..The Seven Ecumenical Councils
 
..

The Counsels of Christ

by The Rev'd Dr. Stanley Harakas

The Orthodox Church believe Jesus' voice can still be heard in the seven ecumenical councils.

 

Jesus Christ promised to send the Holy Spirit to guide the Church "into all truth" (John 16:13). According to the Orthodox Faith, this promise finds its most complete fulfillment in the ecumenical councils.

At "ecumenical" (from the Greek word for "world-wide" or "all encompassing") councils, bishops and clergy from across the church gathered to produce two types of rulings:

CANONS: dealt with administrative matters and could be changed by later councils.
HOROI: were doctrinal formulations; they permanently express authentic Orthodox teaching and cannot be changed by subsequent councils.

Through the centuries, Orthodox leaders have gathered in dozens of councils to discuss doctrine and practice. But the Orthodox believe there have been only seven truly ecumenical councils.

{These Ecumenical Councils all took place before the Great Schism of the Church. In the year 1054, the leader of the Church in the West, the Bishop of Rome, separated himself from the rest of the Church; after that date, there could no longer be any true "ecumenical" councils, since part of the Church had been removed from the whole; the Orthodox Church does not hold that any of the councils of the Western Church can be valid for HOROI, since at best they can only deal with administrative and disciplinary matters in their own jurisdiction -- in other words, the "Lateran Councils," the two "Vatican Councils" and the other councils of the Roman Catholic Church do not, by their very nature, have the ability to determine doctrinal or theological statements about the Christian Faith (the webmaster)}.

Here are the main theological teachings and some sample canons passed by each council.

1. Nicea (325)
318 bishops
Opposed the teaching of Arius by affirming that Jesus Christ is fully divine.
Issued the first version of the Nicene Creed.
Passed 85 canons: Rome is the "first among equals" of the patriarchial sees of Christendom; various restrictions are to be placed on Christians who denied the faith under persecution; prayer should be offered standing.

2. Constantinople (381)
150 bishops
Affirmed the divinity of the Holy Spirit, thus formulating the doctrine of the Holy Trinity: One God in three persons (hypostases), Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Completed final version of Nicene Creed (also called the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed).
Passed seven canons: bishops should not interfere in matters of other dioceses; the bishop of Constantinople is "second among equals" to the see of Rome (since it is the "New Rome").

3. Ephesus (431)
200 bishops
Rejected the teaching of Nestorius, affirming that Jesus Christ was one person with two natures (human and divine).
Declared Mary the Theotokos, "Birthgiver of God."
Passed eight canons: bishops deposed by Nestorian bishops are to be reinstated; it is forbidden to alter the Nicene Creed.

4. Chalcedon (451)
630 bishops
Opposed monophysite views, which held that the divine nature of Jesus Christ overwhelmed his human nature. Taught that the divine and human in Christ were united without confusion, change, division, or separation; yet they are distinct and unmingled.
Passed 30 canons: clergy and monks forbidden from involvement in business or the military; women cannot be ordained deaconesses before the age of 40; priests and deacons are not permitted to seize the material goods of their bishop once he dies.

5. Constantinople II (553)
165 bishops
In light of continuing controversies about the person of Christ, it re-affirmed the teachings of the previous ecumenical councils regarding Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.
No canons passed.

6. Constantinople III (680)
170 bishops
Opposed the monothelete (single divine will) teaching about Christ, and affirmed that Jesus Christ had both full human and divine wills, united harmoniously under the leadership of the divine will.
No canons passed.

"5. & 6". Quinisext Council (692)
327 bishops
Also known as the Council in Trullo because it was held in the trullus, or domed room of the emperor's palace in Constantinople.
It is viewed as an extension of the Fifth-Sixth Ecumenical Councils, thus the name.
Passed 102 canons: obligatory clerical celibacy condemned; Saturday fasting during Lent forbidden.

7. Nicea II (787)
367 bishops
Held in the midst of the more-than-century-long icon controversy (725-842). Concluded that only God can be worshiped, but icons can be honored as a means of expressing devotion to what was depicted in them.
Passed 22 canons: bishops, priests, and deacons cannot be appointed by secular authorities; women cannot stay in bishops' houses or men's monasteries.

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For more detailed information, click on these links:
http://www.goholycross.org/studies/councils.html

http://home.it.net.au/~jgrapsas/pages/Ecumenical_Councils.htm


For a COMPLETE TEXTof the proceedings of the Councils:

THE SEVEN ECUMENICAL COUNCILS
( http://www.intratext.com/X/ENG0835.HTM)

THE SEVEN ECUMENICAL COUNCILS
(http://www.ccel.org/fathers2/NPNF2-14/TOC.htm)


Stanley Samuel Harakas is emeritus professor of theology at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, Brookline, Massachusetts. He is author of Of Life and Salvation (Light and Life, 1996).

 

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