Rome?
As the Council made no distinctions, raised no protest, and did exactly
what the Pope demanded, we should a priori presume that it agreed with all St. Agatho’s pretensions. Further, the analogy of a former
reunion of East and West—that under the Emperor Justin in 519—suggests that an
explicit assertion of Roman inerrancy would not be out of place.
But we are not left to a priory considerations. A series of documents
emanating from the Council and the Emperor exhibits the views of the Council on
this subject with entire clearness. They echo the words of Agatho as to the unfailing faith of Rome. They repeat after him that he spoke with the
voice of Peter. They represent the whole work of the Council as consisting
merely in accepting his letter.
The first of these is the final and solemn decree of the Council which
was read on September 11th, and adopted in the last session, September 16, 681.
This decree begins by accepting the five general Councils and the creeds of
Nicaea and Constantinople. It condemns the heretics, including Honorius, and
goes on:
“And this holy and Ecumenical Synod, faithfully and with uplifted hands
greeting the letter of the most holy and blessed Pope of elder Rome, Agatho, to our most faithful Emperor Constantine, which
casts out by name those who have preached and taught, as we have said, one will
or one operation in the dispensation of the Incarnation of Christ, our true
God; and likewise embracing the other synodical epistle to his divinely taught serenity from the holy Synod of 125 God-beloved
bishops subject to the same most holy Pope, as being in harmony both with the
Council of Chalcedon and with the tome sent to the sainted Flavian by the most blessed Pope of the same elder Rome, Leo, whom the said Council
called the pillar of orthodoxy, and also with the synodical letters written by the blessed Cyril against the impious Nestorius”... (an exposition
of doctrine follows).
This decree was signed by the whole Council, first by the legates, and
last by the Emperor. At the moment of his signing, anathema was again exclaimed
against all the heretics, including Honorius. The decree clearly implies that
the whole work of the Council had been the acceptance of the two letters from
Rome as embodying the teaching of the Fathers. They are evidently received ex animo in the sense in which they were intended.
21.
The Council describes the Pope’s Authority.
The next document is the customary addressed to the Emperor by the
whole Council, and signed by the Legates and by all the Bishops. The Pope is
spoken of as the “most high priestly prelate of elder Rome and of the apostolic
acropolis”. When the five general Councils are enumerated, it is said that
against Arius—
“Constantine ever Augustus and the famous Silvester immediately assembled the great and illustrious Synod of Nicaea … Similarly
against Macedonius the great King Theodosius and Damasus the adamant of the faith, immediately resisted him
… Against Nestorius arose Celestine and Cyril ... and against Eutyches the trumpet of Leo, like the mighty roaring of a
lion echoing from Rome ... and lastly Vigilius agreed
with the all pious Justinian”.
This description of the Councils as depending on the Emperors and Popes
is a most remarkable testimony to the Eastern view in the 7th century, and all
the more, because in the case of the first two Councils it is not obviously
historical. After such a witness to the relation of Pope and Council, we are
not surprised at other passages which deal with the sixth Council itself.
The Bishops praise the Emperor for restoring the integrity of the faith
:
“Therefore, in accordance with the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, and in
agreement with one another, and assenting to the letter of our most blessed
Father and most high Pope Agatho, addressed to your
Majesty, and also to that of his holy Synod of 125 Bishops, we glorify our Lord
Jesus Christ as one of the holy Trinity”, &c. The two natures are then
professed, and Theodore, Sergius, and Paul, Pyrrhus and Peter and Cyrus are
anathematized, “and with them Honorius, who was Prelate of Rome, as having
followed them in all things”, and Macarius, Stephen,
and Polychronius.
“And lest anyone should reprehend the divine zeal of the all-holy Pope
or the present angelic assemblage, we have followed his teaching, and he the
Apostolic and Patristic tradition, and we have found nothing that was not
consonant with what they have laid down ... Who has ever beheld such wondrous
things? The spiritual lists were arrayed, and the champion of the false
teaching was beforehand disarmed (i.e., by the Pope's letter), and he knew not
that he would not obtain the crown of victory, but be stripped of the sacerdotal
crown. But with us fought the Prince of the Apostles, for to assist us we had
his imitator and the successor to his chair, who exhibited to us the mystery of
theology in his letter. The ancient city of Rome proffered to you a divinely
written confession and caused the daylight of dogmas to rise by the Western
parchment. And the ink shone, and by Agatho Peter
spoke; and you the autocrat king, did vote with the Almighty who reigns with
yon .. and the wicked Simons who had flown aloft, fell down with the wing of
contempt, and their statue was brought to ruin”.
The allusion is of course to Simon Magus, who was said to have flown
into the air in the Roman Forum, but to have fallen at the prayer of St. Peter.
This flowery language is addressed to the Emperor, not to the Pope, and cannot
therefore be discounted as flattery. The victory over the heresy is attributed
to the Pope, and Agatho’s own claim to be the
mouthpiece of Peter is adopted by the Council. It is, therefore, proved that
the acceptance of the Roman letters by the Council was full and whole-hearted.
A third document is the letter, which the Council, in accordance with
precedent, addressed to the Pope himself. It begins thus
“The greatest diseases demand the greatest remedies, as you know, most blessed
one. Wherefore, Christ, our true God, has revealed your Holiness as a wise
physician, mightily driving away the disease of heresy by the medicine of
orthodoxy, and bestowing health on the members of the Church. We therefore
leave to you what is to be done, since you occupy the first See of the
universal Church, and stand on the firm rock of the faith, after we have dwelt
with pleasure upon the writings of the true confession from your paternal
blessedness to the most pious King, which also we recognize as pronounced by
the chiefest head of the Apostles, and by which we
have put to flight the dangerous opinion of the
heresy which lately arose ... Those who erred concerning the faith we have
slain by our anathemas in the morning without the precincts of the courts of
the Lord (to speak like David), according to the previous condemnation
pronounced on them in your holy letters—we mean Theodore of Pharan,
Sergius, Honorius, Cyrus, Paul, Pyrrhus, and Peter, and besides these … Macarius … Stephen . and Polychronius”.
The rest of the letter is in a like strain. Finally the Pope is
requested to confirm the decision “by an honoured rescript”. This epistle is signed by all the Fathers of the Council.
22.
The Emperor describes the Prerogatives of Rome.
Effect was given to the decrees of the Council by the Emperor in an
edict of considerable length. I quote one passage, which is an official
declaration of the inerrancy of Rome by the head of the State :
“These are the teachings of the voices of the Gospels and Apostles,
these the doctrines of the holy Synods, and of the elect and patristic tongues;
these have been preserved untainted by Peter, the rock of the faith, the head
of the Apostles; in this faith we live and reign”, &c.
The Emperor wrote also to the Pope. He recounts how he had invited the
Pope to send representatives to a Council and the other Patriarchs to send
their subject Bishops, on account of the inroads of heretics. This is not quite
the same as his view before the Council, when he had spoken as if there was but
a quarrel between Rome and Byzantium, in which he would be an unbiased arbiter.
The letter must be somewhat later than that of the Council to Agatho, as it is addressed to Leo II. St. Agatho had died soon after the end of the Council, on
January 10, 682. I cite one striking paragraph from the letter :
“The letter of Pope Agatho, who is with the
saints, to our majesty having been presented by his envoys ... we ordered it to
be read in the hearing of all, and we beheld in it as in a mirror the image of
sound and unsullied faith. We compared it with the voices of the Gospels and of
the Apostles, and set beside it the decisions and definitions of the holy
ecumenical Synods, and compared the quotations it contained with the precepts
of the Fathers, and finding nothing out of harmony, we perceived in it the word
of the true confession [i.e., of Peter] unaltered. And with the eyes of our
understanding we saw it as it were the very ruler of the Apostolic choir, Peter
himself, declaring the mystery of the whole dispensation, and addressing Christ
by this letter: Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God; for his holy
letter described in word for us the whole Christ. We all received it willingly
and sincerely, and embraced it, as though it were Peter himself with the arms
of our soul. Macarius alone, who was Prelate of
Antioch, with those whom he dragged after him, divided from us, and drew back
from the yoke of Christ, and leapt out of the sacerdotal circle; for he refused
altogether to agree to the all-holy writings of Agatho,
as though he were even raging against the coryphaeus Peter himself … And since
he so hardened his heart and made his neck a cord of iron, and his forehead of
brass, and his ears heavy that they should not hear, and set his heart
unfaithful that it should not obey the law, for the law goeth forth from Sion, the teachings of the Apostolic
height, for this cause the holy ecumenical Synod stripped him, Macarius, and his fellow heretics, of the sacerdotal
office. In a written petition all of one accord begged our serenity to send
them, to your blessedness. This we have done … committing to your fatherly
judgment all that concerns them … Glory be to God, who does wondrous things,
Who has kept safe the faith among you unharmed. For how should He not do so in
that rock on which He founded His Church, and prophesied that the gates of
hell, all the am bushes of heretics, should not prevail against it . From it,
as from the vault of heaven, the word of the true confession flashed forth, and
enlightened the souls of the lovers of Christ, and brought warmth to frozen
orthodoxy. This we have completed happily by God’s help, and have brought all
the sheep of Christ into one fold, no longer deceived by false shepherds and
the prey of wolves, but pastured by the one Good Shepherd, whom you have been
appointed to join in pasturing them, and to lay down your life for the sheep”
The Emperor also addressed a short letter to the Roman Synod, in which
he says :
“You yourselves were present with your ecumenical chief pastor, speaking
with him in spirit and in writing. For we received, besides the letter from his
blessedness, also one from your sanctity. It was produced, it was read, and it
detailed for us the word of truth and painted the likeness of orthodoxy … We
did not neglect to compare them with care. And, therefore, in harmony of mind
and tongue we believed with the one and confessed with the other, and we
admired the writing of Agatho as the voice of divine
Peter, for nobody disagreed, save one”.
23.
Papal Infallibility and the Sixth Council.
These letters may help us to decide whether “the Bishops who composed
the Council had no, even rudimentary, idea of Papal Infallibility”. The Pope
imposed terms of communion. The Council accepts the letter in which the Pope
defined the faith. It deposes those who refused to accept it. It asks him to
confirm its decisions. The Bishops and the Emperor declare that they have seen
the letter to contain the doctrine of the Fathers; Agatho speaks with the voice of Peter himself; from Rome the law had gone forth as out
of Sion; Peter had kept the faith unaltered. The
Council holds the same traditional views about Rome which we have heard from
Constantinople, from Palestine, from Africa, from Cyprus.
All this is not the Vatican definition, for it is not definite. But the
very least that is implied is that Rome has an indefectible faith, which is
authoritatively promulgated to the whole Church by the Bishops of the Apostolic
See, the successors of Peter and the heirs at once of his faith and of his
authority.
How was it possible to assert this, and yet in the same breath to
condemn Pope Honorius as a heretic? The answer is surely plain enough. Honorius
was fallible, was wrong, was a heretic, precisely because he did not, as he
should have done, declare authoritatively the Petrine tradition of the Roman Church. To that tradition he had made no appeal, but had
merely approved and enlarged upon the half-hearted compromise of Sergius. The
Roman tradition had been asserted with authority by Popes Severinus,
John IV, Theodore, Martin, and their successors; and Martin had sealed his
testimony with his sufferings and death. Neither the Pope nor the Council
consider that Honorius had compromised the purity of Roman tradition, for he
had never claimed to represent it.
Therefore just as today we judge the letters of Pope Honorius by the
Vatican definition, and deny them to be ex cathedra, because they do not define
any doctrine and impose it upon the whole Church, so the Christians of the 7th
century judged the same letters by the custom of their own day, and saw that
they did not claim what papal letters were wont to claim, viz., to speak with
the mouth of Peter, in the name of Roman tradition. The grounds of both
judgments are in reality the same, viz., that the Pope was not defining with
authority and binding the Church.
It is true that in the East, as we have seen, the whole of the continued
resistance to the true doctrine had been built upon the authority of Honorius,
and that without his unfortunate letters in all probability no Monothelite troubles would have disturbed the page of
history. But even in a case where no appeal was made by the Pope to the
apostolic tradition, and where no penalties were threatened by him, there could
be no anticipation that any incorrect mandate should issue from a Church whose
faith was so pure, nor that such a letter as that of Honorius could be disowned
by his successors. It was natural for the Byzantines, therefore, to treat it as
giving the Roman view, natural that it should be followed by Sergius (whom in
fact it bound since it was, addressed to him), natural that it should remain a
tower of strength to heretics until it had been authoritatively declared by
Rome to be no embodiment of her tradition. Such a disavowal had become absolutely
necessary as the complement of the Roman condemnation of the ecthesis and the typus, which had
both been founded on Honorius, as we saw.
But once disowned by Rome, the words of Honorius were harmless against
Rome. They were instantly reduced to their true value, as the expression of his
own view.
The infallibility of the Pope is for the sake of the Church. Wherever
his fall would necessarily involve the Church in the same error, he is
infallible. Therefore he is infallible whenever he binds the Church by his
authority to accept his ruling, and only then. It is a matter of history that
no Pope has ever involved the whole Church in error. It is a matter of history
that Pope after Pope has solemnly defined the truth and bound the Church to accept
it. It is a matter of history that Pope after Pope has confirmed the Councils
which decided rightly and has annulled those which decided wrongly. It is a
matter of history that Rome has always retained the true faith. If this was
wonderful in the 7th century, it is more wonderful after thirteen more
centuries have passed.
24.
The Condemnation of Pope Honorius is confirmed by
numerous Pontiffs and by two Ecumenical Councils.
The confirmation of the sixth Council by Pope Leo II is contained in a
long dogmatic letter to the Emperor, dated May 7, 682. The central paragraph is
as follows :
“My predecessor, Pope Agatho of apostolic memory, together with his honorable
Synod, preached this norm of the right apostolic tradition. This he sent by
letter to your piety by his own legates, demonstrating it and confirming it by
the usage of the holy and approved teachers of the Church. And now the holy and
great Synod, celebrated by the favor of God and your own has accepted it and
embraced it in all things with us, as recognizing in it the pure teaching of
blessed Peter, the prince of the apostles, and discovering in it the marks of
sound piety. Therefore the holy and universal sixth Synod, which by the will of
God your clemency summoned and presided, has followed in all things the
teaching of the apostles and approved Fathers. And because, as we have said, it
has perfectly preached the definition of the true faith which the Apostolic See
of blessed Peter the apostle (whose office we unworthy hold) also reverently
receives, therefore we, and by our ministry this reverend Apostolic bee, wholly
and with full agreement do consent to the definitions made by it, and by the
authority of blessed Peter do confirm them, even as we have received firmness
from the Lord Himself upon the firm rock which is Christ”.
St. Leo thus enumerates the heretics condemned :
“And in like manner we
anathematize the inventors of the new error, that is, Theodore, Bishop of Pharan, Sergius, Pyrrhus, Paul, and Peter, betrayers rather
than leaders of the Church of Constantinople, and also Honorius who did not
attempt to sanctify this Apostolic Church with the teaching of apostolic
tradition, but by profane treachery permitted its purity to be polluted”.
It has been sometimes said that St. Leo in these words interprets the
decision of the Council about Honorius in a mild sense, or that he modifies it.
It is supposed that by “permitted to be polluted” Leo II means no positive
action, but a mere neglect of duty, grave enough in a Pope, but not amounting
to the actual teaching of heresy. If Leo II had meant this, he would have been mistaken.
Honorius did positively approve the letter of Sergius, as the Council pointed
out. Further, the merely negative ruling of the typus had been condemned as heresy by the Lateran Council.
As a fact the words of Leo II are harsher than those of the Council. He
declares that Honorius did not publish the apostolic doctrine of his See, and
he represents this as a disgrace to the Church of Rome itself, as a pollution
of the unspotted. This no Eastern Bishop had ventured to say.
The anathemas on Pope Honorius have been again and again confirmed. A
few years later he is included in the list of heretics by the Trullan Synod, a Council whose canons were not, however,
and could not be received by Rome and the West. But the seventh and eighth
ecumenical Councils did the same, although the eighth Council formally declared
that the Church of Rome had never erred. It is still more important that the
formula for the oath taken by every new Pope from the 8th century till the 11th
adds these words to the list of Monothelites condemned : “Together with Honorius, who added fuel to their wicked
assertions”. Unquestionably no Catholic has the right to deny that Honorius was
a heretic (though in the sense that Origen and Theodore of Mopsuestia were heretics), a heretic in words if not in intention.
Finally Honorius was mentioned as a heretic in the lessons of the Roman
Breviary for June 28th, the feast of St. Leo II, until the 18th century, when
the name, was omitted as liable to cause misunderstanding. In the Middle Ages,
“to lie like the second nocturne” was a proverb, and no doubt the Breviary is
still full of historical errors. Nevertheless, the persistence of this reading
through many centuries at all events shows that it was not found scandalous by
our forefathers, and was perfectly well understood until controversy with later
views, Gallican and Protestant, suggested
difficulties.