Copied From 5th Council, Second Council of Constantinople, 553 @ http://www.catholicbook.com/AgredaCD/Ecumenical_Councils/Constantinople2.htm
SUMMARY:
SITE: Constantinople
YEAR: A.D. 553
POPE: Vigilius, 537 - 555
EMPEROR: Justinian I, 527 - 565
Condemned the "Three Chapters:, writings influenced by Nestorianism; Defined
that Mary was a virgin throughout her entire life (Perpetual Virginity)
Reaffirmed Mary as the Mother of God; Promulgated numerous dogmatic canons.
(TFW: 25, 27, 44-45)
Second Council of Constantinople (553), of 165 Bishops under Pope Vigilius and
Emperor Justinian I, Condemned the errors of Origen and certain writings (The
Three Chapters) of Theodoret, of Theodore, Bishop of Mopsuestia and of Ibas,
Bishop of Edessa; it further confirmed the first four general councils,
especially that of Chalcedon whose authority was contested by some heretics.
ACTION: Effectively called by Justinian I and eventually ratified by Pope
Vigilius, Constantinople II Condemned a collection of statements known as the
"Three Chapters": 1) the person and the writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia,
Master of Nestorius, originator of that heresy; 2) the writings of Theodoret of
Cyrrhus; 3) the writings of Ibas of Edessa. The last two friends of Nestorius
had been restored to their sees by Chalcedon when they no longer opposed the
teachings of St. Cyril of Alexandria (d. 444) and of Ephesus. Chalcedon was not
discredited here (as the Monophysites had hoped) since it had been concerned
with men. Constantinople II was concerned with their writings, although a
hundred years after they had died.
NOTE: Two important local councils condemning heresies: Carthage (416) solemnly
approved by Pope Innocent II, (401 - 417), and then in 418 by Pope Zosimus (417
- 418), Condemned Pelagianism (Pelagius, a British Monk), which heresy denied
original sin calling it only "bad example." Orange (429) France, solemnly
approved by Pope Boniface II (530 - 532), Condemned Semi-Pelagianism (an
over-reaction to St. Augustine on grace), which claimed man needed grace only
after his first supernatural act. St. Augustine made it clear that God's grace
is first.
NOTE: Council referred much to St. Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria, Doctor of the
Church (d. 444).
HERESIARCH: THEODORE OF MOPSUESTIA ("3 Chapters").
SESSION I
EXTRACTS FROM THE ACTS
[The Emperor's Letter which was read to the Fathers.] In the Name of our Lord
God Jesus Christ. The Emperor Flavius Justinian, German, Gothic, etc., and
always Augustus, to the most blessed bishops and patriarchs, Eutychius of
Constantinople, Apollinarius of Alexandria, Domninus of Theopolis, Stephen,
George, and Damian, the most religious bishops taking the place of that man of
singular blessedness, Eustochius, the Archbishop and Patriarch of Jerusalem, and
the other most religious bishops stopping in this royal city from the different
provinces.
[The following is the letter condensed, including Hefele's digest. History of
the Councils, Vol. IV., p. 298.]
The effort of my predecessors, the orthodox Emperors, ever aimed at the settling
of controversies which had arisen respecting the faith by the calling of Synods.
For this cause Constantine assembled 318 Fathers at Nice, and was himself
present at the Council, and assisted those who confessed the Son to be
consubstantial with the Father. Theodosius, 150 at Constantinople, Theodosius
the younger, the Synod of Ephesus, the Emperor Marcian, the bishops at Chalcedon.
As, however, after Marcian's death, controversies respecting the Synod of
Chalcedon had broken out in several places, the Emperor Leo wrote to all bishops
of all places, in order that everyone might declare his opinion in writing with
regard to this holy Council. Soon afterwards, however, had arisen again the
adherents of Nestorius and Eutyches, and caused great divisions, so that many
Churches had broken off communion with one another. When, now, the grace of God
raised us to the throne, we regarded it as our chief business to unite the
Churches again, and to bring the Synod of Chalcedon, together with the three
earlier, to universal acceptance. We have won many who previously opposed that
Synod; others, who persevered in their opposition, we banished, and so restored
the unity of the Church again. But the Nestorians want to impose their heresy
upon the Church; and, as they could not use Nestorius for that purpose, they
made haste to introduce their errors through Theodore of Mopsuestia, the teacher
of Nestorius, who taught still more grievous blasphemies than his. He
maintained, e.g., that God the Word was one, and Christ another. For the same
purpose they made use of those impious writings of Theodoret which were directed
against the first Synod of Ephesus, against Cyril and his Twelve Chapters, and
also the shameful letter which Ibas is said to have written. They maintain that
this letter was accepted by the Synod of Chalcedon, and so would free from
condemnation Nestorius and Theodore who were commended in the letter. If they
were to succeed, the Logos could no longer be said to be "made man," nor Mary
called the Mother (genetrix) of God. We, therefore, following the holy Fathers,
have first asked you in writing to give your judgment on the three impious
chapters named, and you have answered, and have joyfully confessed the true
faith. Because, however, after the condemnation proceeding from you, there are
still some who defend the Three Chapters, therefore we have summoned you to the
capital, that you may here, in common assembly, place again your view in the
light of day. When, for example, Vigilius, Pope of Old Rome, came hither, he, in
answer to our questions, repeatedly anathematised in writing the Three Chapters,
and confirmed his steadfastness in this view by much, even by the condemnation
of his deacons, Rusticus and Sebastian. We possess still his declarations in his
own hand. Then he issued his Judicatum, in which he anathematised the Three
Chapters, with the words, Et quoniam, etc. You know that he not only deposed
Rusticus and Sebastian because they defended the Three Chapters, but also wrote
to Valentinian, bishop of Scythia, and Aurelian, bishop of Aries, that nothing
might be undertaken against the Judicatum. When you afterwards came hither at my
invitation, letters were exchanged between you and Vigilius in order to a common
assembly.
(1) But now he had altered his view would no longer have a synod, but required
that only the three patriarchs and one other bishop (in communion with the Pope
and the three bishops about him) should decide the matter. In vain we sent
several commands to him to take part in the synod. He rejected also our two
proposals, either to call a tribunal for decision, or to hold a smaller
assembly, at which, besides him and his three bishops, every other patriarch
should have place and voice, with from three to five bishops of his diocese. *
We further declare that we hold fast to the decrees of the four Councils, and in
every way follow the holy Fathers, Athanasius, Hilary, Basil, Gregory the
Theologian, Gregory of Nyssa, Ambrose, Theophilus, John (Chrysostom) of
Constantinople, Cyril, Augustine, Proclus, Leo and their writings on the true
faith. As, however, the heretics are resolved to defend Theodore of Mopsuestia
and Nestorius with their impieties, and maintain that that letter of Ibas was
received by the Synod of Chalcedon, so do we exhort you to direct your attention
to the impious writings of Theodore, and especially to his Jewish Creed which
was brought forward at Ephesus and Chalcedon, and anathematized by each synod
with those who had so held or did so hold; and we further exhort you to consider
what the holy Fathers have written concerning him and his blasphemies, as well
as what our predecessors have promulgated, as also what the Church historians
have set forth concerning him.
(2) You will thence see that he and his heresies have since been condemned and
that therefore his name has long since been struck from the diptychs of the
Church of Mopsuestia. Consider the absurd assertion that heretics ought not to
be anathematized after their deaths; and we exhort you further to follow in this
matter the doctrine of the holy Fathers, who condemned not only living heretics
but also anathematized after their death those who had died in their iniquity,
just as those who had been unjustly condemned they restored after their death
and wrote their names in the sacred diptychs; which took place in the case of
John and of Flavian of pious memory, both of them bishops of Constantinople.
(3) Moreover we exhort you to examine the writing of Theodoret and the supposed
letter of Ibas, in which the incarnation of the Word is denied, the expression
"Mother of God" and the holy Synod of Ephesus rejected, Cyril called a heretic,
and Theodore and Nestorius defended and praised. And as they say that the
Council of Chalcedon has received this letter, you must compare the declarations
of this Council relating to the faith with the contents of the impious letter.
Finally, we entreat you to accelerate the matter. For he who when asked
concerning the right faith, puts off his answer for a long while, does nothing
else but deny the right faith. For in questioning and answering on things which
are of faith, it is not he who is found first or second, but he who is the more
ready with a right confession, that is acceptable to God. May God keep you, most
holy and religious fathers, for many years. Given IV. Nones of May, at
Constantinople, in the xxviith year of the reign of the imperial lord Justinian,
the perpetual Augustus, and in the xiith year after the consulate of the most
illustrious Basil.
EXTRACTS FROM THE ACTS.
SESSION VII.
(From the Paris manuscript found in Hardouin Concilia, Tom. III., 171 et seqq.;
Mansi, Tom. ix., 346 et seqq. This speech is not found in full in any other MS.
The Ballerini [ Hefele notes] raise objections to the genuineness of the
additions [in Noris. Opp., Tom. IV., 1037], but Hefele does not consider the
objections of serious moment. [Hist. of the Councils, Vol. IV., p. 323, note 2.]
All the MSS. agree that The most glorious quaester of the sacred palace,
Constantine, was sent by the most pious Emperor, and when he had entered the
Council spake as follows: "Certum est vestrae beatitudini, quantum, etc." The
rest of the speech differs in the different manuscripts. I follow that of
Paris.) You know how much care the most invincible Emperor has always had that
the contention raised up by certain persons with regard to the Three Chapters
should have a termination. ... For this intent he has required themost religious
Vigilius to assemble withyou and draw up a decree on this matter in accordance
with the Orthodox faith. Although therefore, Vigilius has already frequently
condemned the Three Chapters in writing, and has done this also by word of mouth
in the presence of the Emperor, and of the most glorious judges and of many
members of this synod, and has always been ready to smite with anathema the
defenders of Theodore of Mopsuestia, and the letter which was attributed to Ibas,
and the writings of Theodoret which be set forth against the orthodox faith and
against the twelve capitula of the holy Cyril:(1) yet he has refused to do this
in communion with you and your synod. Yesterday Vigilius sent Servus Dei, a most
reverend Subdeacon of the Roman Church, and invited Belisarius,(2) Cethegus, as
also Justinus and Constantine the most glorious consuls, as well as bishops
Theodore,Ascidas, Benignus, and Phocas, to come to him as he wished to give
through them an answer to the Emperor. They came, but speedily returned and
informed the most pious lord, that we had visited Vigilius, the most religious
bishop, and that he had said to us: "We have called you for this reason, that
you may know what things have been done in the past days. To this end I have
written a document about the disputed Three Chapters, addressed to the most
pious Emperor,(3) pray be good enough to read it, and to carry it to his
Serenity." But when we had heard this and had seen the document written to your
serenity, we said to him that we could not by any means receive any document
written to the most pious Emperor without his bidding. "But you have deacons for
running with messages, by whom you can send it." He, however, said to us: "You
now know that I have made the document." But we, bishops, answered him: "If your
blessedness is willing to meet together with us and the most holy Patriarchs,
and the most religious bishops, and to treat of the Three Chapters and to give,
in unison with us all, a suitable form of the orthodox faith, as the Holy
Apostles and the holy Fathers and the four Councils have done, we will hold thee
as our head, as a farmer and primate. But if your holiness has drawn up a
document for the Emperor, you have errand-runners, as we have said; send it by
them." And when he had heard these things from us, he sent Servus Dei the
Subdeacon, who now awaits the answer of your serenity. And when his Piety had
heard this, he commanded through the aforesaid most religious and glorious men,
the before-named subdeacon to carry back this message to the most religious
Vigilius: "We invited him (you) to meet together with the most blessed
patriarchs and other religious bishops, and with them in common to examine and
judge the Three Chapters. But since you have refused to do this, and you say
that you alone have written by yourself somewhat on the Three Chapters; if you
have condemned them, in accordance with those things which you did before, we
have already many such statements and need no more; but if you have written now
something contrary to these things which were done by you before, you have
condemned yourself by your own writing, since you have departed from orthodox
doctrine and have defended impiety. And how can you expect us to receive such a
document from you?" And when this answer was given by the most pious Emperor, he
did not send through the same deacon any document in writing from himself. And
all this was done without writing as also to your blessedness.
[He then, according to all the MSS., presented certain documents to be read, in
the MS. printed by Labbe and Cossart, Tom. V., col. 549 et seqq. These are fewer
than in the Paris MS., which last also contains the following just after the
reading of the documents and after the Council had declared that they proved the
Emperor's zeal for the faith.]
Constantine, the most glorious Quaestor, said: While I am still present at your
holy council by reason of the reading of the documents which have been presented
to you, I would say that the most pious Emperor has sent a minute (formam), to
your Holy Synod, concerning the name of Vigilius, that it be no more inserted in
the holy diptychs of the Church, on account of the impiety which he defended.
Neither let it be recited by you, nor retained, either in the church of the
royal city, or in other churches which are intrusted to you and to the other
bishops in the State committed by God to his rule. And when you hear this
minute, again you will perceive by it how much the most serene Emperor cares for
the unity of the holy churches and for the purity of the holy mysteries.
[The letter was then read.]
The holy Synod said: What has seemed good to the most pious Emperor is congruous
to the labours which he bears for the unity of the churches. Let us preserve
unity to (ad) the Apostolic See of the most holy Church of ancient Rome,
carrying out all things according to the tenor of what has been read. De
proposita vero quaestione quod jam promisimus procedat.
NOTES.
Hefele understands that the Council heard and approved this letter of the
Emperor's, but that the "Emperor did not mean entirely to break off communion
with the Apostolic see, neither did he wish the Synod to do so" (Hist. Councils,
Vol. IV., p. 326), as indeed he says in his letter.
The Ballerini consider this letter of the Emperor's to be spurious, but (says
Hefele) "on insufficient grounds" (l. c., p. 326, note 3). The expressions used
by the Emperor may not unnaturally be somewhat startling to those holding the
theological position of the Ballerini: "We will not endure to receive the
spotless communion from him nor from any one else who does not condemn this
impiety ... lest we be found thus communicating with the impiety of Nestorius
and Theodore." It is noteworthy that the Fifth Ecumenical Council should strike
the name of the reigning Pope from the diptychs as a father of heresy; and that
the Sixth Ecumenical Synod should anathematize another Pope as a heretic!
THE SENTENCE OF THE SYNOD.
(From the Acts. Collation VIII., L. and C., Conc., Tom. V., col. 562.)
Our Great God and Saviour Jesus Christ, as we learn from the parable in the
Gospel, distributes talents to each man according to his ability, and at the
fitting time demands an account of the work done by every man. And if he to whom
but one talent has been committed is condemned because he has not worked with it
but only kept it without loss, to how much greater and more horrible judgment
must he be subject who not only is negligent concerning himself, but even places
a stumbling-block and cause of offence in the way of others? Since it is
manifest to all the faithful that whenever any question arises concerning the
faith, not only the impious man himself is condemned, but also he who when he
has the power to correct impiety in others, neglects to do so.(1)
We therefore, to whom it has been committed to rule the church of the Lord,
fearing the curse which hangs over those who negligently perform the Lord's
work, hasten to preserve the good seed of faith pure from the tares of impiety
which are being sown by the enemy.
When, therefore, we saw that the followers of Nestorius were attempting to
introduce their impiety into the church of God through the impious Theodore, who
was bishop of Mopsuestia, and through his impious writings; and moreover through
those things which Theodoret impiously wrote, and through the wicked epistle
which is said to have been written by Ibas to Maris the Persian, moved by all
these sights we rose up for the correction of what was going on, and assembled
in this royal city called thither by the will of God and the bidding of the most
religious Emperor.
And because it happened that the most religious Vigilius stopping in this royal
city, was present at all the discussions with regard to the Three Chapters, and
had often condemned them orally and in writing, nevertheless afterwards he gave
his consent in writing to be present at the Council and examine together with us
the Three Chapters, that a suitable definition of the right faith might be set
forth by us all. Moreover the most pious Emperor, according to what had seemed
good between us, exhorted both him and us to meet together, because it is comely
that the priesthood should after common discussion impose a common faith. On
this account we besought his reverence to fulfil his written promises; for it
was not right that tile scandal with regard to these Three Chapters should go
any further, and the Church of God be disturbed thereby. And to this end we
brought to his remembrance the great examples left us by the Apostles, and the
traditions of the Fathers. For although the grace of the Holy Spirit abounded in
each one of the Apostles, so that no one of them needed the counsel of another
in the execution of his work, yet they were not willing to define on the
question then raised touching the circumcision of the Gentiles, until being
gathered together they had confirmed their own several sayings by the testimony
of the divine Scriptures.
And thus they arrived unanimously at this sentence, which they wrote to the
Gentiles: "It has seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us, to lay upon you no
other burden than these necessary things, that ye abstain from things offered to
idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication."
But also the Holy Fathers, who from time to time have met in the four holy
councils, following the example of tile ancients, have by a common discussion,
disposed of by a fixed decree the heresies and questions which had sprung up, as
it was certainly known, that by common discussion when the matter in dispute was
presented by each side, the light of truth expels the darkness of falsehood.
Nor is there any other way in which the truth can be made manifest when there
are discussions concerning the faith, since each one needs the help of his
neighbour, as we read in the Proverbs of Solomon: "A brother helping his brother
shall be exalted like a walled city; and he shall be strong as a well-founded
kingdom;" and again in Ecclesiastes he says: "Two are better than one; because
they have a good reward for their labour."
So also the Lord himself says: "Verily I say unto you that if two of you shall
agree upon earth as touching anything they shall seek for, they shall have it
from my Father which is in heaven. For wheresoever two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them."
But when often he had been invited by us all, and when the most glorious judges
had been sent to him by the most religious Emperor, he promised to give sentence
himself on the Three Chapters (sententiam proferre): And when we heard this
answer, having the Apostle's admonition in mind, that "each one must, give an
account of himself to God" and fearing the judgment that hangs over those who
scandalize one, even of the least important, and knowing how much sorer it must
be to give offence to so entirely Christian an Emperor, and to the people, and
to all the Churches; and further recalling what was said by God to Paul: "Fear
not, but speak, and be not silent, for I am with thee, and no one can harm
thee." Therefore, being gathered together, before all things we have briefly
confessed that we hold that faith which our Lord Jesus Christ, the true God,
delivered to his holy Apostles, and through them to the holy churches, and which
they who after thorn were holy fathers and doctors, handed down to the people
credited to them.
We confessed that we hold, preserve, and declare to the holy churches that
confession of faith which the 318 holy Fathers more at length set forth, who
were gathered together at Nice, who handed down the holy mathema or creed.
Moreover, the 150 gathered together at Constantinople set forth our faith, who
followed that same confession of faith and explained it. And the consent of fire
200 holy fathers gathered for the same faith in the first Council of Ephesus.
And what things were defined by the 630 gathered at Chalcedon for the one and
the same faith, which they both followed and taught. And all those wile from
time to time have been condemned or anathematized by the Catholic Church, and by
the aforesaid four Councils, we confessed that we hold them condemned and
anathematized. And when we had thus made profession of our faith we began the
examination of the Three Chapters, and first we brought into review the matter
of Theodore of Mopsuestia; and when all the blasphemies contained in his
writings were made manifest, we marvelled at the long-suffering of God, that the
tongue and mind which had framed such blasphemies were not immediately consumed
by the divine fire; and we never would have suffered the reader of the
aforenamed blasphemies to proceed, fearing [as we did] the indignation of God
for their record alone (as each blasphemy surpassed its predecessor in the
magnitude of its impiety and moved from its foundation the mind of the hearer)
had it not been that we saw they who gloried in such blasphemies stood in need
of the confusion which would come upon them through their manifestation. So that
all of us, moved with indignation by these blasphemies against God, both during
and after the reading, broke forth into denunciations and anathematisms against
Theodore, as if he had been living and present. O Lord be merciful, we cried,
not even devils have dared to utter such things against thee.
O intolerable tongue! O the depravity of the man! O that high hand he lifted up
against his Creator! For the wretched man who had promised to know the
Scriptures, had no recollection of the words of the Prophet Hosea, "Woe unto
them! for they have fled from me: they are become famous because they were
impious as touching me; they spake iniquities against me, and when they had
thought them out, they spake the violent things against me. Therefore shall they
fall in the snare by reason of the wickedness of their own tongues. Their
contempt shall turn into their own bosom: because they have transgressed my
covenant and have acted impiously against my laws."
To these curses the impious Theodore is justly subject. For the prophecies
concerning Christ he rejected and hastened to destroy, so far as he had the
power, the great mystery of the dispensation for our salvation; attempting in
many ways to show the divine words to be nothing but fables, for the mirth of
the gentiles, and spurned the other prophetic announcements made against the
impious, especially that which the divine Habacuc said of those who teach
falsely, "Woe unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, that puttest thy bottle
to him and makest him drunken that thou mayest look on their nakedness," that
is, their doctrines full of darkness and altogether foreign to the light.
And why should we add anything further? For anyone can take in his hands the
writings of the impious Theodore or the impious chapters which from his impious
writings were inserted by us in our acts, and find the incredible foolishness
and the detestable things which he said. For we are afraid to proceed further
and again to remember these infamies.
There was also read to us what had been written by the holy Fathers against him,
and his foolishness which exceeded that of all heretics, and moreover the
histories and the imperial laws, setting forth his impiety from the beginning,
and since after all these things the defenders of his impiety, glorying in the
injuries uttered by him against his Creator, said that it was not right to
anathematize him after death, although we knew the ecclesiastical tradition
concerning the impious, that even after death, heretics are anathematized;
nevertheless we thought it necessary concerning this also to make examination,
and there were found in the acts how divers heretics had been anathematized
after death; and in many ways it was manifest to us that those who were saying
this cared nothing for the judgment of God, nor for the Apostolic announcements,
nor for the tradition of the Fathers. And we would like to ask them what they
have to say to the Lord's having said of himself: "Whosoever should have
believed in him, is not judged: but who should not have believed in him is
judged already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten
Son of God," and of that exclamation of the Apostle: Although we or an angel
from heaven were to preach to you another gospel than that we have preached unto
you, let him be anathema: as we have said, so now I say again, If anyone preach
to you another gospel than that you have received, let him be anathema."
For when the Lord says: "he is judged already," and when the Apostle
anathematizes even angels, if they teach anything different from what we have
preached, how can even those who dare all things, presume to say that these
words refer only to the living? or are they ignorant, or is it not rather that
they feign to be ignorant, that the judgment of anathema is nothing else than
that of separation from God? For the impious person, although he may not have
been verbally anathematized by anyone, nevertheless he really is anathematized,
having separated himself from the true life by his impiety.
For what have they to answer to the Apostle again when he says, "A man that is
an heretic reject after the first and second corrections. Knowing that such a
man is perverse, and sins, and is condemned by himself."
In accordance with which words Cyril of blessed memory, in the books which he
wrote against Theodore, says as follows: They are to be avoided who are in the
grasp of such awful crimes whether they be among the quick or not. For it is
necessary always to flee from that which is hurtful, and not to have respect of
persons, but to consider what is pleasing to God. And again the same Cyril of
holy memory, writing to John, bishop of Antioch, and to the synod assembled in
that city concerning Theodore who was anathematized together with Nestorius,
says thus: It was therefore necessary to keep a brilliant festival, since every
voice which agreed with the blasphemies of Nestorius had been cast out no matter
whose. For it proceeded against all those who held these same opinions or had at
one time held them, which is exactly what we and your holiness have said: We
anathematize those who say that there are two Sons and two Christs. For one is
he who is preached by us and you, as we have said, Christ, the Son and Lord,
only begotten as man, according to the saying of the most learned Paul. And also
in his letter to Alexander and Martinian and John and Paregorius and Maximus,
presbyters and monastic fathers, and those who with them were leading the
solitary life, he so says: The holy synod of Ephesus, gathered together
according to the will of God against the Nestorian perfidy with a just and keen
sentence condemned together with him the empty words of those who afterwards
should embrace or who had in time past embraced the same opinions with him, and
who presumed to say or write any such thing, laying upon them an equal
condemnation. For it followed naturally that when one was condemned for such
profane emptiness of speech, the sentence should not come against one only, but
(so to speak) against every one of their heresies or calumnies, which they utter
against the pious doctrines of the Christ, worshipping two Sons, and dividing
the indivisible, and bringing in the crime of man-worship (anthropolatry), both
into heaven and earth. For with us the holy multitude of the supernal spirits
adore one Lord Jesus Christ. Moreover several letters of Augustine, of most
religious memory, who shone forth resplendent among the African bishops, were
read, shewing that it was quite right that heretics should be anathematized
after death. And this ecclesiastical tradition, the other most reverend bishops
of Africa have preserved: and the holy Roman Church as well had anathematized
certain bishops after their death, although they had not been accused of any
falling from the faith during their lives: and of each we have the evidence in
our hands.
But since the disciples of Theodore and of his impiety, who are so manifestly
enemies of the truth, have attempted to bring forward certain passages of Cyril
of holy memory and of Proclus, as though they had been written in favour of
Theodore, it is opportune to fit to them the words of the prophet when he says:
"The ways of the Lord are right and the just walk therein; but the wicked shall
be weak in them." For these, evilly receiving the fixings which have been well
and opportunely written by the holy Fathers, and making excuses in their sins,
quote these words. The fathers do not appear as delivering Theodore from
anathema, but rather as economically using certain expressions on account of
those who defended Nestorius and his impiety, in order to draw them away from
this error, and to lead them to perfection and to teach them to condemn not only
Nestorius, the disciple of the impiety, but also his teacher Theodore. So in
these very words of economy the Fathers shew their intention on tiffs point,
that Theodore should be anathematized, as has been abundantly demonstrated by us
in our acts from the writings of Cyril and Proclus of holy memory with regard to
the condemnation of Theodore and his impiety. And such economy is found in
divine Scripture: and it is evident that Paul the Apostle made use of this in
the beginning of his ministry, in relation to those who had been brought up as
Jews, and circumcised Timothy, that by this economy and condescension he might
lead them on to perfection. But afterwards he forbade circumcision, writing thus
to the Galatians: "Behold, I Paul say to you, that if ye be circumcised Christ
profiteth you nothing." But we found that that which heretics were wont to do,
the defenders of Theodore had done also. For cutting out certain of the things
which the holy Fathers had written, and placing with them and mixing up certain
false things of their own, they have tried by a letter of Cyril of holy memory
as though from a testimony of the Fathers, to free from anathema the aforesaid
impious Theodore: in which very passages the truth was demonstrated, when the
parts which had been cut off were read in their proper order, and the falsehood
was thoroughly evinced by the collation of the true. But in all these things,
they who spake such vanities, "trusted in falsehood," as it is written, "they
trust in falsehood, and speak vanity; they conceive grief and bring forth
iniquity, weaving the spider's web." When we had thus considered Theodore and
his impiety, we took care to have re cited and inserted in our acts a few of
these things which had been impiously written by Theodoret against the right
faith and against the Twelve Chapters of St. Cyril and against the First Council
of Ephesus, also certain things written by him in defence of those impious ones
Theodore and Nestorius, for the satisfaction of the reader; that all might know
that these had been justly cast out and anathematized. In the third place the
letter which is said to have been written by Ibas to Maris the Persian, was
brought forward for examination, and we found that it, too, should be read. When
it was read immediately its impiety was manifest to all. And it was right to
make the condemnation and anathematism of the aforesaid Three Chapters, as even
to this time there had been some question on the subject. But because the
defenders of these impious ones, Theodore and Nestorius, were scheming in some
way or other to confirm these persons and their impiety, and were saving that
this impious letter, which praised and defended Theodore and Nestorius and their
impiety, had been received by the holy Council of Chalcedon we thought it
necessary to shew that the holy synod was free of the impiety which was
contained in that letter, that it might be clear that they who say such things
do not do so with the favour of this holy council, but that through its name
they may confirm their own impiety. And it was shewn in the acts that in former
times Ibas had been accused because of the very impiety which is contained in
this letter; at first by Proclus, of holy memory, the bishop of Constantinople,
and afterwards by Theodosius, of pious memory, and by Flavian, who was ordained
bishop in succession to Proclus, who delegated the examination of the matter to
Photius, bishop of Tyre, and to Eustathius, bishop of the city of Beyroot.
Afterwards the same Ibas, being found guilty, was cast out of his bishopric.
Such was the state of the case, how could anyone presume to say that that
impious letter was received by the holy council of Chalcedon and that the holy
council of Chalcedon agreed with it throughout? Nevertheless in order that they
who thus calumniate the holy council of Chalcedon may have no further
opportunity of doing so, we ordered to be recited the decisions of the holy
Synods, to wit, of first Ephesus, and of Chalcedon, with regard to the Epistles
of Cyril of blessed memory and of Leo, of pious memory, sometime Pope of Old
Rome. And since we had learned from these that nothing written by anyone else
ought to be received unless it had been proved to agree with the orthodox faith
of the holy Fathers, we interrupted our proceedings so as to recite also the
definition of the faith which was set forth by the holy council of Chalcedon, so
that we might compare the things in the epistle with this decree. And when this
was done it was perfectly clear that the contents of the epistle were wholly
opposite to those of the definition.
For the definition agreed with the one and unchanging faith set forth as well by
the 318 holy Fathers as by the 150 and by those who assembled at the first synod
at Ephesus. But that impious letter, on the other hand, contained the
blasphemies of the heretics Theodore and Nestorius, and defended them, and calls
them doctors, while it calls the holy Fathers heretics.
And this we made manifest to all, that we did not have any intention of omitting
the Fathers of the first and second interlocutions, which the followers of
Theodore and Nestorius cited on their side, but these and all the others having
been read and their contents examined, we found that the aforesaid Ibas was not
allowed to be received without being compelled to anathematize Nestorius and his
impious teachings, which were defended in that epistle. And this the rest of the
religious bishops of the aforesaid holy Council did as well as those two whose
interlocutions certain tried to use.
For this they observed in the case of Theodoret, and required him to
anathematize those things of which he was accused. If therefore they were
willing to allow the reception of Ibas in no other manner unless he condemned
the impiety which was contained in his letters, and subscribed the definition of
faith adopted by the Council, how can they attempt to make out that this impious
letter was received by the same holy council? For we are taught, "What
fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath
light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with Belial? Or what part hath
he that believeth with an infidel? And what agreement hath the temple of God
with idols."
Having thus detailed all that has been done by us, we again confess that we
receive the four holy Synods, that is, the Nicene, the Constantinopolitan, the
first of Ephesus, and that of Chalcedon, and we have taught, and do teach all
that they defined respecting the one faith. And we account those who do not
receive these things aliens from the Catholic Church. Moreover we condemn and
anathematize, together with all the other heretics who have been condemned and
anathematized by the before-mentioned four holy Synods, and by the holy Catholic
and Apostolic Church, Theodore who was Bishop of Mopsuestia, and his impious
writings, and also those things which Theodoret impiously wrote against the
right faith, and against the Twelve Chapters of the holy Cyril, and against the
first Synod of Ephesus, and also those which he wrote in defence of Theodore and
Nestorius. In addition to these we also anathematize the impious Epistle which
Ibas is said to have written to Maris, the Persian, which denies that God the
Word was incarnate of the holy Mother of God, and ever Virgin Mary, and accuses
Cyril of holy memory, who taught the truth, as an heretic, and of the same
sentiments with Apollinaris, and blames the first Synod of Ephesus as deposing
Nestorius without examination and inquiry, and calls the Twelve Chapters of the
holy Cyril impious, and contrary to the right faith, and defends Theodorus and
Nestorius, and their impious dogmas and writings. We therefore anathematize the
Three Chapters before-mentioned, that is, the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia,
with his execrable writings, and those things which Theodoret impiously wrote,
and the impious letter which is said to be of Ibas, and their defenders, and
those who have written or do write in defence of them, or who dare to say that
they are correct, and who have defended or attempt to defend their impiety with
the names of the holy Fathers, or of the holy Council of Chalcedon. These things
therefore being settled with all accuracy, we, bearing in remembrance the
promises made respecting the holy Church, and who it was that said that the
gates of hell should not prevail against her, that is, the deadly tongues of
heretics; remembering also what was prophesied respecting it by Hosea, saying,
"I will betroth thee unto me in faithfulness, and thou shalt know the Lord," and
numbering together with the devil, the father of lies, the unbridled tongues of
heretics who persevered in their impiety unto death, and their most impious
writings, will say to them, "Behold, all ye kindle a fire, and cause the flame
of the fire to grow strong, ye shall walk in the light of your fire, and the
flame which ye kindle." But we, having a commandment to exhort the people with
right doctrine, and to speak to the heart of Jerusalem, that is, the Church of
God, do rightly make haste to sow in righteousness, and to reap the fruit of
life; and kindling for ourselves the light of knowledge from the holy
Scriptures, and the doctrine of the Fathers, we have considered it necessary to
comprehend in certain Capitula, both the declaration of the truth, and the
condemnation of heretics, and of their wickedness.
THE CAPITULA OF THE COUNCIL.
(Labbe and Cossart, Concilia, Tom. V., col. 568.)
I. If anyone shall not confess that the nature or essence of the Father, of the
Son, and of the Holy Ghost is one, as also the force and the power; [if anyone
does not confess] a consubstantial Trinity, one Godhead to be worshipped in
three subsistences or Persons: let him be anathema. For there is but one God
even the Father of whom are all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ through whom
are all things, and one Holy Spirit in whom are all things.
II. If anyone shall not confess that the Word of God has two nativities, the one
from all eternity of the Father, without time and without body; the other in
these last days, coming down from heaven and being made flesh of the holy and
glorious Mary, Mother of God and always a virgin, and born of her: let him be
anathema.
III. IF anyone shall say that the wonder-working Word of God is one [Person] and
the Christ that suffered another; or shall say that God the Word was with the
woman-born Christ, or was in him as one person in another, but that he was not
one and the same our Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, incarnate and made man,
and that his miracles and the sufferings which of his own will he endured in the
flesh were not of the same [Person]: let him be anathema.
IV. If anyone shall say that the union of the Word of God to man was only
according to grace or energy, or dignity, or equality of honour, or authority,
or relation, or effect, or power, or according to good pleasure in this sense
that God the Word was pleased with a man, that is to say, that he loved him for
his own sake, as says the senseless Theodorus, or [if anyone pretends that this
union exists only] so far as likeness of name is concerned, as the Nestorians
understand, who call also the Word of God Jesus and Christ, and even accord to
the man the names of Christ and of Son, speaking thus clearly of two persons,
and only designating disingenuously one Person and one Christ when the reference
is to his honour, or his dignity, or his worship; if anyone shall not
acknowledge as the Holy Fathers teach, that the union of God the Word is made
with the flesh animated by a reasonable and living soul, and that such union is
made synthetically and hypostatically, and that therefore there is only one
Person, to wit: our Lord Jesus Christ, one of the Holy Trinity: let him be
anathema. As a matter of fact the word "union" (ths enwsews)has many meanings,
and the partisans of Apollinaris and Eutyches have affirmed that these natures
are confounded inter se, and have asserted a union produced by the mixture of
both. On the other hand the followers of Theodorus and of Nestorius rejoicing in
the division of the natures, have taught only a relative union. Meanwhile the
Holy Church of God, condemning equally the impiety of both sorts of heresies,
recognises the union of God the Word with the flesh synthetically, that is to
say, hypostatically. For in the mystery of Christ the synthetical union not only
preserves unconfusedly the natures which are united, but also allows no
separation.
V. If anyone understands the expression "one only Person of our Lord Jesus
Christ" in this sense, that it is the union of many hypostases, and if he
attempts thus to introduce into the mystery of Christ two hypostases, or two
Persons, and, after having introduced two persons, speaks of one Person only out
of dignity, honour or worship, as both Theodorus and Nestorius insanely have
written; if anyone shall calumniate the holy Council of Chalcedon, pretending
that it made use of this expression [one hypostasis] in this impious sense, and
if he will not recognize rather that the Word of God is united with the flesh
hypostatically, and that therefore there is but one hypostasis or one only
Person, and that the holy Council of Chalcedon has professed in this sense the
one Person of our Lord Jesus Christ: let him be anathema. For since one of the
Holy Trinity has been made man, viz.: God the Word, the Holy Trinity has not
been increased by the addition of another person or hypostasis.
VI. IF anyone shall not call in a true acceptation, but only in a false
acceptation, the holy, glorious, and ever-virgin Mary, the Mother of God, or
shall call her so only in a relative sense, believing that she bare only a
simple man and that God the word was not incarnate of her, but that the
incarnation of God the Word resulted only from the fact that he united himself
to that man who was born [of her];(1) if he shall calumniate the Holy Synod of
Chalcedon as though it had asserted the Virgin to be Mother of God according to
the impious sense of Theodore; or if anyone shall call her the mother of a man
anqrwpotokon or the Mother of Christ (Xristotokon), as if Christ were not God,
and shall not confess that she is exactly and truly the Mother of God, because
that God the Word who before all ages was begotten of the Father was in these
last days made flesh and born of her, and if anyone shall not confess that in
this sense the holy Synod of Chalcedon acknowledged her to be the Mother of God:
let him be anathema.
VII. IF anyone using the expression, "in two natures," does not confess that our
one Lord Jesus Christ has been revealed in the divinity and in the humanity, so
as to designate by that expression a difference of the natures of which an
ineffable union is unconfusedly made, [a union] in which neither the nature of
the Word was changed into that of the flesh, nor that of the flesh into that of
the Word, for each remained that it was by nature, the union being hypostatic;
but shall take the expression with regard to the mystery of Christ in a sense so
as to divide the parties, or recognising the two natures in the only Lord Jesus,
God the Word made man, does not content himself with taking in a theoretical
manner(2) the difference of the natures which compose him, which difference is
not destroyed by the union between them, for one is composed of the two and the
two are in one, but shall make use of the number [two] to divide the natures or
to make of them Persons properly so called: let him be anathema.(3)
VIII. IF anyone uses the expression "of two natures," confessing that a union
was made of the Godhead and of the humanity, or the expression "the one nature
made flesh of God the Word," and shall not so understand those expressions as
the holy Fathers have taught, to wit: that of the divine and human nature there
was made an hypostatic union, whereof is one Christ; but from these expressions
shall try to introduce one nature or substance [made by a mixture] of the
Godhead and manhood of Christ; let him be anathema. For in teaching that the
only-begotten Word was united hypostatically [to humanity] we do not mean to say
that there was made a mutual confusion of natures, but rather each [nature]
remaining what it was, we understand that the Word was united to the flesh.
Wherefore there is one Christ, both God and man, consubstantial with the Father
as touching his Godhead, and consubstantial with us as touching his manhood.
Therefore they are equally condemned and anathematized by the Church of God, who
divide or part the mystery of the divine dispensation of Christ, or who
introduce confusion into that mystery.
IX. IF anyone shall take the expression, Christ ought to be worshipped in his
two natures, in the sense that he wishes to introduce thus two adorations, the
one in special relation to God the Word and the other as pertaining to the man;
or if anyone to get rid of the flesh, [that is of the humanity of Christ,] or to
mix together the divinity and the humanity, shall speak monstrously of one only
nature or essence (fusin hgoun ousian) of the united (natures), and so worship
Christ, and does not venerate, by one adoration, God the Word made man, together
with his flesh, as the Holy Church has taught from the beginning: let him be
anathema.
X. IF anyone does not confess that our Lord Jesus Christ who was crucified in
the flesh is true God and the Lord of Glory and one of the Holy Trinity: let him
be anathema.
XI. IF anyone does not anathematize Arius, Eunomius, Macedonius, Apollinaris,
Nestorius, Eutyches and Origen, as well as their impious writings, as also all
other heretics already condemned and anathematized by the Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church, and by the aforesaid four Holy Synods and [if anyone does not
equally anathematize] all those who have held and hold or who in their impiety
persist in holding to the end the same opinion as those heretics just mentioned:
let him be anathema.
NOTES.
HEFELE.
(Hist. Councils, Vol. iv., p. 336.)
Halloix, Garnier, Basnage, Walch and others suppose, and Vincenzi maintains with
great zeal, that the name of Origen is a later insertion in this anathematism,
because (a) Theodore Ascidas, the Origenist, was one of the most influential
members of the Synod, and would certainly have prevented a condemnation of
Origen; further, (b) because in this anathematism only such heretics would be
named as had been condemned by one of the first four Ecumenical Synods, which
was not the case with Origen; (c) because this anathematism is identical with
the tenth in the omologia of the Emperor, but in the latter the name of Origen
is lacking; and, finally, (d) because Origen does not belong to the group of
heretics to whom this anathematism refers. His errors were quite different.
All these considerations scent to me of insufficient strength, or mere
conjecture, to make an alteration in the text, and arbitrarily to remove the
name of Origen. As regards the objection in connection with Theodore Ascidas, it
is known that the latter had already pronounced a formal anathema on Origen, and
certainly he did the same this time, if the Emperor wished it or if it seemed
advisable. The second and fourth objections have little weight. In regard to the
third (c) it is quite possible that either the Emperor subsequently went further
than in his omologia, or that the bishops at the fifth Synod, of their own
accord, added Origen, led on perhaps by one or another anti-Origenist of their
number. What, however, chiefly determines us to the retention of the text is:
(a) that the copy of the synodal Acts extant in the Roman archives, which has
the highest credibility, and was probably prepared for Vigilius himself,
contains the name of Origen in the eleventh anathematism; and (b) that the monks
of the new Lama in Palestine, who are known to have been zealous Origenists,
withdrew Church communion from the bishops of Palestine after these had
subscribed the Acts of the fifth Synod. In the anathema on the Three Chapters
these Origenists could find as little ground for such a rupture as their friends
and former colleague Ascidas; it could only be by the synod attacking their
darling Origen. (c) Finally, only on the ground that the name of Origen really
stood in the eleventh anathematism, can we explain the widely-circulated ancient
rumour that our Synod anathematized Origen and the Origenists.
XII. IF anyone defends the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia, who has said that the
Word of God is one person, but that another person is Christ, vexed by the
sufferings of the soul and the desires of the flesh, and separated little by
little above that which is inferior, and become better by the progress in good
works and irreproachable in Iris manner of life, as a mere man was baptized in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and obtained by
this baptism the grace of the Holy Spirit, and became worthy of Sonship, and to
be worshipped out of regard to the Person of God the Word (just as one worships
the image of an emperor) and that he is become, after the resurrection,
unchangeable in his thoughts and altogether without sin. And, again, this same
impious Theodore has also said that the union of God the Word with Christ is
like to that which, according to the doctrine of the Apostle, exists between a
man and his wife, "They twain shall be in one flesh." The same [Theodore] has
dared, among numerous other blasphemies, to say that when after the resurrection
the Lord breathed upon his disciples, saying, "Receive the Holy Ghost," he did
not really give them the Holy Spirit, but that he breathed upon them only as a
sign. He likewise has said that the profession of faith made by Thomas when he
had, after the resurrection, touched the hands and the side of the Lord, viz.:
"My Lord and my God," was not said in reference to Christ, but that Thomas,
filled with wonder at the miracle of the resurrection, thus thanked God who had
raised up Christ. And moreover (which is still more scandalous) this same
Theodore in his Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles compares Christ to Plato,
Manichaeus, Epicurus and Marcion, and says that as each of these men having
discovered his own doctrine, had given his name to his disciples, who were
called Platonists, Manicheans, Epicureans and Marcionites, just so Christ,
having discovered his doctrine, had given the name Christians to his disciples.
If, then, anyone shall defend this most impious Theodore and his impious
writings, in which he vomits the blasphemies mentioned above, and countless
others besides against our Great God and Saviour Jesus Christ, and if anyone
does not anathematize him or his impious writings, as well as all those who
protect or defend him, or who assert that his exegesis is orthodox, or who write
in favour of him and of his impious works, or those who share the same opinions,
or those who have shared them and still continue unto the end in this heresy:
let him be anathema.
XIII. IF anyone shall defend the impious writings of Theodoret, directed against
the true faith and against the first holy Synod of Ephesus and against St. Cyril
and his XII. Anathemas, and [defends] that which he has written in defence of
the impious Theodore and Nestorius, and of others having the same opinions as
the aforesaid Theodore and Nestorius, if anyone admits them or their impiety, or
shall give the name of impious to the doctors of the Church who profess the
hypostatic union of God the Word; and if anyone does not anathematize these
impious writings and those who have held or who hold these sentiments, and all
those who have written contrary to the true faith or against St. Cyril and his
XII. Chapters, and who die in their impiety: let him be anathema.
XIV. IF anyone shall defend that letter which Ibas is said to have written to
Maris the Persian, in which he denies that the Word of God incarnate of Mary,
the Holy Mother of God and ever-virgin, was made man, but says that a mere man
was born of her, whom he styles a Temple, as though the Word of God was one
Person and the man another person; in which letter also he reprehends St. Cyril
as a heretic, when he teaches the right faith of Christians, and charges him
with writing things like to the wicked Apollinaris. In addition to this he
vituperates the First Holy Council of Ephesus, affirming that it deposed
Nestorius without discrimination and without examination. The aforesaid impious
epistle styles the XII. Chapters of Cyril of blessed memory, impious and
contrary to the right faith and defends Theodore and Nestorius and their impious
teachings and writings. If anyone therefore shall defend the aforementioned
epistle and shall not anathematize it and those who defend it and say that it is
right or that a part of it is right, or if anyone shall defend those who have
written or shall write in its favour, or in defence of the impieties which are
contained in it, as well as those who shall presume to defend it or the
impieties which it contains in the name of the Holy Fathers or of the Holy Synod
of Chalcedon, and shall remain in these offences unto the end: let him be
anathema.
EXCURSUS ON THE XV. ANATHEMAS AGAINST ORIGEN.
That Origen was condemned by name in the Eleventh Canon of this council there
seems no possible reason to doubt. I have given in connexion with that canon a
full discussion of the evidence upon which our present text rests. But there
arises a further question, to wit, Did the Fifth Synod examine the case of
Origen and finally adopt the XV. Anathemas against him which are usually found
assigned to it ? It would seem that with the evidence now in our possession it
would be the height of rashness to give a dogmatic answer to this question.
Scholars of the highest repute have taken, and do take to-day, the opposite
sides of the case, and each defends his own side with marked learning and
ability. To my mind the chief difficulty in supposing these anathematisms to
have been adopted by the Fifth Ecumenical is that nothing whatever is said about
Origen in the call of the council, nor in any of the letters written in
connexion with it; all of which would seem unnatural had there been a long
discussion upon the matter, and had such an important dogmatic definition been
adopted as the XV. Anathemas, and yet on the other hand there is a vast amount
of literature subsequent in date to the council which distinctly attributes a
detailed and careful examination of the teaching of Origen and a formal
condemnation of him and of it to this council.
The XV. Anathemas as we now have them were discovered by Peter Lambeck, the
Librarian of Vienna, in the XVIIth century; and bear, in the Vienna MS., the
heading, "Canons, of the 165 holy Fathers of the holy fifth Synod, held in
Constantinople." But despite this, Walch (Ketzerhist., Vol. vii., p. 661 et seqq.
and 671; Vol. viij., p. 281 et seqq.); Dollinger (Church History, Eng. Trans.,
Vol. v., p. 203 et seqq.); Hefele (Hist. Councils, Vol. iv., p. 221 sq.), and
many others look upon this caption as untrustworthy. Evagrius, the historian,
distinctly says that Origen was condemned with special anathemas at this
Council, but his evidence is likewise (and, as it seems to me, too peremptorily)
set aside.
Cardinal Noris, in his Dissertatio Historica de Synodo Quinta, is of opinion
that Origen was twice condemned by the Fifth Synod; the first time by himself
before the eight sessions of which alone the acts remain, and again after those
eight sessions, in connexion with two of his chief followers, Didymus the Blind
and the deacon Evagrius. The Jesuit, John Garnier wrote in opposition to Noris;
but his work, while exceedingly clever, is considered by the learned to contain
(as Hefele says) "many statements [which] are rash, arbitrary, and inaccurate,
and on the whole it is seen to be written in a spirit of opposition to Noris."(1)
In defence of Noris's main contention came forward the learned Ballerini
brothers, of Verona. In their Defensio dissertationis Norisianoe de Syn. V. adv.
diss. P. Garnerii, they expand and amend Noris's hypothesis. But after all is
said the matter remains involved in the greatest obscurity, and it is far easier
to bring forward objections to the arguments in defence of either view than to
bring forward a theory which will satisfy all the conditions of the problem.
Those who deny that the XV. Anathemas were adopted by the Fifth Synod agree in
assigning them to the "Home Synod," that is a Synod at Constantinople of the
bishops subject to it, in A.D. 543. Hefele takes this view and advocates it with
much cogency, but confesses frankly, "We certainly possess no strong and
decisive proof that the fifteen anathematisms belong to the Constantinopolitan
synod of the year 543; but some probable grounds for the opinion may be
adduced.(1) This appears to be a somewhat weak statement with which to overthrow
so much evidence as there can be produced for the opposite view. For the
traditional view the English reader will find a complete defence in E. B. Pusey,
What is of Faith with regard to Eternal Punishment?
Before closing it will be well to call the attention of the reader to these
words now found in the acts as we have them: "And we found that many others had
been anathematised after death, also even Origen; and if any one were to go back
to the times of Theophilus of blessed memory or further he would have found him
anathematised after death; which also now your holiness and Vigilius, the most
religious Pope of Old Rome has done in his case."(2) It would seem that this
cannot possibly refer to anything else than a condemnation of Origen by the
Fifth Ecumenical Synod, and so strongly is Vincenzi, Origen's defender,
impressed with this that he declares the passage to have been tampered with. But
even if these anathemas were adopted at the Home Synod before the meeting of the
Fifth Ecumenical, it is clear that by including his name among those of the
heretics in the XIth Canon, it practically ratified and made its own the action
of that Synod.
The reader will be glad to know Harnack's judgment in this matter. Writing of
the Fifth Council, he says: "It condemned Origen, as Justinian desired; it
condemned the Three Chapters and consequently the Antiochene theology, as
Justinian desired," etc., and in a foot-note he explains that he agrees with "Noris,
the Ballerini, Moller (R. Encykl., xi., p. 113) and Loofs (pp. 287, 291) as
against Hefele and Vincenzi."(3) A few pages before, he speaks of this last
author's book as "a big work which falsities history to justify the theses of
Halloix, to rehabilitate Origen and Vigilius, and on the other hand to 'remodel'
the Council and partly to bring it into contempt."(4) Further on he says: "The
fifteen anathemas against Origen, on which his condemnation at the council was
based, contained the following points. ... Since the 'Three Chapters ' were
condemned at the same time, Origen and Theodore were both got rid of. ...
Origen's doctrines of the consummation, and of spirits and matter might no
longer be maintained. The judgment was restored to its place, and got back even
its literal meaning."(5)
THE ANATHEMAS AGAINST ORIGEN.
IF anyone asserts the fabulous pre-existence of souls, and shall assert the
monstrous restoration which follows from it: let him be anathema.
II. IF anyone shall say that the creation (thu paragwghn) of all reasonable
things includes only intelligences (noas) without bodies and altogether
immaterial, having neither number nor name, so that there is unity between them
all by identity of substance, force and energy, and by their union with and
knowledge of God the Word; but that no longer desiring the sight of God, they
gave themselves over to worse things, each one following his own inclinations,
and that they have taken bodies more or less subtile, and have received names,
for among the heavenly Powers there is a difference of names as there is also a
difference of bodies; and thence some became and are called Cherubims, others
Seraphims, and Principalities, and Powers, and Dominations, and Thrones, and
Angels, and as many other heavenly orders as there may be: let him be anathema.
III. IF anyone shall say that the sun, the moon and the stars are also
reasonable beings, and that they have only become what they are because they
turned towards evil: let him be anathema.
IV. IF anyone shall say that the reasonable creatures in whom the divine love
had grown cold have been hidden in gross bodies such as ours, and have been
called men, while those who have attained the lowest degree of wickedness have
shared cold and obscure bodies and are become and called demons and evil
spirits: let him be anathema,.
V. IF anyone shall say that a psychic (yukikhn) condition has come from an
angelic or archangelic state, and moreover that a demoniac and a human condition
has come from a psychic condition, and that from a human state they may become
again angels and demons, and that each order of heavenly virtues is either all
from those below or from those above, or from those above and below: let him be
anathema.
VI. IF anyone shall say that there is a twofold race of demons, of which the one
includes the souls of men and the other the superior spirits who fell to this,
and that of all the number of reasonable beings there is but one which has
remained unshaken in the love and contemplation of God, and that that spirit is
become Christ and the king of all reasonable beings, and that he has created(1)
all the bodies which exist in heaven, on earth, and between heaven and earth;
and that the world which has in itself elements more ancient than itself, and
which exists by themselves, viz.: dryness, damp, heat and cold, and the image (idean)
to which it was formed, was so formed, and that the most holy and consubstantial
Trinity did not create the world, but that it was created by the working
intelligence (Nous dhmiourgos) which is more ancient than the world, and which
communicates to it its being: let him be anathema.
VII. IF anyone shah say that Christ, of whom it is said that he appeared in the
form of God, and that he was united before all time with God the Word, and
humbled himself in these last days even to humanity, had (according to their
expression) pity upon the divers falls which had appeared in the spirits united
in the same unity (of which he himself is part), and that to restore them he
passed through divers classes, had different bodies and different names, became
all to all, an Angel among Angels, a Power among Powers, has clothed I himself
in the different classes of reasonable beings with a form corresponding to that
class, and finally has taken flesh and blood like ours and is become man for
men; [if anyone says all this] and does not profess that God the Word humbled
himself and became man: let him be anathema.
VIII. IF anyone shall not acknowledge that God the Word, of the same substance
with the Father and the Holy Ghost, and who was made flesh and became man, one
of the Trinity, is Christ in every sense of the word, but [shall affirm] that he
is so only in an inaccurate manner, and because of the abasement (kenwsanta), as
they call it, of the intelligence (nous); if anyone shall affirm that this
intelligence united (sunhmmenon) to God the Word, is the Christ in the true
sense of the word, while the Logos is only called Christ because of this union
with the intelligence, and e converse that the intelligence is only called God
because of the Logos: let him be anathema.
IX. IF anyone shall say that it was not the Divine Loges made man by taking an
animated body with a yukh logikh and noera, that he descended into hell and
ascended into heaven, but shall pretend that it is the Nous which has done this,
that Nous of which they say (in an impious fashion) he is Christ properly so
called, and that he is become so by the knowledge of the Monad: let him be
anathema.
X IF anyone shall say that after the resurrection the body of the Lord was
ethereal, having the form of a sphere, and that such shall be the bodies of all
after the resurrection; and that after the Lord himself shall have rejected his
true body and after the others who rise shall have rejected theirs, the nature
of their bodies shall be annihilated: let him be anathema.
XI. IF anyone shall say that the future judgment signifies the destruction of
the body and that the end of the story will be an immaterial yusis, and that
thereafter there will no longer be any matter, but only spirit nous): let him be
anathema.
XII. IF anyone shall say that the heavenly Powers and all men and the Devil and
evil spirits are united with the Word of God in all respects, as the Nous which
is by them called Christ and which is in the form of God, and which humbled
itself as they say; and [if anyone shall say] that the Kingdom of Christ shall
have an end: let him be anathema.
XIII. IF anyone shall say that Christ [i.e., the Nous is in no wise different
from other reasonable beings, neither substantially nor by wisdom nor by his
power and might over all things but that all will be placed at the right hand of
God, as well as he that is called by them Christ [the Nous, as also they were in
the reigned pre-existence of all things: let him be anathema.
XIV. IF anyone shall say that all reasonable beings will one day be united in
one, when the hypostases as well as the numbers and the bodies shall have
disappeared, and that the knowledge of the world to come will carry with it the
ruin of the worlds, and the rejection of bodies as also the abolition of [all]
names, and that there shall be finally an identity of the gnpsis and of the
hypostasis; moreover, that in this pretended apocatastasis, spirits only will
continue to exist, as it was in the reigned pre-existence: let him be anathema.
XV. IF anyone shall say that the life of the spirits (nopn) shall be like to the
life which was in the beginning while as yet the spirits had not come down or
fallen, so that the end and the beginning shall be alike, and that the end shall
be the true measure of the beginning: let him be anathema.
THE ANATHEMATISMS OF THE EMPEROR JUSTINIAN AGAINST ORIGEN.(1)
(Labbe and Cossart, Concilia, Tom. v., col. 677.)
Whoever says or thinks that human souls pre-existed, i.e., that they had
previously been spirits and holy powers, but that, satiated with the vision of
God, they had turned to evil, and in this way the divine love in them had died
out (apyugeisas) and they had therefore become souls (yukas) and had been
condemned to punishment in bodies, shall be anathema.
II. If anyone says or thinks that the soul of the Lord pre-existed and was
united with God the Word before the Incarnation and Conception of the Virgin,
let him be anathema.
III. If anyone says or thinks that the body of our Lord Jesus Christ was first
formed in the womb of the holy Virgin and that afterwards there was united with
it God the Word and the pre-existing soul, let him be anathema.
IV. If anyone says or thinks that the Word of God has become like to all
heavenly orders, so that for the cherubim he was a cherub, for the seraphim a
seraph: in short, like all the superior powers, let him be anathema.
V. If anyone says or thinks that, at the resurrection, human bodies will rise
spherical in form and unlike our present form, let him be anathema.
VI. If anyone says that the heaven, the sun, the moon, the stars, and the waters
that are above heavens, have souls, and are reasonable beings, let him be
anathema.
VII. If anyone says or thinks that Christ the Lord in a future time will be
crucified for demons as he was for men, let him be anathema.
VIII.
If anyone says or thinks that the power of God is limited, and that he created
as much as he was able to compass, let him be anathema.
IX. If anyone says or thinks that the punishment of demons and of impious men is
only temporary, and will one day have an end, and that a restoration (apokatastasis)
will take place of demons and of impious men, let him be anathema.
Anathema to Origen and to that Adamantius, who set forth these opinions together
with his nefarious and execrable and wicked doctrine? and to whomsoever there is
who thinks thus, or defends these opinions, or in any way hereafter at any time
shall presume to protect them.
THE DECRETAL EPISTLE OF POPE VIGILIUS IN CONFIRMATION OF THE FIFTH ECUMENICAL
SYNOD.
HISTORICAL NOTE.
(Fleury. Hist. Eccl., Liv. xxxiii. 52.)
At last the Pope Vigilius resigned himself to the advice of the Council, and six
months afterwards wrote a letter to the Patriarch Eutychius, wherein he
confesses that he has been wanting in charity in dividing from his brethren. He
adds, that one ought not to be ashamed to retract, when one recognises the
truth, and brings forward the example of Augustine. He says, that, after having
better examined the matter of the Three Chapters, he finds them worthy of
condemnation. "We recognize for our brethren and colleagues all those who have
condemned them, and annul by this writing all that has been done by us or by
others for the defence of the three chapters."
THE DECRETAL LETTER OF POPE VIGILIUS.
(The manuscript from which this letter was printed was found in the Royal
Library of Paris by Peter de Marca and by him first published, with a Latin
translation and with a dissertation. Both of these with the Greek text are found
in Labbe and Cossart's Con-cilia, Tom. V., col. 596 et seqq.; also in Migne's
Patr. Lat., Tom. LXIX., col. 121 et seqq. Some doubts have been expressed about
its genuineness and Harduin is of opinion that the learned Jesuit, Garnerius, in
his notes on the Deacon Leberatus's Breviary, has proved its supposititious
character. But the learned have not generally been of this mind but have
accepted the letter as genuine.)
Vigilius to his beloved brother Eutychius.
No one is ignorant of the scandals which the enemy of the human race has stirred
up in all the world: so that he made each one with a wicked object in view,
striving in some way to fulfil his wish to destroy the Church of God spread over
the whole world, not only in his own name but even in ours and in those of
others to compose diverse things as well in words as in writing; in so much that
he attempted to divide us who, together with our brethren and fellow bishops,
are stopping in this royal city, and who defend with equal reverence the four
synods, and sincerely persist in the one and the same faith of those four
synods, by his sophistries and machinations he tried to part from them; so that
we ourselves who were and are of the same opinion as they touching the faith,
went apart into discord, brotherly love being despised.(1)
But since Christ our God, who is the true light, whom the darkness comprehendeth
not, hath removed all confusion from our minds, and hath so recalled peace to
the whole world and to the Church, so that what things should be defined by us
have been healthfully fulfilled through the revelation of the Lord and through
the investigation of the truth.
Therefore, my dear brothers, I do you to wit, that in common with all of you,
our brethren, we receive in all respects the four synods, that is to say the
Nicene, the Constantinopolitan, the first Ephesian, and the Chalcedonian; and we
venerate them with devout mind, and watch over them with all our mind. And
should there be any who do not follow these holy synods in all things which they
have defined concerning the faith, we judge them to be aliens to the communion
of the holy and Catholic Church.
Wherefore on account of our desire that you, my brothers, should know what we
have done in this matter, we make it known to you by this letter. For no one can
doubt how many were the discussions raised on account of the Three Chapters,
that is, concerning Theodore, sometime bishop of Mopsuestia, and his writings,
as well as concerning the writings of Theodoret, and concerning that letter
which is said to have been written by Ibas to Maris the Persian: and how diverse
were the things spoken and written concerning these Three Chapters. Now if in
every business sound wisdom demands that there should be a retractation of what
was propounded after examination, there ought to be no shame when what was at
first omitted is made public after it is discovered by a further study of the
truth. [And if this is the case in ordinary affairs] how much more in
ecclesiastical strifes should the same dictate of sound reason be observed?
Especially since it is manifest that our Fathers, and especially the blessed
Augustine, who was in very sooth illustrious in the Divine Scriptures, and a
master in Roman eloquence, retracted some of his own writings, and corrected
some of his own sayings, and added what he had omitted and afterward found out.
We, led by their example never gave over the study of the questions raised by
the controversy with regard to the before-mentioned Three Chapters, nor our
search for passages in the writings of our Fathers which were applicable to the
matter.
As a result of this investigation it became evident that in the sayings of
Theodore of Mopsuestia (which are spoken against on all hands) there are
contained very many things contrary to the right faith and to the teachings of
the holy Fathers; and for this very reason these same holy Fathers have left for
the instruction of tile Church treatises which they had written against him.
For among other blasphemies of his we find that he openly said that God the Word
was one [Person] and Christ another [Person], vexed with the passions of the
soul and with the desires of the flesh, and that he little by little advanced
from a lower to a higher stage of excellence by the improvement (prokiph, per
profectum operum) of his works, and became irreprehensible in his manner of
life.(1) And further he taught that it was a mere man who was baptized in the
Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, and that he received
through ilia baptism the grace of the Holy Spirit, and merited his adoption; and
therefore that Christ could be venerated in the same way that the image of the
Emperor is venerated as being the persona (eis proswpon) of God the Word. And he
also taught that [only] after his resurrection he became immutable in his
thoughts and altogether impeccable.
Moreover he said that the union of the Word of God was made with Christ as the
Apostle says the union is made between a man and his wife: They twain shall be
one flesh; and that after his resurrection, when the Lord breathed upon his
disciples and said, Receive tile Holy Ghost, he did not give to them the Holy
Spirit. In like strain of profanity he dared to say that the confession which
Thomas made, when he touched the hands and side of the Lord after his
resurrection, saying, My Lord and my God, did not apply to Christ (for Theodore
did not acknowledge Christ to be God); but that Thomas gave glory to God being
filled with wonder at the miracle of the resurrection, and so said these words.
But what is still worse is this, that in interpreting the Acts of the Apostles,
Theodore makes Christ like to Plato, and Manichaeus, and Epicurus, and Marcian,
saying: Just as each of these were the authors of their own peculiar teachings,
and called their disciples after their own names, Platonists, and Munichaeans,
and Epicureans, and Marcionites, just so Christ invented dogmas and called his
followers Christians after himself.
Let therefore the whole Catholic Church know that justly and irreproachably we
have arrived at the conclusions contained in this our constitution. Wherefore we
condemn and anathematize Theodore, formerly bishop of Mopsuestia, and his
impious writings, together with all other heretics, who (as is manifest) have
been condemned and anathematized by the four holy Synods aforesaid, and by the
Catholic Church: also the writings of Theodoret which are opposed to the right
faith, and are against the Twelve Chapters of St. Cyril, and against the first
Council of Ephesus, which were written by him in defence of Theodore and
Nestorius.
Moreover we anathematize and condemn the letter to the Persian heretic Maris,
which is said to have been written by Ibas, which denies that Christ the Word
was incarnate of the holy Mother of God and ever-virgin Mary, and was made man,
but declares that a mere man was born of her, and this man it styles a temple,
so from this we are given to understand that God the Word is one [Person] and
Christ another [Person]. Moreover it calumniates Saint Cyril, the master and
herald of the orthodox faith, calling him a heretic, and charging him with
writing things similar to Apollinaris; and it reviles the first Synod of
Ephesus, as having condemned Nestorius without deliberation or investigation; it
likewise declares the twelve chapters of St. Cyril to be impious and contrary to
the right faith; and further still it defends Theodore and Nestorius, and their
impious teachings and writings. Therefore we anathematize and condemn the
aforesaid impious Three Chapters, to-wit, the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia and
his impious writings; And all that Theodoret impiously wrote, as well as the
letter said to have been written by Ibas, in which are contained the above
mentioned profane blasphemies. We likewise subject to anathema whoever shall at
any time believe that these chapters should be received or defended; or shall
attempt to subvert this present condemnation.
And further we define that they are our brethren and fellow-priests who ever
keep the right faith set forth by those afore-mentioned synods, and shall have
condemned the above-named Three Chapters, or even do now condemn them.
And further we annul and evacuate by this present written definition of ours
whatever has been said by me (a me)or by others in defence of the aforesaid
Three Chapters.
Far be it from the Catholic Church that anyone should say that all the
blasphemies above related or they who held and followed such things, were
received by the before-mentioned four synods or by any one of them. For it is
most clear, that no one was admitted by the before-mentioned holy Fathers and
especially by the Council of Chalcedon, about whom there was any suspicion,
unless he had first repelled the above-named blasphemies and all like to them,
or else had denied and condemned the heresy or blasphemies of which he was
suspected.
Subscription.
May God preserve thee in health, most honourable brother. Dated VI. Id. Dec. in
the xxijd year of our lord the Emperor Justinian, eternal Augustus, the xijth
year after the consulate of the illustrious Basil.(1)
HISTORICAL EXCURSUS ON THE AFTER HISTORY OF THE COUNCIL.
Pope Vigilius died on his way home, but not until, as we have seen, he had
accepted and approved the action of the council in doing exactly that which he
"by the authority of the Apostolic See" in his Constitutum had forbidden it to
do.(2) He died at the end of 554 or the beginning of 555.
Pelagius I., who succeeded him in the See of Rome, likewise confirmed the Acts
of the Fifth Synod. The council however was not received in all parts of the
West, although it had obtained the approval of the Pope. It was bitterly opposed
in the whole of tile north of Italy, in England, France, and Spain, and also in
Africa and Asia. The African opposition died out by 559, but Milan was in schism
until 571, when Pope Justin II. published his "Henoticon." In Istria the matter
was still more serious, and when in 607 the bishop of Aquileia-Grado with those
of his suffragans who were subject to the Empire made their submission and were
reconciled to the Church, the other bishops of his jurisdiction set up a
schismatical Patriarchate at old Aquileia, and this schism continued till the
Council of Aquileia in 700. But before this the II. Council of Constantinople
was received all the world over as the Fifth Ecumenical Council; and was fully
recognized as such by the Sixth Council in 680.