The Byzantine Fathers
Of
the Sixth to Eighth Century.
Georges
Florovsky.
Content:
Chapter One. Hymnographers, Polemicists, and
Florilegia.
Hymnody and the Early Christian Liturgy. The Fifty-Ninth Canon of the Council of
Laodicea. St. Basil the Great and Antiphonal Singing.
The Development of Psalmody with Refrains.
St. Romanus. St. Andrew of Crete. The Acathistus Hymn.
Polemicists of the Sixth and Seventh
Centuries.
Minor Polemicists. St. Sophronius of Jerusalem. St. Anastasius of
Sinai.
Chapter Two. The Spirit of
Monophysitism.
The Chalcedonian Oros and the Tragic Schism in the
Church. The Language of St. Cyril and
Monophysitism. The National and Regional Element in the Rise of
Monophysitism. The Lack of a Feeling for Human Freedom in Monophysite
Theology. The Similarity Between Monophysitism and
Augustinianism. Julian of Halicarnassus. The Inner Duality in the Monophysite
Movement. The Theological Controversy and the Emphasis on the
Appeal to Tradition. Justinian and the Mood of the Time. The Condemnation of Origenism as the Condemnation of
the Inner Temptations of Alexandrian
Theology.
Chapter Three. Sketches in the History of
Monophysitism.
The Mood at Chalcedon. The Tome of Pope
Leo.
The Literary Style of the Tome. The Weakness of the Tome: The Latin Theological
Tradition and Greek Theological Categories of Thought. The Lack of a Definition of Person. A Lucid Confession of Faith in a Radiant
Fog.
A Stumbling Block and a Temptation for the
Egyptians. The Text of the Chalcedonian Oros. The Formula of Reunion of 433 and the Chalcedonian
Oros. The Cutting Edge of the Chalcedonian Oros.
The Paradoxical Unspokenness in the Chalcedonian
Oros. The Fathers of Chalcedon and Their Two-Sided
Problem. The Disturbing Vagueness to the Easterners.
The Necessity for a Theological
Commentary.
The Reaction to the Council of
Chalcedon.
The Reaction in Alexandria. The Opponents to the Council of Chalcedon as
"Dissidents" not "Heretics" and their Political Loyalty. The Alexandrians and Proterius. The Reaction in Jerusalem: Juvenal and
Theodosius. The Special Situation of Palestine. The Reaction of Rome. The Reaction in Antioch. Peter the Fuller’s Arrival in Antioch and the
Alteration of the Trisagion Hymn. The Death of Emperor Marcian and the Return to
Alexandria of the Exiled Opponents to the Council of Chalcedon. The Monophysite Election of Timothy Aelurus as
Patriarch of Alexandria and the Murder of Proterius. The Coronation of Emperor Leo I and Policy in
Alexandria. The Exile of Timothy Aelurus and the Election
of Timothy Salafaciolus as Patriarch of
Alexandria. The Deposition of Peter the Fuller in Antioch, the
Return of Patriarch Martyrius, and Splits within Monophysitism. The Influence of the Germanic Tribes on the Latin West
and on Byzantium. The Defeat of Attila and the Increase of Germanic
Influence. Emperor Leo I and the Termination of the Influence of
Aspar the Ostrogoth. Emperor Zeno and Isaurian
Influence.
The Encyclical of Basiliscus 476. The Refusal of Patriarch Acacius to Sign the
Encyclical. Timothy Aelurus’ Rejection of Extreme
Monophysitism. Timothy Aelurus’ Council of Ephesus. Patriarch Acacius and St. Daniel the
Stylite. The Return of Emperor Zeno and the Murder of
Basiliscus. The Death of Timothy Aelurus and the Election of Peter
Mongus. A Time of Trouble in Antioch. The Appointment of Calendio as Patriarch of
Antioch. Political and Ecclesiastical Intrigues. John Talaia and Peter Mongus. The Henotikon of Zeno 482. Pope St. Felix III. The Exile of Calendio and the Return of Peter
Mongus.
The Confession of Faith of the Church in
Persia. The Schools of Edessa and
Nisibis.
Edessa. Nisibis. The Emergence of New Personalities: Philoxenus and
Severus.
The Death of Patriarch Acacius and the
Situation Inherited by his Successors, Fravitta and
Euphemius.
Peter Mongus and Fravitta. Patriarch Euphemius. The Death of Emperor Zeno and the Selection of Emperor
Anastasius. The Death of Pope Felix III and the Papacy Under Pope
Gelasius. The Death of Pope Gelasius and the Papacy Under
Anastasius II.
The Papal Schism: Symmachus and
Laurentius. Patriarch Flavian of Antioch and the Struggle with
Philoxenus.
Patriarch Macedonius of Constantinople and
his Encounter with Philoxenus and Emperor
Anastasius. Philoxenus’ Continued Struggle in Antioch.
Severus of Antioch. The Revolt of Vitalian the
Goth.
Negotiations Between Pope Hormisdas and Emperor
Anastasius.
The Accession to the Throne of Justin I and Justinian
I. The Chalcedonian Reaction in
Constantinople. The Chalcedonian Reaction in Antioch. Justinian’s Negotiations with Pope
Hormisdas.
The Imperial Edict Compelling Acceptance of Chalcedon
and the Arrest Order for Severus.
John of Tella. Persecution of non-Chalcedonians in Edessa.
Severus’ Activity in Exile. The Controversy Between Severus and Julian of
Halicarnassus.
The Imperial Edict Against Arians and the Reaction of
Theodoric.
Theodora’s Monastery of Refuge for Exiled
Monophysites. Monophysite Missionary Activity from Theodora’s
Monastery. The Relaxation of Justinian’s Policy and the Nika
Riots.
Justinian’s Request for a Theological Conference and
the Petition of the Monophysites.
Theodoras Influence: Severus Visits
Constantinople. Theodoras Influence: Anthimus of Trebizond Becomes
Patriarch of Constantinople. Pope Agapetus Visits Constantinople on Request of
Theodahad, the Gothic King. Pope Agapetus Consecrates Patriarch Menas in
Constantinople.
The Decisions of Justinian’s Standing Council of
Bishops In 536.
Theodora’s Agreement with the Roman Deacon
Vigilius. The Prospect of Monophysitism after its Defeat at the
Conference of 536.
Justinian’s Contra Monophysitas and his Interest in
Theology.
The Military Attacks by the Bulgars and the
Persians and the Outbreak of the Plague. Jacob Baradaeus. John of Ephesus. Missionary Work in
Nubia.
Justinian and the Fifth Ecumenical
Council.
Pope Vigilius Forcibly Taken to
Constantinople. The Fifth Ecumenical Council. The Anathemas of the Fifth Ecumenical
Council. Anathemas Against Origen and Origenism. Pope Vigilius and the Fifth Ecumenical
Council.
The Deposing of Pope Vigilius by the Fifth Ecumenical
Council.
The Earlier Years of Pope Pelagius and His
Ultimate Recognition of the Fifth Ecumenical
Council. The Result of the Fifth Ecumenical Council and a
Glimpse at Its Sessions. The Firm Resistance to Justinian’s Stunning Edict of
564 Proclaiming Aphthartodocetism Orthodox. The Twilight of Justinian’s Reign. The Actions of the Exiled Monophysite "Patriarch"
Theodosius in His Last Days. Justin II’s Convocation of the Monophysite Conference
of 566. The Monophysite Conference at Callinicum.
The Imperial Summons for Another Conference Among the
Monophysites at Constantinople. The Varieties of Monophysite Thought. The Reign of Terror Unleashed by Patriarch John
Scholasticus Against the Monophysites of Constantinople in 571. The Death of Patriarch John and the Recall of the
Exiled Patriarch Eutychius. Internal Dissenion Among the Monophysites: Problems
Caused by the Reconciliation of Paul the Black with Jacob. The Election of Two Monophysite Patriarchs
of Alexandria: Theodore of Rhamnis and Peter.
The Death of Jacob Baradaeus. Damianus of Alexandria and the Conference on unity
Among the Monophysites Requested by Almoundir. The Theological Quarrel Between Damianus of Alexandria
and Peter Callinicum of Antioch. The Monophysite Conference at the Gubba Barraya
Monastery. Pope Gregory I and the Chalcedonian Patriarch of
Alexandria Eulogius. The Election of the Monk Athanasius as Patriarch of
Antioch. Maurice Accuses Al-Moundir of Treason and the
Consequent Splitting of the Ghassanid Kingdom. The Policy of Emperor Maurice (582-602): Persecution
of the Monophysites in Constantinople. Emperor Maurices Extension of Imperial Rule in Armenia
and the Ecclesiastical Result. The Persecution of Monophysites in Melitene and
Mesopotamia Unleashed by Domitian, Bishop of Melitene. Emperor Maurice and Chosroes II of Persia.
The Bloody Reign of Emperor Phocas
(602-610). The Edict of Emperor Phocas to Pope Boniface
III. The Advance of the Persian Army and the Religious
Policy of Chosroes II. The Accession of Emperor Heraclius
(610-641).
Patriarch Segius and the Beginning of
Monothelitism. The Role of Pope Honorius in the Rise of
Monothelitism. The Islamic
Conquests.
Chapter Four. Leontius of
Byzantium.
The Controversial Corpus of
"Leontius."
The Theological Thought in the Corpus of
"Leontius."
The Quest for Precise Definitions. The Concepts of Nature, Essence, and
Hypostasis. The Reality of Enhypostasis. The Mystery of the Incarnation and Union as a
Presupposition of the Existence of Duality. Hypostasis and the Communicatio Idiomatum.
Leontius’ Criticism of St. Cyril’s Formula.
Leontius’ Dispute with the
Aphthartodocetists.
Chapter Five. The Spirit of Monenergism
and Monothelitism. Chapter Six. St. Maximus the
Confessor.
The Writings of St. Maximus. The Theology of St.
Maximus.
Revelation as the Central Theme in the Theology of St.
Maximus the Confessor. New Development of the Logos Doctrine and
the Doctrine of the Knowledge of God. The God-Man. Man’s Path.
Chapter Seven. St. John of
Damascus.
The Life of St. John of Damascus. The Writings of st. John of
Damascus.
The Theological System of St. John of
Damascus. The Defense of the Holy
Ikons.
The Seventh Ecumenical Council
787.
The Definition of Faith. The Council’s Letter to Irene and Constantine
VI.
In Memoriam Fr.
Georges Florovsky 1893-1979.
"Preeminent
Orthodox Christian Theologian, Ecumenical Spokesman, And Authority on Russian
Letters."
[All quotations are
from pages 5 and 11 of the Harvard Gazette of October 1, 1982, written by George
H. Williams, Hollis Professor of Divinity Emeritus, Harvard Divinity School and
Edward Louis Keenan, Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Harvard
University and "placed upon the records" at the Harvard Faculty of Divinity
Meeting on September 16, 1982.]
"Archpriest
Professor Georges Vasilyevich Florovsky (1893-1979), preeminent theologian of
Orthodoxy and historian of Christian thought, ecumenical leader and interpreter
of Russian literature … died in Princeton, New Jersey in his 86th year" on
August 11, 1979.
Born in Odessa in
1893, Fr. Florovsky was the beneficiary of that vibrant Russian educational
experience which flourished toward the end of the 19th century and produced many
gifted scholars. His father was rector of the Theological Academy and dean of
the Cathedral of the Transfiguration. His mother, Klaudia Popruzhenko, was the
daughter of a professor of Hebrew and Greek. Fr. Florovsky’s first scholarly
work, "On Reflex Salivary Secretion," written under one of Pavlov’s students,
was published in English in 1917 in the last issue of The Bulletin of the
Imperial Academy of Sciences.
In 1920, with his
parents and his brother Antonii, Fr. Florovsky left Russia and settled first in
Sophia, Bulgaria. He left behind his brother, Vasilii, a surgeon, who died in
the 1924 famine, and his sister Klaudia V. Florovsky, who became a professor of
history at the University of Odessa. In 1921 the President of Czechoslovakia,
Thomas Masaryk, invited Fr. Florovsky and his brother Antonii to Prague. Fr.
Florovsky taught the philosophy of law. Antonii later became a professor of
history at the University of Prague.
In 1922 Georges
Florovsky married Xenia Ivanovna Simonova and they resettled in Paris where he
became cofounder of St. Sergius Theological Institute and taught there as
professor of patristics (1926-1948). In 1932 he was ordained a priest and placed
himself canonically under the patriarch of Constantinople.
In 1948 he came to
the United States and was professor of theology at St. Vladimir’s Theological
Seminary from 1948 to 1955, and dean from 1950. From 1954 to 1965 he was
professor of Eastern Church History at Harvard Divinity School and, concurrently
(1962-1965) an associate of the Slavic Department and (1955-1959) an associate
professor of theology at Holy Cross Theological School.
"Although Fr.
Florovsky’s teaching in the Slavic Department [at Harvard University] was only
sporadic, he became a major intellectual influence in the formation of a
generation of American specialists in Russian cultural history. His lasting
importance in this area derives not from his formal teaching but from the time
and thought he gave to informal "circles" that periodically arose around him in
Cambridge among those who had read The Ways of Russian Theology [then
only in Russian], for decades a kind of "underground book" among serious
graduate students of Russian intellectual history, and had sought him out upon
discovering that he was at the Divinity School … During a portion of his
incumbency at Harvard … patristics and Orthodox thought and institutions from
antiquity into 20th century Slavdom flourished. In the Church History Department
meetings he spoke up with clarity. In the Faculty meetings he is remembered as
having energetically marked book catalogues on his lap for the greater glory of
the Andover Harvard Library! In 1964 Fr. Florovsky was elected a director of the
Ecumenical Institute founded by Paul VI near Jerusalem." Active in both the
National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches, Fr. Florovsky
was Vice President-at-Large of the National Council of Churches from 1954 to
1957.
"After leaving
Harvard, Professor Emeritus Florovsky taught from 1965 to 1972 in Slavic
Studies at Princeton University, having begun lecturing there already in 1964;
and he was visiting lecturer in patristics at Princeton Theological Seminary as
early as 1962 and then again intermittently after retirement from the
University. His last teaching was in the fall semester of 1978/79 at Princeton
Theological Seminary."
"Fr. Florovsky in
the course of his career was awarded honorary doctorates by St. Andrew’s
University … Boston University, Notre Dame, Princeton University, the University
of Thessalonica, St. Vladimir’s Theological Seminary, and Yale. He was a member
or honorary member of the Academy of Athens, the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, the British Academy, and the Fellowship of St. Alban and St.
Sergius."
Fr. Florovsky
personified the cultivated, well-educated Russian of the turn of the century.
His penetrating mind grasped both the detail and depth in the unfolding drama of
the history of Christianity in both eastern and western forms. He was
theologian, church historian, patristic scholar, philosopher, Slavist, and a
writer in comparative literature. "Fr. Florovsky sustained his pleasure on
reading English novels, the source in part of his extraordinary grasp of the
English language, which, polyglot that he was, he came to prefer above any other
for theological discourse and general exposition. Thus when he came to serve in
Harvard’s Slavic Department, there was some disappointment that he did not
lecture in Russian, especially in his seminars on Dostoievsky, Soloviev,
Tolstoi, and others. It was as if they belonged to a kind of classical age of
the Russian tongue and civilization that, having been swept away as in a deluge,
he treated as a Latin professor would Terrence or Cicero, not presuming to give
lectures in the tonalities of an age that had vanished
forever."
Fr. Florovsky’s
influence on contemporary church historians and Slavists was vast. The best
contemporary multi-volume history of Christian thought pays a special tribute to
Fr. Florovsky. Jaroslav Pelikan of Yale University, in the bibliographic section
to his first volume in The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development
of Doctrine, writes under the reference to Fr. Florovsky’s two works in
Russian on the Eastern Fathers: "These two works are basic to our interpretation
of trinitarian and christological dogmas" (p. 359 fromThe Emergence of the
Catholic Tradition: 100-600). George Huntston Williams, Hollis Professor
Emeritus of Harvard Divinity School, wrote: "Faithful priestly son of the
Russian Orthodox Church …, Fr. Georges Florovsky — with a career-long
involvement in the ecumenical dialogue — is today the most articulate, trenchant
and winsome exponent of Orthodox theology and piety in the scholarly world. He
is innovative and creative in the sense wholly of being ever prepared to restate
the saving truth of Scripture and Tradition m the idiom of our contemporary
yearning for the transcendent."
Author’s Preface
(1978).
These four volumes
on the Eastern Fathers of the fourth century and the Byzantine fathers from the
fifth to eighth centuries were originally published in 1931 and 1933 in Russian.
They contained my lectures given at the Institute of Orthodox Theology in Paris
from 1928 to 1931 and were originally published in Russian more or less in the
form in which they were originally delivered. They therefore lacked exact
references and appropriate footnotes. Another reason for the omission of
reference material in the 1931 and 1933 publications is that the books were
originally published at my own expense and strict economy was therefore
necessary. In fact, their publication was only the result of the generous
cooperation and help of personal friends. These English publications must be
dedicated to their memory. The initiative of the original publication was taken
by Mrs. Elizabeth Skobtsov, who became an Orthodox nun and was later known under
her monastic name of Mother Maria. It was she who typed the original manuscripts
and she who was able to persuade Mr. Iliia Fondaminsky, at that time one of the
editors of the renowned Russian review, Sovremennye Zapiski [Annales
Contemporaries], to assume financial responsibility. Both these friends
perished tragically in German concentration camps. They had been inspired by the
conviction that books in Russian on the Fathers of the Church were badly needed,
not only by theological students, but also by a much wider circle of those
concerned with doctrinal and spiritual vistas and issues of Eastern Orthodox
Tradition. Their expectation was fully justified: the volumes in Russian rapidly
sold out and were warmly appreciated in the general press.
When I began
teaching at the Paris Institute, as Professor of Patrology, I had to face a
preliminary methodological problem. The question of the scope and manner of
Patristic studies had been vigorously debated by scholars for a long time.
(There is an excellent book by Fr. J. de Ghellinck, S.J., Patristique et
Moyen Age, Volume II, 1947, pp. 1-180). The prevailing tendency was to treat
Patrology as a history of Ancient Christian Literature, and the best modern
manuals of Patrology in the West were written precisely in this manner:
Bardenhewer, Cay re, Tixeront, Quasten, adherents to this school of thought,
made only sporadic reference to certain points of doctrine but their approach
was no doubt legitimate and useful. However, another cognate discipline came
into existence during the last century, Dogmengeschichte, or the school
of the history of doctrine. Here scholars were concerned not so much with
individual writers or thinkers but rather with what can be defined as the
"internal dialectics" of the Christian "mind" and with types and trends of
Christian thought.
In my opinion,
these two approaches to the same material must be combined and correlated. I
have tried to do precisely this with the revision of some of the material for
the English publications. I have written some new material on the external
history and especially on the ecumenical councils. But in essence Patrology must
be more than a kind of literary history. It must be treated rather as a history
of Christian doctrine, although the Fathers were first of all testes
veritatis, witnesses of truth, of the faith. "Theology" is wider and more
comprehensive than "doctrine." It is a kind of Christian Philosophy. Indeed,
there is an obvious analogy between the study of Patristics and the study of the
history of Philosophy. Historians of Philosophy are as primarily concerned with
individual thinkers as they are interested ultimately in the dialectics of
ideas. The "essence" of philosophy is exhibited in particular systems. Unity of
the historical process is assured because of the identity of themes and problems
to which both philosophers and theologians are committed. I would not claim
originality for my method, for it has been used occasionally by others. But I
would underline the theological character of Patrology.
These books were
written many years ago. At certain points they needed revision or extension. To
some extent, this has been done. Recent decades have seen the rapid progress of
Patristic studies in many directions. We now have better editions of primary
sources than we had forty or even thirty years ago. We now have some new texts
of prime importance: for example, the Chapters of Evagrius or the new Sermons of
St. John Chrysostom. Many excellent monograph studies have been published in
recent years. But in spite of this progress I do not think that these books,
even without the revisions and additions, have been made obsolete. Based on an
independent study of primary sources, these works may still be useful to both
students and scholars.
Georges Florovsky September,
1978
Chapter One.
Hymnographers, Polemicists, and Florilegia.
Hymnographers.
Hymnody and the
Early Christian Liturgy.
From the beginning
the character of the Christian liturgy was more dogmatic than lyrical. This is
connected with its mystical realism. On the human side, the liturgy is, first of
all, a confession — a testimony of faith, not only an outpouring of
feelings. It is for this reason that the dogmatic and theological disputes left
such a noticeable trace on the history of liturgical poetry. As early as the
dogmatic disputes of the late second century, references to ancient psalms to
the glory of Christ, the Lord God, receive the power of a theological argument
as evidence from liturgical tradition. St. Basil the Great, in his disputes with
the Arians over the Divinity of the Spirit, also relies on the testimony of
liturgical tradition. Pope Celestine subsequently advances a general principle
that a law of faith is defined as a law of prayer — ut legem credendi statuit
lex supplicandi (Capitula Celestini, 8, alias 11). The redaction of
these chapters which are known to us evidently belongs to Prosper of Aquitaine.
Thus the liturgical rite obtains recognition as a dogmatic monument or dogmatic
source.
At an earlier time
creative improvization occupied a very significant place in the liturgy (see I
Corinthians 14:26). This was the case even in the second and third centuries, as
the testimony of Justin Martyr and Tertullian bear witness. These were primarily
hymns and psalms — songs of praise and thanksgiving. It is sufficient to name
the great prayer in the Epistle of Clement of Rome. Other of these
ancient hymns remained in liturgical use forever; for example, the ancient hymn,
Gladsome Light — Φώς ιλαρόν which dates back to the very earliest
of times and is still sung at every Vesper Service in the Orthodox Church.
Mention must also be made of the doxologies and hymns of thanks in the
Alexandrian copy of the Bible, and in the seventh book of the Apostolic
Constitutions.
The Fifty-Ninth
Canon of the Council of Laodicea.
In the fourth
century we observe a liturgical turning point. It was partly connected with the
dogmatic struggle, and partly with the development and spread of monasticism.
Very instructive is the famous Fifty-Ninth Canon of the Council of Laodicea
(fourth century) which forbids "reading ordinary psalms and books not determined
by the rule of the Church” — διωτικούς ψαλμούς; ουδέ ακανόνιστα βιβλία. “No
psalms composed by private individuals nor any uncanonical books may be read in
the Church, but only the Canonical Books of the Old and New Testaments." Later
Byzantine canonists suggested that what is at issue here are the so-called
"psalms of Solomon," and others similar to those. It is more probable to think
that the Laodicean rule had a wider and more direct meaning. By analogy with the
Sixtieth Canon which defines the contents of the Biblical canon — precisely in
connection with the liturgical reading of the Biblical books — it is possible to
see in the Fifty-Ninth Canon an attempt to consolidate a definite "canon" in the
liturgy as well, excluding all "unholy" hymns from the liturgical ordinary. This
prohibition refers to all "false" hymns into which dogmatic ambiguity and even
plain delusion had easily entered. Phrygia had always been in its own way a nest
of heresy, and psalms were a very convenient and effective means for
disseminating and instilling false views. We know very well that this means was
constantly being utilized by ancient sectarians and false teachers. It is
sufficient to recall the hymns or "psalms" of the Gnostics and Montanists, and,
from a later era, the hymns of Arius in his Thalia and Apollinarius’
New Psalter. Under the conditions of dogmatic struggle, the attempt to
bring liturgical singing within precise and strict bounds was entirely
understandable. The simplest solution of all was to return to Biblical psalmody,
to the "proclaiming" of the canonical psalms attributed to David. From the
beginning they came into Christian use from the observances of the services from
the synagogue. In the fourth century Biblical motifs became even more noticeable
in the liturgy. This was instituted deliberately — it was not merely an
involuntary recollection.
St. Basil the
Great and Antiphonal Singing.
The liturgical
procedure established by St. Basil the Great in his cloisters had special
influence. His disputes with the Neo-Caesareans was characteristic. They accused
him of innovations: he had introduced antiphonal singing of songs and singing
with refrains. St. Basil did not deny that this was a new procedure — besides,
it had already been accepted everywhere (see Eterius’ Pilgrimage
concerning the service in Jerusalem). However, the Neo-Caesareans had their
innovations too — some "supplications" ("litanies") of a penitential nature. But
this is not what Basil is stressing: "and we do nothing but pray publicly about
our sins, only with the difference that we petition our God not with human
phrases, like you, but with words of the Spirit" (Letter, 207). St. Basil
emphasizes that with the Neo-Caesareans there is much which proves to be
insufficient "because of the antiquity of the statute;" that is, obsolescence
(see On the Holy Spirit, chapter 29).
The Development
of Psalmody with Refrains.
The custom of
psalmody with refrains becomes common at this time in urban or synodical
churches — both in Alexandria under St. Athanasius and in Antioch under Diodore
and St. John Chrysostom. "In our gatherings David is first, middle, and last,"
says St. John Chrysostom. This was the rebirth of Old Testament custom (see the
refrain in the very text of the 135th Psalm). From the refrains there
gradually developed new psalms closely tied to the Biblical text which they
reveal or elucidate. Psalmody (the "sequence of psalms") receives a special
development in the monasteries. Here a daily cycle of prayers and liturgy was
compiled and consolidated. At its foundation lies the "versification" of the
Psalter. Monks in Egyptian monasteries avoided long prayers. Prayer has to be
frequent, but concise — "lest the Enemy have time to distract our heart," as the
abbot Isaac explained to John Cassian.
Solemn singing was
considered inappropriate. "Monks did not go into the wilderness in order to sing
melodic songs," said an Alexandrian abbot to his disciples. "What kind of
emotion is possible for monks if in the Church or their cells they raise their
voices like oxen!" This striving to pray "with the words of the Spirit, this
abstention from new hymns and psalms composed "according to the custom of the
Hellenes" is very characteristic. Sometimes verses from patristic works were
joined to the Psalms and Biblical songs. For example, the abbot Dorotheus speaks
of St. Gregory of Nazianzus’ "song of dicta." Monastic liturgies, whether
cenobitic or anchoritic, were more penitential as opposed to the more ancient
"cathedral" liturgy which was solemn and laudatory.
New liturgical
poetry begins to develop comparatively late and very gradually on the new
foundation. New hymns are composed. The story of the venerable Auxentius (of the
time of the Council of Chalcedon) is interesting. The people would throng before
his cave. The ascetic would proclaim individual verses and the crowd would
respond with short refrains — from the Psalms or the ancient hymns. One of
Auxentius1 friends was Anthimius, the first creator of anthems." The liturgical
rite developed independently in various places. Especially important centers
were the Great Church in Constantinople — the Hagia Sophia, the Sinai cloisters,
and the laura of St. Sabas the Illuminator. At first it was the influence of the
monasteries of Syria and Palestine which was decisive in the history of
liturgical poetry. From here come all the significant psalmists of the sixth and
seventh centuries, and even the eighth century, right up to St. John of
Damascus. Here the traditions of Greek and Syrian poetry intersect. These new
hymns reflect the era with its Christological disturbances and disputes. The
idea of consolidating the already existing rite arises very early. Thus is
composed the "regulations" — the Typikon. The Greek title expresses not
only the motif of a norm or order but first of all a model. The Typikon
is not so much a book of rules as a book of examples or
models.
We are forced to
reconstruct the history of hymnody from comparatively late records. It is not
always possible to detach the most ancient layers from later strata with total
certainty. The inscriptions of names even in the oldest manuscripts are not very
reliable. Generally speaking, the oldest hymns were supplanted by the works of
later psalmists, particularly in the period when the statutes were definitely
consolidated or recorded. In addition, the liturgy becomes more and more
anonymous and supra-personal. Early Byzantine liturgical poetry reaches its
highest peak in the dogmatic hymnody of St. John of
Damascus.
St.
Romanus.
Within the ranks of
early Byzantine poets and hymnologists we must mention first St. Romanus
‘Melodus’ — ό μελωδός (c. 490-560). Strangely enough, none of the historians
mention him. We know of his life only from the Menaion under October 1.
Hie was of Syrian origin, from Emesa. Legendary material indicates that he was
of Jewish origin. He was a deacon first in Beirut before coming to
Constantinople under the reign of Anastasius I (491-518). St. Romanus was a
creator of the Kontakion, a term which comes from the staff about which
the inscribed scroll is wrapped. They were "hymns of praise for Holy Days" and
usually had an acrostic of his name. The Kontakion is organized in a
strophic system and usually consisted of twenty-four stanzas. Each stanza is a
perfect structural imitation of the first. The metrical system of the
Kontakion is based on stress and accent and hence the rhythm was
influenced by the melody. It is not easy to determine the volume of his creative
legacy precisely. Approximately one thousand hymns have been ascribed to him but
only approximately eighty metrical sermons have come down to us under his name.
Among the best are his Kontakia for the great Holy Days — Christmas,
Candlemas (the feast commemorating the purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary
and the presentation of Christ in the Temple which is known in Eastern
Christianity as υπαπαντή, which is The Meeting1 of Christ with Simeon), the
Annunciation, and the Resurrection (or ‘Easter’) — "If you entered the grave,
Immortal…").
St. Romanus’ works
stand out for their richness and the elegance of their poetic form. Their
content is quite simple and free of allegory, but the author’s dogmatic pathos
reaches a high intensity. He is always concerned with a Christological theme. He
sings of the invariable union of two natures, and constantly goes on the attack
against the heretics — his songs are full of polemical allusions. He is harsh in
his denunciations of philosophers and especially doctors. This is fully in
keeping with the mood of Justinian’s time. With the rise of the canon in the
composition of the Matin service, most of the works of St. Romanus were forced
out of use. St. Romanus has been described as "perhaps the greatest religious
poet of all time" and his works as "masterpieces of world
literature."
St. Andrew of
Crete.
We also know little
about the life of another great Byzantine hymnologist, St. Andrew of Crete (c.
660-740). And once again what knowledge we have comes from the Menaion.
The chronicler names Andrew of Crete among the members of the council held in
712 under pressure from emperor Philippicus-Bardanes (711-713), the council
which repudiated the acts of the Sixth Ecumenical Council. This was an act of
unworthy compliance but not of apostasy. The council held in 712 was a
Monothelite council and at this St. Andrew subscribed to the repudiation of two
wills in Christ. In 713 he retracted and explained his doctrine in a metrical
confession. St. Andrew was a native of Damascus, became a deacon in
Constantinople (c. 685) and the head of a refuge for orphans and the elderly,
and later became archbishop of Gortyna in Crete in 692. He was a remarkable
orator and hymn-writer. He evidently was the first composer of the famous
Great Canon — ό μέγας κανών. The Triodion which bears the name of
St. Sophronius probably belongs not to St. Andrew but to Joseph the Hymnologist
of the ninth century. Most of St. Andrew’s canons went out of use quite
early.
The most remarkable
one by St. Andrew is, of course, the Great Canon. It is known to us in a
later revision by the Studites. The Irmos and anthems of Marius the
Egyptian do not belong to Andrew. More than anything else, this is a unique
penitential autobiography — hence, that élan and intensity of personal feeling
which permeate this epic of a grief-stricken soul. Biblicism is characteristic
for St. Andrew. At times he virtually repeats Biblical texts. The Great
Canon is overcrowded with Biblical reminiscences. A long line of vivid
penitential images from the Bible stretches from Adam to the prudent thief. The
Biblical text is very often perceived allegorically — but this is moral, not
speculative, allegorism. St. Andrew expresses few dogmatic motifs. Penitential
lyrics predominate. We should also note his Triodia for the first days of
Holy Week (they are now sung at Vespers in the Eastern Orthodox Church during
Holy Lent). As a liturgical form, the canon received its furthest development
and refinement in the creations of St. John of Damascus and Cosmas of Maiuma (he
must be distinguished from another hymn-writer named Cosmas who was his and St.
John of Damascus’ mentor. However, it is virtually impossible to distinguish the
works of the two hymn-writers named Cosmas. In the eighth century Stephen the
Sabbite was also composing canons of hymns. The iconoclastic troubles also had
an unhealthy effect on Church singing and hymnology.
The Acathistus
Hymn.
Among the monuments
of Constantinopolitan hymnody we must make note of the renowned
Acathistus — ακάθιστος which literally means “Not Sitting” because it was
sung standing. In the later statutes this famous liturgical hymn in honor of the
Blessed Mother Mary became sung — and still is — on the Saturday of the fifth
week of Great Lent. It consists of twenty-four stanzas of various lengths, each
beginning with one of the twenty-four letters of the Greek alphabet. The text is
based on the Gospel narratives of the Nativity. The author of the
Acathistus is unknown. According to a widespread belief it was composed
by Sergius, the Monothelite patriarch of Constantinople in thanksgiving for the
deliverance of his city from the Avars and Slavs in 626. But this is very
doubtful. It has also been ascribed to George Pisides but this too is doubtful.
A ninth century manuscript of St. Gall claims that it was written by patriarch
Germanus who, after the defeat of the Saracens before Constantinople in 717-718,
instituted a special feast in which the Acathistus was to be sung. Some
scholars accept this but it, too, is not at all
conclusive.
Apparently the
Acathistus is preserved in a later revision which altered the original
plan and the very theme of the hymn. Originally its theme was more
Christological than Mariological. This original redaction can be dated with some
hesitation to the time of emperor Heraclius in the early seventh century
(610-641).
Polemicists of the Sixth and
Seventh Centuries.
Minor
Polemicists.
At the very
beginning of the sixth century a certain Palestinian monk named Nephalius wrote
against Severus. We know of this only through Severus’ response, his
Orationes ad Nephalium. A little later John the Grammarian of Caesarea
voiced his objections to Severus. This John also wrote in defense of the Council
of Chalcedon and should not be confused with John Philoponus, the Monophysite
philosopher of Alexandria who bears also the title "the Grammarian." We also
know about these objections only from Severus’ work, Contra Grammaticum.
From the same period is the polemical work by John of Scythopolis, Against
the Aposchistae, which St. Photius claims was written as a response to a
work titled Against Nestorius written "by the father of the Aposchistae."
The only work of John’s for which there is any substantial record is his
Apology, a work in defense of the Council of Chalcedon. The fathers of the Sixth
Ecumenical Council refer to John’s work Against Severus (see Doctrina
patrum de Incarnatione Verbi). Heracleon, bishop of Chalcedon, wrote against
the Eutychians and Photius refers to an expansive work by Heracleon against
Manichaeism. Mention should also be made of the Dogmatic Panoply,
probably composed by Pamphilus of Jerusalem, who was a friend of Cosmas
Indicopleustes (Cosmas, the "Indian navigator," was a merchant from Alexandria
who later in life became a monk; he travelled on the Eastern seas and wrote the
noteworthy Christian Topography — Χριστιανική τοπογραφία — which is an
attack on the Ptolemaic system in favor of certain fantastic doctrines of
astrology used to attempt to harmonize with a literal understanding of the Bible
— the main value of his work is its geographical information and its testimony
to the spread of Christianity at that time).
The time of
Justinian was a time of special polemical agitation connected with the attempts
to reach an agreement and reunite the Church. To start with, we must note the
dogmatic epistles of the emperor himself. In any event, Justinian was
theologically educated. For all of his attraction to reunification with the
Monophysites, he himself theologized in a completely orthodox way. Only in his
old age was he carried away by the doctrine of the Aphthartodocetists but his
edict on this has not come down to us. According to Michael the Syrian,
Justinian’s Aphtharto -docetism differed little from the views of Julian of
Halicarnassus (Chronicle, 9, 34).
Justinian’s
weakness was in hurrying to decree his theological views as the norm of
confessions. Also, in his striving for unity, he would sometimes be too
tolerant, while at other times he would turn into "a Diocletian." However, in
his theology he always tried to start from the patristic traditions. His
theological tastes are very typical — he was repulsed by Antiochene theology and
exasperated by Origen. Closest to him were St. Cyril and the Cappadocians. In
general, Justinian was very close to Leontius of Byzantium and Leontius of
Jerusalem but we do not encounter in Justinian the doctrine of
"enhypostasisness" — his language is less precise.
The polemical
activity of Ephraem of Antioch dates back to Justinian’s time. Ephraem was
patriarch from 526 to 544. His writings are known to us from St. Photius. He
wrote against the Nestorians and the Monophysites, in defense of St. Cyril and
in defense of the Council of Chalcedon. He was a resolute adversary of
Origenism. Especially curious are his remarks against the Julianists (concerning
Adam’s "immortality").
The dogmatic and
polemical tracts of John Maxentius, who is well for his participation in the
so-called "Theopaschite"disputes, are very interesting. He also disputed with
the Nestorians, the Pelagians, and the Monophysites. He developed the formula of
the Scythian monks — "One of the Holy Trinity suffered" — into an integral
theological doctrine on redemption.
Also extremely
interesting is the dogmatic epistle of a certain monk Eustaphius On Two
Natures, in which the dispute with Severus is reduced to the question of two
operations — this was in connection with the Monophysite criticism of Pope Leo’s
Tome. St. Photius recounts in detail a book by a certain monk Jovus,
titled On the Incarnation. This work is very characteristic in its plan
and terminology.
It is especially
necessary to note a tract by Timothy of Constantinople On the Acceptance of
Heretics [De receptione haereticorum; Περι των προσερχόμενων τη άγια
εκκλησία. This work is rich in factual data concerning the history of the
persuasions and divisions within Monophysite circles.
The activity of
Anastasius of Antioch dates back to the late sixth century. He occupied the
throne in the sixties but was later exiled and incarcerated. He returned to
Antioch about 593. He wrote extensively in his confinement, mostly against the
Aphthartodocetists. His compositions were published only in a Latin translation.
It is characteristic that Anastasius relies almost exclusively on the
Scriptures, and almost does not mention the fathers at all. Anastasius’ basic
idea is the sufferings of the God-Man. His ideas were echoed by St. Maximus the
Confessor and St. John of Damascus.
St. Eulogius of
Alexandria was active at the same time. As one of the Antiochene father
superiors, he ascended the Alexandrian throne about 583 and occupied it until
his death in 607. He wrote extensively but most of his writings are known to us
only from excerpts provided by St. Photius. Of the fragments preserved by St.
Photius’ quotations, the passages from the apparently voluminous dogmatic work
On the Holy Trinity and the Incarnation are especially characteristic. It
must be stressed that St. Eulogius develops the doctrine of the "natural" human
will in Christ very precisely. He speaks directly about "two operations" and
"two desires," and he corroborates his reflections with a deep analysis of the
basic Gospel texts. In this respect he is the direct predecessor of St. Maximus
the Confessor.
St. Sophronius
of Jerusalem.
Of the writers of
the seventh century we must first of all name St. Sophronius of Jerusalem. He
came from a monastic milieu. There is much foundation for seeing a future
patriarch in that Sophronius the Sophist. He was from Damascus, and born about
560. In his youth he was a "sophist;" that is, a teacher of philology. But early
on he went into a monastery, the laura of St. Theodosius, where he met and
became good friends with John Moschus (d. 619 or 620), the seventh century
Byzantine monk, traveler, and writer, known mainly for his collection of vivid
monastic tales entitled Λειμων [in Latin known as Pratum
spirituale] which he dedicated to his friend St. Sophronius. Together,
John Moschus and St. Sophronius travelled widely — to Palestine, Egypt, Sinai,
Cyprus, Antioch, Egypt and Rome. It was in Rome that John Moschus died. St.
Sophronius brought his remains to the monastery of St. Theodosius. He completed
and published John’s Leimon [Pratum spirituale].
St. Sophronius was
again in Egypt in 633. He was there when the Monothelite movement began, and he
immediately came out against Cyrus of Phasis, patriarch of Alexandria. In that
same year St. Sophronius travelled to Constantinople to attempt to persuade
Patriarch Sergius I, the leading figure among the Monothelites, to accept the
orthodox position but his mission failed. In 634 he was elected to the throne of
Jerusalem. This was the time of the Saracen invasion and taking of Jerusalem. By
the autumn of 637 St. Sophronius saw that the Holy City of Jerusalem had no
choice but to surrender. St. Sophronius, however, refused to deal with anyone
about the surrender except the caliph himself. And in point of fact the caliph
did undertake the journey from Medina to Jerusalem. The Caliph Omar entered the
city in his ragged clothing, common for the caliphs of Medina but not for the
later caliphs of Damascus and Bagdad, and was given a tour of the Holy City’s
monuments by St. Sophronius. It is reported that St. Sophronius remained
externally polite but that he was disgusted at the ragged sight of this new
master of the Orient. And, seeing the caliph in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, St. Sophronius is reported to have said: "Lo, the Abomination of
Desolation, spoken of by Daniel, who stands in the Holy Place." Shortly after
Omar’s visit, St. Sophronius died in 638.
St. Sophronius was
not a theologian by vocation. He spoke out on dogmatic themes like a pastor.
Most important is his famous Synodical Epistle which was published upon
his ascent to the throne of Jerusalem. Here St. Sophronius offers a detailed
profession of faith in light of the Monothelite temptation which was then
manifesting itself. His Synodical Epistle was subsequently accepted at the Sixth
Ecumenical Council (680-681) as a precise exposition of faith: "We have also
examined the Synodical Epistle of Sophronius of holy memory, former Patriarch of
Holy City of Christ our God, Jerusalem, and have found it in accordance with the
true faith and with the Apostolic teachings, and with those of the holy approved
Fathers. Therefore we have received it as orthodox and as salutary to the Holy
Catholic and Apostolic Church, and have decreed that it is right that his name
be inserted in the diptychs of the Holy Churches."
St. Sophronius’
Synodical Epistle is very mild. It insists only on the essentials. First,
he speaks of the Trinitarian mystery, then he moves on to Christology. He speaks
in the customary manner of antitheses, which recalls Pope Leo’s Tome. The
Incorporeal is made flesh, and the Eternal accepts birth in time — the true God
becomes a true man. In the Incarnation the Logos accepts the "whole human
composition... flesh which is consubstantial with us; a rational soul which is
similar to our souls; and a mind which is completely identical to our minds." He
accepts them in such a way that everything human begins to be when it begins to
be the humanity of God the Logos.
Two natures are
unified in a single hypostasis, "being patently cognizable as two" — and even in
union each preserves the whole totality of the special qualities and attributes
characteristic of it. St. Sophronius reaches a conclusion about the distinction
between two activities from the invariance of two natures (he does not speak of
two wills). The reason for this is that the difference between the natures is
revealed precisely in actions or activities. "We profess both natural actions in
both natures and essences, from which for our own sake an unmixed union exists
in Christ, and this made the single Christ and Son a complete God, whom we must
also recognize as a complete man."
Both actions or
activities relate to the One Christ through the inseparable unity of his
Hypostasis. And God the Logos operates through humanity. However, Christ
experiences everything human "naturally" and "in a human way" — φυσικώς και
ανθρωπίνως although not by necessity or involuntarily. It is here that St.
Sophronius’ emphasis lies: "in a human way," but without that "capacity for
suffering" or passiveness which is characteristic of the "simple;" that is, the
sinful nature of man.
St. Sophronius
enters the history of Christian literature not so much as a theologian but as a
hagiographer and psalmist. It is hard to determine the share of his
participation in the composition of the work known as The Spiritual
Meadow. There is no doubt that the praise and legends about the miracles of
Saints Cyrus and John the Healer belong to him. The "service book" doubtlessly
does not belong to him. The authenticity of the collection of "anacreontic"poems
is almost beyond dispute. These are not liturgical psalms but rather homilies
expressed in rhythmical speech.
The explanation of
the liturgy which is known under St. Sophronius’ name does not belong to him,
although generally he worked on the Church statutes. Simeon of Thessaloniki
attributed to Sophronius the introduction to the rule of the cloister of St.
Sabas, a rule in general use in Palestine.
St. Anastasius
of Sinai.
St. Anastasius of
Sinai [Anastasius Sinaita] was the Father Superior of the monastery of St.
Catherine on Mount Sinai. From here he travelled more than once around Syria,
Arabia, and in Egypt, with polemical and missionary aims. We know very little
about his life. He died about twenty years after the Sixth Ecumenical Council;
that is, in about 700. He was primarily an erudite person.
All his books were
written for disputes. His main work is The Guide — οδηγός. It would be
better to translate this as "handbook." It was composed from individual chapters
and epistles in which St. Anastasius investigates the individual and particular
objections of the Monophysites on the basis of the Scriptures and from the
testimony of the ancients. The book containing One Hundred and Fifty-Four
Questions and Answers is of the same nature, although in its present form it
cannot be considered his. This work is more a handbook of eristics (the art of
debate) rather than one of "dialectics." True, St. Anastasius unmasks the spirit
of petty, abstruse questioning; however, he himself looks into petty
difficulties and permits perplexing questions. For the historian there are many
important details in this work, especially in the explanation and application of
the texts from Scripture. His references to the ancients are also very
important. But the spirit of a system vanishes, coherence weakens, and attention
becomes lost in a labyrinth of aporias.
We must also
consider the possibility that St. Anastasius may indeed be the author of a work
entitled The Interpretation of the Six Days. Of the twelve original
books, only the last has come down to us in the original. The explanation is
given only allegorically ("anagogic contemplations"). St. Anastasius explains
the psalms as well. It must be stressed that St. Anastasius always thinks in
Aristotelian categories, although he considers "Aristotle’s blather" to be the
source of all heresies.
Florilegia.
In the Christological
disputes the question of theological tradition was forcefully raised. This was
connected with the fight of school or trends. The time had come to sum up the
historical — and sometimes critical — situation and to fortify one’s profession
with the testimony and authority of the ancient fathers.
We find a
systematic selection of "patristic opinions" already in St. Cyril’s polemical
epistles. The Antiochenes, especially Theodoret in his Eranistes, also
were actively engaged in the collection of ancient testimonies. In the West St.
John Cassian refutes Nestorius with the aid of the testimony of earlier
teachers. Pope Leo the Great refutes Eutyches using the testimony of the
fathers. The councils of the fifth to the seventh centuries attentively reread
the collections of patristic writings, especially at the Fifth and Sixth
Ecumenical Councils and at the Lateran Council of 649. Excerpts from ancient
writers are especially abundant in Leontius of Byzantium and Leontius of
Jerusalem and in St. Maximus the Confessor.
Thus dogmatic
florilegia arc gradually put together. With this a literary form typical
of the Hellenistic epoch is revived. For the needs of teaching or for polemics
associated with various schools of thought, numerous collections of model
excerpts or testimonies of ancient patristic writers — most often those of an
edifying nature — were put together at this time. It is sufficient to recall
Plutarch’s Apophthegma or Stabeo’s famous collection.
It is virtually
impossible to trace the history of Christian florilegia in all their detail. The
most significant of them is known under the name The Words of the Holy
Fathers or A Selection of Phrases [usually called in Latin the Doctrina
patrum de Incarnatione Verbi]. This collection is preserved in several
manuscript copies which represent different redactions. The oldest of these
manuscripts goes back to the eighth or ninth centuries. We have to date the
compilation of the code to the time of the Sixth Ecumenical Council but previous
to the outbreak of iconoclasm. There are some grounds for speculating that the
compiler is St. Anastasius of Sinai. In any case, the selection of texts in the
this collection of patristic writings is very reminiscent of the collection of
texts in Anastasius’ Guide.
It is especially
necessary to note as well the collection of Sacra Parallela, which
is known under the name of St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749). Its literary
history has not yet been entirely explained. In the manuscripts we also
encounter codes of patristic pronouncements on individual questions — for
example, on the dogmatic meaning of certain texts, in particular Matthew 26:39
ff. and Luke 2:52.
These collections
were subject to further reworking, and would be augmented with new articles when
new issues captured theological attention. In the iconoclastic period there
arise special collections containing testimony about the veneration of holy
ikons — St. John of Damascus has such a code of texts, and there is one in the
Acts of the Seventh Ecumenical Council (787). Various collections of an edifying
nature receive a wide circulation. Their origins are primarily connected with
liturgical needs, with the custom of the so-called "prescribed readings" which
replaced the free sermon (see Trullo, 19). In an earlier time, during the
liturgy the acts of martyrs were usually read. Later these started to be
replaced by more or less extensive excerpts from patristic works, most often
from the writings of John Chrysostom. However, the custom of "prescribed
readings" was definitely established comparatively late. For the historian
all of these collections present a dual interest. First, they frequently
preserve important fragments of lost works. Secondly, these compilations allow
us to establish the average level and scope of historical and dogmatic knowledge
in a certain epoch. They tell us more about the readers than about the
writers.
The exegetical
collections are of a different nature. They were compiled in the process of
exegetical work on the Holy Scriptures, and were developed from comments or
observations on Biblical texts — the so-called scholia. This was a
classical custom — compare, for example, the scholia to the different
classical authors; scholia on legislative and other juridical documents were
different. The explanations of different interpreters are deposited one upon the
other. In the process of recopying or revising the so-called "lemmas" — that is,
the exact references, are omitted very frequently. Interpretations sometimes are
blended into a coherent text. Usually the names of the interpreters are
designated with brief signs which are often conventional and sometimes
obscure.
The impartiality of
the compilers of the Christian exegetical collections or "chains"
[catenae] is characteristic; one could say, rather, their peculiar
unscrupulousness. The compilers of these collections usually strive for
completeness and variety — of course, within the limits of the material known or
available to them. Therefore, they have no difficulty in putting authors of
opposite tendencies next to one another — Origen next to Diodore, Severus or
even Apollinarius next to Theodore of Mopsuestia. After all, even heretics have
healthy and valuable ideas. This "impartiality" adds a special importance to the
exegetical compilations. They preserve many fragments from books which have been
lost or spurned — the exegesis, for example, of Origen, Didymus, and Diodore.
This frequently allows us to restore forgotten motifs in the history of exegesis
in general and of the interpretation of individual characteristic texts.
Sometimes in the catenae we find exegetical fragments by very early
authors — St. Hippolytus, for example, and Papias of Hierapolis — and archaic
theological motifs come to life before our very eyes. However, it is not easy to
use the catenae. Indications of authorship are often vague, unreliable, and
sometimes patently incorrect. We even have to rely not on a collection’s
compilers but on later copyists — strictly speaking, on the scribe of the
manuscript copy known to us. Nevertheless, the material extracted from the
catenae is very important. To this day it has yet to be exhausted or
thoroughly studied.
The first to work
at compiling exegetical collections was Procopius of Gaza (c. 475-538), the head
of the school in Gaza for many years. A number of his exegeses have remained —
first of all, his extensive exegesis on the Octateuch, which has not been
published in its entirety to this day. In his preface Procopius describes the
method of his work. First, he collects and copies out the opinions of the
exegetes he has selected — the "selections" or "eclogae" Then, since
explanations very frequently coincide, he shortens his code, leaving only
divergent opinions. His exegesis, too, is such an "abbreviation." For the most
part, Procopius used the exegeses of Basil the Great, Gregory of Nazianzus, and
Cyril of Alexandria. Procopius explained the book of Isaiah in addition to the
Octateuch. His scholia on the books of Kings and the Paralipomenon- —
παραλειπομένων — [which is Greek for “of the things left out" and is the name by
which the two books of Chronicles are known traditionally in Roman Catholic and
Greek Orthodox reference], which are mostly based on Theodoret have also been
preserved. Procopius1 authorship of the commentaries on Proverbs and the
Song of Songs, known under his name, is not
indisputable.
The exegeses of
Olympiodorus, an Alexandrian deacon who lived in the first half of the sixth
century, on The Teachers’ Books of the Old Testament; on Jeremiah;
on Baruch; on Lamentations; and on the Gospel of Luke are
of the same nature.
Later interpreters
are more independent. For example, Gregory of Agrigentum (Grigenti) in Sicily,
who lived in the late sixth century. Born near Agrigentum, he made a pilgrimage
to Palestine where he was ordained deacon by the patriarch of Jerusalem. In Rome
he was consecrated bishop of Agrigentum. Apparently he was a victim of character
assassination. It is known that Gregory the Great addressed several letters to
him. He had either died or been deposed by about 594 and there exists a long
life on him in Greek ascribed to Leontius of Byzantium but, in any case,
apparently revised by Simeon Metaphrastes. An exegesis on Ecclesiastes
was long attributed to him. However, some recent scholars maintain that this
exegesis on Ecclesiastes was the work of a ninth century bishop, Gregory
of Agrigentum, who is venerated in the Eastern Church on his Feast Day of
November 23. Others also reveal an independence — Icumenus in his exegesis of
Revelation (c. 600) and Anastasius of Nicaea in his exegesis of the
Psalms (late seventh century). It is especially necessary to note the famous
exegesis attributed to Andrew of Caesarea on Revelation (not later than
637) — it was subsequently revised by Arethas of Caesarea, a contemporary of St.
Photius. The modern world is deeply indebted to Arethas, a celebrated scholar
and patron of classical letters, despite his rather deplorable character.
Andrew’s work, subsequently revised by Arethas, is full of references to the
ancients. He often even cites the opinions of the pre-Nicene fathers. He
understands Revelation allegorically. In other copies his book is even
inscribed directly with Origen’s name.
Chapter Two.
The Spirit
of Monophysitism.
The Chalcedonian
Oros and the Tragic Schism in the Church.
The Chalcedonian
oros or definition of faith became the cause of a tragic schism in the
Church. Historical Monophysitism is precisely the non-acceptance and rejection
of the Chalcedonian Council, a schism and break with the fathers of the council.
The Monophysite movement can in general be compared with the anti-Nicene
movement, and the makeup of the Monophysite schism was just as motley and
heterogeneous as that of the "anti-Nicene coalition" in the middle of die fourth
century. From the very beginning there were always few real "Eutychians" and
Apollinarians among the Monophysites. Eutyches was just as much a heretic for
the majority of Monophysites as he was for the orthodox. Dioscorus rehabilitated
him and granted him communion more out of indirect motives than because he
agreed with him and his beliefs, and mainly in defiance of Flavian. In any case,
at Chalcedon Dioscorus openly rejected any "mixing," "transformation" or
"cleavage." Anatolius of Constantinople, during the discussion of the
oros at the council, reminded everyone that "Dioscorus was not
deposed for faith." It is still impossible to prove through these words that
Dioscorus was not in actuality mistaken. However, it is very characteristic that
they judged and condemned Dioscorus at the council not for heresy but for the
brigandage at Ephesus and for “human murder.” Neither Dioscorus nor Timothy the
“Cat” — more accurately, the “Weasel,” for he was known as “Timothy Aelurus (d.
477) from the Greek αίλουρος [literally "weasel"] — denied the "double
consubstantiality" of the God-Man — consubstantial with the Father in his
Divinity and consubstantial with the human race in his
humanity.
The Language of
St. Cyril and Monophysitism.
The same thing has to be said
about most Monophysites. They claimed to be the only faithful keepers of the
faith of St. Cyril. In any event they spoke Cyril’s language and his words. The
Chalcedonian oros seemed to them to be cloaked in Nestorianism. The
theology of most of these Monophysites was primarily a systemization of St.
Cyril’s doctrine. In this regard the theological views of Philoxenus (Xenaias)
of Hierapolis (c. 440-523) and Severus of Antioch (c. 465-538), the two most
prominent leaders of Syrian Monophysitism in the late fifth and early sixth
centuries, were especially characteristic. It was Severus1 system which became
the official dogmatic doctrine of the Monophysite church when it finally
withdrew into itself. Severus’ theological system also became the official
doctrine of the Syrian Jacobites, of the Coptic Christians in Egypt and of the
Armenian Church. This was, first of all, formal and literary
Monophysitism.
These Monophysites
spoke of the unity of the God-Man as a "unity of nature" but μια φυσις meant to
them little more than the μία υποστασις of the Chalcedonian oros. By "nature"
they meant "hypostasis." Severus makes this observation directly. In this regard
they were rather strict Aristotelians and recognized only "individuals" or
"hypostases" as real or existing. In any case, in the "unity of nature" the
duality of "natural qualities" — St. Cyril’s term — did not disappear or fall
away for them. Therefore, Philoxenus called the “single nature” complex. This
concept of a “complex nature” is fundamental in Severus’ system — μία φύσίς
σύνθετος. Severus defines the God-Man unity as a "synthesis," a "co-composition"
— συνθεσις — and in doing so distinguishes "co-composition" from any fusion or
mixing. In this "co-composition" there is no change or transformation of the
"components" — they are only "combined" indissolubly and do not exist "apart."
Therefore, for Severus the "dual consubstantiality" of the Logos Incarnate is an
indisputable and immutable tenet and a criterion of true faith. Severus could
sooner be called a "diplophysite" rather than a Monophysite in the true sense of
the word. He even agreed to "distinguish" "two natures" — or better, "two
essences" — in Christ not only "before the union" but also in the union itself —
"after union" — of course with the proviso that it can only be a question of a
mental or analytical distinguishing, a distinguishing "in contemplation" — εν
θεωρία, or “through imagination” — κατ’ έπίνοίαν. And once again this almost
repeats St. Cyril’s words.
For Severus and his
followers "unity of nature" meant a unity of subject, a unity of person, a unity
of life. They were much closer to St. Cyril than it usually seemed to the
ancient polemicists. Fairly recently the works of the Monophysite theologians
again have become available to us in ancient Syrian translations and it has
become possible to form an opinion about their thought without having to go
through biased witnesses.
Now we must not
speak of Monophysitism as a revived Apollinarianism, and we have to strictly
differentiate the "Eutychians" and the "Monophysites" in the broad sense of the
terms. It is very characteristic that this boundary was drawn with total
firmness already by St. John of Damascus. In his short work, Briefly On
Heresies, which is part two of his principal dogmatic work entitled Πηγή
γνώσεως [Fount of Knowledge], St. John of Damascus refers to
"Monophysites" directly as schismatics and dissenters but not as heretics —
"these Egyptians are schismatics and Monophysites. On the pretext of the
Chalcedonian definition they separated themselves from the Orthodox Church. They
are called Egyptians because the Egyptians were the first to begin this kind of
division during the reigns of emperors Marcian and Valentinian. In everything
else they are orthodox" (Heresy 83). However, this is what makes the schism
enigmatic and incomprehensible.
The National and
Regional Element
in the Rise of Monophysitism.
Of course, divisions in the
Church are entirely possible even without dogmatic disagreements. Political
enthusiasm and darker passions can also disrupt and shatter Church unity. From
the very beginning in the Monophysite movement national and regional motives
latched on to religious ones. To the "Egyptians" the Council of Chalcedon was
unacceptable and despicable not only because in its definition of faith it spoke
of "two natures" but also because in the famous Twenty-Eighth Canon it
extolled Constantinople over Alexandria. Orthodox Alexandrians had a hard time
reconciling themselves to this fact. It is no accident that "Monophysitism" very
quickly becomes a non-Greek faith, a faith of Syrians, Copts, Ethiopians, and
Armenians. National separatism constantly makes itself very sharply felt in the
history of the Monophysite disputes. The dogmatic nature of Monophysitism is
very much connected to Greek tradition — it is comprehensible only through Greek
terminology, the Greek way of thinking and the categories of Greek metaphysics.
It was Greek theologians who worked out the dogma of the Monophysite church.
However, a keen hatred of Hellenism is very characteristic of Monophysitism as a
whole. They use the word "Greek" as a synonym for "pagan" — "Greek books and
pagan sciences."
Greek Monophysitism
was comparatively short-lived. In Syria there soon began a direct eradication of
everything Greek. In this regard the fate of Jacob of Edessa (c.640-708), one of
the most remarkable Monophysite theologians of the seventh century and
especially renowned for his Biblical works — he is called the Syrian Jerome — is
quite typical. He was compelled to leave his monastery, where for eleven years
he tried to revive Greek scholarship. He was forced to leave "persecuted by the
brotherhood which hated Greeks." All of these extraneous motives muddled and
stirred up the theological dispute. However, one should not exaggerate its
significance. Religious differences were still decisive — differences of
feeling, not differences of opinion. This explains the Monophysites’ stubborn
attachment to St. Cyril’s theological language and their insurmountable
suspicion of the Chalcedonian oros, which to them invariably smelled of
"Nestorianism." This is impossible to explain as a mere difference of
intellectual cast or mental skills. Neither is it explained as admiration for
the imaginary antiquity of the Monophysite formula — "a forgery of the
Apollinarians." One can hardly think that Severus in particular could not
understand the Chalcedonian terminology, that he would not have grasped that the
fathers of the council were using words differently than he but not deviating
very far from him in content of faith. But the point is that Monophysitism
was not theological heresy, was not a "heresy" of theologians — its soul, its
secret is not revealed in theological constructs or formulas. It is true
that Severus’ system could be reset almost in Chalcedonian terminology. But only
"almost."
The Lack of a
Feeling for Human Freedom in Monophysite Theology.
There is always something
remaining. More than anything else, the spirit of the system distinguishes the
Monophysites from St. Cyril. It was not at all easy to reshape Cyril’s inspired
doctrine into a logical system, and the terminology made this problem more
difficult. Hardest of all was intelligibly defining the form and character of
the human "traits" in the God-Man synthesis. The followers of Severus could not
speak of Christ’s humanity as a "nature." It broke down into a system of traits,
for the doctrine of the Logos "taking" humanity was still not developed fully by
Monophysitism into the idea of "inter-hypostasisness." The Monophysites usually
spoke of the Logos’ humanity as οικονομία. It is not without foundation that the
fathers of the Council of Chalcedon detected here a subtle taste of original
Docetism. Certainly this is not the Docetism of the ancient Gnostics at all, nor
is it Apollinarianism. However, to the followers of Severus the "human" in
Christ was not entirely human, for it was not active, was not "self-motivated."
In the contemplation of the Monophysites the human in Christ was like a passive
object of Divine influence. Divinization or theosis seems mbe a unilateral act
of Divinity without sufficiently taking into count the synergism of human
freedom, the assumption of which in no way supposes a "second subject." In their
religious experiment the element of freedom in general was not sufficiently
pronounced and this could be called anthropological
minimalism.
The Similarity
Between Monophysitism and Augustinianism.
To a certain extent, there is
a similarity between Monophysitism and Augustinianism — the human is pushed into
the background and, as it were, suppressed by the Divine. What St. Augustine
said about the boundless activity of grace refers in Monophysite doctrine to the
God-Man "synthesis." In this regard one could speak of the "potential
assimilation" of humanity by the Divinity of the Logos even in Severus’ system.
In Severus’ thought this is proclaimed in his muddled and forced doctrine of
"unified God-Man activity" — this expression is taken from Dionysius the
Areopagite. The actor is always unified — the Logos. Therefore, the activity —
"energy" — is unified too. But together with this, it is complex as well,
complex in its manifestations — τα αποτελέσματα, in conformity with the
complexity of the acting nature or subject. A single action is manifested dually
and the same is true for will or volition. In other words, Divine activity is
refracted and, as it were, takes refuge in the "natural qualities" of the
humanity received by the Logos. We must remember that Severus here touched upon
a difficulty which was not resolved in the Orthodox theology of his time. Even
with Orthodox theologians the concept of divinization or theosis sometimes
suggested the boundless influence of Divinity. However, for Severus the
difficulty proved insurmountable, especially because of the clumsiness and
inflexibility of the "Monophysite" language and also because in his reflections
he always started from the Divinity of the Logos and not from the Person of the
God-Man. Formally speaking, this was the path trod by St. Cyril but in essence
this led to the idea of human passivity — one could even say the non-freedom of
the God-Man. These biases of thought proclaim the indistinctness of
Christological vision. To these conservative Monophysites the human in Christ
seemed still too transfigured — not qualitatively, of course, not physically,
but potentially or virtually. In any event, it did not seem to be acting freely
and the Divine does not manifest itself in the freedom of the numan. What is
taking place here is partly simple unspokenness, and in Severus’ time Orthodox
theologians had also not yet revealed the doctrine of Christ’s human freedom —
more accurately, the freedom of the "human" in Christ — with sufficient clarity
and fullness. However, Severus simply did not pose the question of freedom and
this, of course, was no accident. Given his premises, the very question had to
have seemed "Nestorian" — concealed by the assumption of the "second
subject."
The orthodox
answer, as given by St. Maximus the Confessor (c. 580-662), presupposes
distinguishing between "nature" and "hypostasis" — not only is "man"
("hypostasis") free but also the "human" as such — the very "nature" — in all
its "natural qualities," in all and in each. An acknowledgement of this sort can
in no way be fit into the framework of the Monophysite — much less the
"diplophysite" — doctrine. Severus’ system was the theology of the "Monophysite"
majority. It could be called conservative Monophysitism. But the history of
Monophysitism is a history of constant dissension and division. It is not so
important that from time to time we meet under the title "Monophysite"
individual groups comprised of people who were not quite followers of Eutyches,
not quite new Docetists who spoke of the "transformation" or the "fusion of
natures," who denied the consubstantiality of humanity in Christ, or who talked
about the "heavenly" origin and nature of Christ’s body. These individual
heretical outbursts are evidence only of the general intellectual ferment and
agitation. Much more important are those divisions and disputes which arise in
the basic course of the Monophysite movement. These reveal its internal logic,
its driving motives, especially Severus’ dispute with Julian of
Halicarnassus.
Julian of
Halicarnassus.
Julian also seemed
to be a Docetist to Severus. It is true that in his polemic with Julian Severus
was not unbiased. Later orthodox polemicists argued not so much with Julian as
with his carried-away followers. In any case, Julian’s original compositions do
not contain that coarse Docetism which his opponents talked so much about when
they charged that his doctrine of the innate “imperishability” — αφθαρσία — of
the Savior’s body turned the mystery of Redemption into some "fantasy and dream"
(hence the name "fantasiasts"). Julian’s system of the "imperishability" of
Christ’s body is connected not with his understanding of the unity of the
God-Man but with his understanding of original sin, with its general
anthropological premises. Here Julian is very close to St. Augustine — this is,
of course, a similarity and not a dependence Ausustine. Of the Monophysite
theologians Julian is closest to Philoxenus Julian considers man’s primordial
nature to be "imDerishable," "non-suffering," "non-mortal" and free also from
the so-called "irreproachable passions;” that is, weakness or the states of
“suffering” in general — πάθη αδιάβλητα. The Fall substantially and hereditarily
damages human nature — human nature became weak, mortal and perishable. In the
Incarnation God the Logos assumes the nature of the primordial Adam, a nature
which is "impassive" and "imperishable." He thus becomes the New Adam. Therefore
Christ suffered and died not "because of the necessity of nature” — not εξ
ανάγκης φυσικής, but through his will, "for the sake of oikonomia — λόγω
οικονομίας “through the will of Divinity,” “by way of a miracle.” However,
Christ’s suffering and death were real and authentic, not an “opinion” or
“apparition.” But they were entirely free, since this was not the death of a
"perishable" and an "impassioned" ("suffering") man, and since they did not
contain the fatal doom of the Fall. There is still no heresy in this doctrine.
But it comes close to another. Julian’s conception of the unity of the God-Man
is tighter than Severus.’ He refuses to "enumerate" or distinguish the "natural
qualities" in the God-Man synthesis. He even refuses to distinguish "in
addition" "two essences" after union. For him, the concept of "essence" had the
same concrete ("individual") sense as the concept of "nature" or "hypostasis."
In the Logos’ Incarnation the "imperishability" of the accepted body is so
secured by its tight unity with Divinity that in suffering and death it is
removed by a certain oikonomic tolerance on the part of God. As Julian
understood it, this did not violate the Savior’s human "con-substantiality." In
any case, however, this clearly exaggerated the "potential assimilability" of
the human by the Divine by virture of the Incarnation itself. Again, this is
connected with a lack of feeling for freedom and with a passive understanding of
"theosis" or "divinization." Julian understood "imperishability" of primordial
human nature as its objective condition rather than as a free possibility, and
he understood "impassiveness" and "imperishability" in Christ too passively. It
is this quietism which violates the equilibrium of Julian’s system. He did not
proceed from an analysis of metaphysical concepts. In his system one clearly
senses the deciding significance of the soteriological ideal. M Julian’s
followers went even further. They were called "apntartodocetists" ("imperishable
valetudinarians") and "fantaslasts. These names set off well that quietism —
rather than "Docetism" — which is so striking in their way of thinking. The
numan is passively transformed. Others of Julian’s followers felt that it was
impossible to call this transformation and impossible to call the divinized
humanity in the unity of the God-Man "creatural." Thus there arose the sect of
Actistites ("non-creaturalists"). Some of Severus’ adherents, in their disputes
about Christ’s human conduct, came to such a conclusion as well. In the union of
God and Man, the limitedness of human knowledge must be removed immediately and
passively. Otherwise, a bifurcation of human "ignorance" and Divine omniscience
arises, and the "unity of nature" is violated. That is how the adherents of a
certain Stephen in Alexandria reasoned. This reasoning reminds us partly of the
arguments — not the conclusion — of Apollinarius regarding the impossibility of
a union of "two perfect things" precisely because of the limitedness and extreme
inconstancy of the human mind. The followers of Stephen found another way out of
this difficulty, however — they denied any difference in Christ after the union,
in which even the human mind was immediately elevated to Divine Omniscience.
Here yet again is proclaimed a quietistic understanding of human thought. On
this question the majority of the followers of Severus were "cryptics" —
Christ’s omniscience was just not manifested in humanity. It seemed impious to
assume that Christ’s human "ignorance" — particularly of the Judgment Day —
could have been real and not just intentional silence.
The Inner
Duality in the Monophysite Movement.
It is necessary to mention
again that for orthodox theology also this was an unanswered question. For the
Monophysites, however, it was also unanswerable. In other words, within the
limits of Monophysite premises it was answerable only by admitting the passive
assimilation of the human by the Divine. All these disputes reveal the
indistinctness and vagueness of a religious vision damaged by anthropological
quietism. There is an inner duality in the Monophysite movement, a bifurcation
of emotion and thought. One could say that Monophysite theology was more
orthodox than their ideals or, to put it differently, that the theologians in
Monophysitism were more orthodox than most of the believers but that the
theologians were prevented from attaining final clarity by the unfortunate
"Monophysite" language. Therefore, Monophysitism becomes "more orthodox" in a
strange and unexpected way precisely when the religious wave has receded and
theology is cooling down to scholasticism. It is at this time that Monophysite
closeness to St. Cyril seems so obvious, for this is closeness in word, not in
spirit. The source of Monophysitism is not to be found in dogmatic formulas but
in religious passion. All the pathos of Monophysitism lies in the self-basement
of man, in an acute need to overcome the human as ch and hence the instinctive
striving to distinguish the God-Man from man more sharply even in his humanity.
This striving can be claimed in various forms and with varying force, depending
on how lucid and how restrained is this burning thirst for human self-basement
which erupts from the dark depths of the subconscious. It is not accidental that
Monophysitism was so closely connected with ascetic fanaticism, with ascetic
self-torture and emotional violence. Nor is it an accident that Origenistic
motifs of a universal apokatastasis were once again revived in
Monophysite circles. In this regard the lone image of the Syrian mystic Stephen
Bar-Sudhaile and his doctrine about universal restoration and a final
"consubstantiality" of all creatures with God is particularly significant.
Neoplatonic mysticism is paradoxically crossed with eastern fatalism. An
apotheosis of self-abasement — such is the paradox of Monophysitism, and only
through these psychological predispositions can one understand the tragic
history of Monophysitism. The belated epilogue to the Monophysite movement will
be the tragic Monothelite controversy.
The Theological
Controversy and the Emphasis on the Appeal to
Tradition.
In the dogmatic disputes of
the fifth and sixth centuries the question of the significance of theological
traditions was put very harshly. The Church doctrine was immutable. Therefore an
argument based on antiquity, a reference to the past, has a particular
demonstrative force. In theological disputes at this time evidence from the
fathers is cited and considered with particular attention. Indeed, it is now
that codes and collections of the texts of the fathers are put together.
However, at the same time the need to regard the past critically is discovered.
Not all historical traditions can be acceptable. This question first arose as
early as the fourth century in connection with Origen’s teachings. But Origenism
in Trinitarian theology was overcome almost silently and Origen’s name was
mentioned very rarely. Otherwise it was a question of the Antiochene tradition.
In the Nestorian disputes suspicion fell on the whole theological past of the
East. And in reply the opposite question was raised — about the Alexandrian
tradition. With the passage of time the need for a critical synthesis ana a
revision of traditions became more and more obvious, and aunng Justinian’s time
came the first attempt at an historical summing up. This is the meaning of the
Fifth Ecumenical Council in 553. It was convened to judge The Three
Chapters — that is, in essence to judge Antiochene theology. It is no
accident, however, that at this council a more general question was posed as
well — the question of the “select fathers” — έγκριτοι πατέρες. A list of
fathers was suggested by the emperor in a letter of his read at the opening of
the Fifth Ecumenical Council and it was repeated at its third meeting. This list
sheds light on the general and indefinite reference: “according to the teachings
of the fathers," "following the teachings of the Holy Fathers." The following
names were given: Athanasius, Hilary, Basil, Gregory of Nazianzus, Gregory of
Nyssa, Ambrose, Augustine, John Chrysostom, Theophilus, Cyril, Proclus, and Leo.
One senses a definite scheme in the choice of names. Of course, the Westerners
were named precisely for the sake of the West — they never had any perceptible
influence in the East and they were but little known in the East. But is is
characteristic that of the "Easterners" only John Chrysostom was named —
paradoxically right next to Theophilus! This is what judgment over the "East"
meant. The names of the great fathers of the fourth century require no
explanation but there was new poignancy in the enumeration of the Alexandrians:
Theophilus and Cyril; and Proclus’ name joins them — they have in mind, of
course, his Tome to the Armenians.
Justinian and
the Mood of the Time.
This list does more than just
reveal Justinian’s personal tastes or sympathies. It is typical of the whole
epoch and Justinian was just expressing the predominant mood. He was no
innovator. He was summing up. He was striving to finish building an integral
system for Christian culture and life. This scheme has its own grandeur and
contains its own great untruth. In any case, Justinian always thought more about
the Christian empire than about the Church. His obsession was that the whole
world should become Christian — the whole "settled earth," γη οικουμένη. In this
he saw his calling — the holy theocratic calling of a universal Christian
emperor. In his eyes this calling was a special gift of God, a second gift,
independent of the priesthood. It is precisely the emperor who is called on to
realize the system of Christian culture. In many ways Justinian forcibly
anticipated events. He hastened to complete construction. This explains his
policy of union and his striving to restore the universal unity of faith broken
after the Council of Chalcedon. This is also connected with his interference in
theological disputes in general. Justinian suffered no disagreements, and in
disputes for the sake of unity he more than rhansed from "a most Christian
sovereign" into a Diocletian Olpooe Aeatho’s comparison in 536. Too frequently
the synthesis would degenerate into a violent and fruitless compromise. There
are many tragic pangs in the history of the Fifth Ecumenical rouncil especially
in its pre-history. It is partly true that the estion of the Three Chapters
arose almost accidentally and that the debate over Antiochene traditions was
aroused or renewed artificially. Justinian had his tactical motives for
publishing the famous Edict of 544. Contemporaries asserted that this edict was
prompted and even composed by Palestinian Origenists — Theodore Askidas — who
counted on deflecting attention away from themselves. This explanation is too
simplistic. There were Three Chapters in the Edict: one on Theodore of
Mopsuestia and his books; one on Theodoret’s objections to St. Cyril; and one on
the "impious" letter of Ibas of Edessa to Maris the Persian. The emperor
suggested they be anathematized. The Edict provoked great excitement everywhere.
It seemed that it was published to benefit the Monophysites. In it was seen a
hidden or concealed condemnation of the Council of Chalcedon, although the
emperor directly anathematized those who would interpret his Chapters in
this light.
Indignation was
especially violent in Africa and in the West in general. Opponents of the Edict
did not so much defend the Antiochians as consider the Edict itself inopportune
and dangerous in the practical sense. Is it proper to reconsider and adjust the
decisions of earlier councils? In addition, a general question arose: in general
is it possible to posthumously condemn deceased brothers who are at peace?
Having appeared before God’s court, are they not removed from any human court?
Supporters of the Edict seemed to be "persecutors of the dead." They fought over
this point more than any other issue. It was the Westerners who were unyielding.
Pope Vigilius confusedly wavered between the will of the emperor and the opinion
of his own Church.
The dispute lasted
for many years. The emperor insisted on having things his own way and at times
really did almost become a Diocletian. Finally, an Ecumenical Council was
convened in 553. It was not easy inducing the Western bishops, who had already
met in Constantinople, to appear at the Ecumenical Council, and tne Council’s
resolutions were accepted in the West only after a long and stubborn struggle.
The Council recognized as possible posthumous condemnation, agreed with the
emperor’s arguments, and published fourteen anathemas which reiterated most of
the anathemas of 551. The decree was preceded by a detailed analysis theological
documents which were under suspicion and a collation of them with the
incontrovertible models of the orthodox faith. The dangerous imprecision of the
Antiochene books was revealed for all to see. To a certain extant this was a
review of the question of the Council of Ephesus, not the one of the Council of
Chalcedon. One could dispute the timeliness of such a review. Many felt there
was no need for this, that psychologically this could be advantageous only to
the Monophysites. It seemed that there was no sense in fighting the Nestorian
danger when there was danger threatening from the opposite side. All these
arguments were of a practical nature and those who objected went no further than
formal challenges. But whatever motives inclined Justinian to pose the question
of the Three Chapters, he was essentially correct. That is why the
Council accepted his anathemas. They refute and condemn Nestorianism in great
detail, as well as the false doctrines of Apollinarius and Eutyches. This was a
solemn confirmation of the Council of Ephesus and a new judgment on the
"Easterners." It is very characteristic that Origenism was also condemned at the
Council. Once again the initiative for condemnation belonged to the emperor. As
early as 543 the emperor had published ten anathemas against Origen and all who
defended his impure opinions. This Edict was accepted in Constantinople, in
Palestine, and in Rome. Before the Council Justinian addressed a new epistle
about Origen to the bishops. Apparently, Origen’s condemnation was proclaimed by
the fathers who had convened earlier than the official opening of the Council.
That is why nothing is said about it in the Council "acts." However, it is
included in the Council’s anathemas (Anathema 11), and Theodore Askidas mentions
it during the Council itself. Shortly after the Council Cyril of Scythopolis
tells of the condemnation of Origen and the Origenists in his Life of
Sabas [Vita Sabae] and directly inculcates it in the Ecumenical Council.
Didymus and Evagrius were condemned along with Origen. Also condemned were
certain "impious opinions" expressed by Origen himself and his followers. The
condemnation primarily referred to the Palestinian Origenists who had shattered
tranquillity in the local monasteries. They had already been censured as early
as 542 by patriarch Ephraem at a local synod in Antioch. Even earlier Antipater,
the bishop of Bostra in Arabia, wrote against Origenism. Palestinian Origenism
was connected with the Syrian Stephen Bar-Sudhaile. In his Edicts Justinian was
only repeating accusations which had been made in the provinces. Not long before
the Council a special group arrived in Constantinople from the monastery of the
venerable Sabas headed by the Father Superior Conon. The monks presented the
emperor with a special which contained an exposition of "all impiety." It is
difficult how accurately Origen was quoted by his accusers. In
any
e the opinions
which were condemned do actually flow from h premises. The Edict of 543
condemned the doctrine of the preexistence and transmigration of souls; the
doctrine of Christ’s eternal soul united with the Divine Logos before the
Incarnation; the doctrine that he was not only a man for the sake of men but
also a Seraphim for Seraphims, and that he would be crucified for demons; and
the doctrine of the apokatastasis. They go into more detail in the epistle of
552. Here a sketch of the entire system is given. Its basic idea is that
everything was created from eternity in perfect spirituality and that today’s
heterogeneous and corporeal world arose through the Fall. The worldly process
will end with a universal restoration and disincarnation of everything that
exists. This is the scheme of Origen himself. We can say precisely what in this
system attracted the Origenists of the sixth century. Cyril of Scythopolis tells
of the division of the Palestinian Origenists into isochrists and protoktists.
The names are quite transparent. The isochrists asserted that in the universal
restoration everyone will become "equal to Christ” — ίσοι τω Χριστώ. This
conclusion actually does not follow directly from Origen’s anthropological and
Christological premises. The protoktists apparently talked not so much about
apokatastasis as about pre-existence, especially the pre-existence of Jesus’
soul as the “first creation” — πρώτον κτίσμα. It is not difficult to understand
why these ideas could spread precisely among monks — they naturally give rise to
conclusions of a practical nature about the paths of the ascetic
achievement.
The Condemnation
of Origenism as the Condemnation of the
Inner
Temptations of Alexandrian Theology.
Again, one could dispute the
need to stir up the question of Origen at an Ecumenical Council. But Origen’s
fallaciousness did not raise any doubts. Condemnation of Origenism at the Fifth
Ecumenical Council was a condemnation of the inner temptations or the old
Alexandrian theology which had not yet lost its influence m famous and rather
wide circles. The prohibitions of the Fifth Ecumenical Council signified a
judgment over the mistakes of the past. They are evidence of a "crisis" in
theological consciousness, ine Antiochene and Alexandrian traditions are broken.
The epoch has begun.
Chapter Three.
Sketches
in the History of Monophysitism.
The Mood at
Chalcedon.
The Council of Chalcedon
appeared momentarily to have ended in apparent victory, in apparent harmony.
Emperor Marcian congratulated the Council because "they had put an end to
discord and had restored unity." Such was not the case prior to or for the
sixty-eight years after the Council of Chalcedon. Harnack’s description of the
Council of Chalcedon as a council as violent as that of the Robber Council by
Dioscorus is exaggerated. But the council was turbulent, vehement, and prone to
violent outbursts. There was theological fanaticism on both sides. The
tumultuous outcries — έκβοήσεις δημοηκαί — by the clergy were checked only by
the imperial commissioners and the senators present who reminded the bishops
that such conduct did not do honor to their ecclesiastical positions. When
Theodoret of Cyrus entered, he was greeted enthusiastically by the Easterners,
but the Egyptians are recorded as shouting: "Cast out the Jew, the enemy of God,
the blasphemer of Christ!" The supporters of Theodoret responded with: "Cast out
the murderer Dioscorus! Who does not know of his crimes?" Harnack’s comments,
partially true but overly exaggerated, reveal his own attitude clearly: "the
Council of Chalcedon, which to distinguish it from the Robber Council, we might
call the Robber and Traitor Council… If it be asked, what is the saddest and
most momentous event in the history of dogma since the condemnation of Paul of
Samosata, we must point to the union of the year 433. The shadow of this
occurrence rests on the whole subsequent history of dogma." The immediate
conclusions that Harnack draws directly after this statement are
erroneous.
The Tome of Pope
Leo.
The Literary
Style of the Tome.
Pope Leo I (d. 461)
sent his famous epistle — the Tome of 449 — to the council of 449, addressed to
Flavian (d. 449), the patriarch of Constantinople. It was suppressed at the
Robber Council. At the Council of Chalcedon in 451 it was accepted with
consolation and ecstasy, and as a confession of Cyril’s faith — Λεων ειπε τα
Κυρίλλου. This was not a dogmatic definition — it was a solemn confession of
faith. Here lies its force and here lies its narrowness. Pope Leo spoke a
liturgical, not a theological, language. Hence the artistic plasticity of his
exposition. He always spoke and wrote in an original rhythmical style. He draws
a vivid image of the God-Man. In addition, he almost hushes up the disputed
issue: not only does he not define his theological terms; he simply avoids them
and does not use them. He did not like to "philosophize" about faith and was not
a theologian at all.
The Weakness of
the Tome: The Latin Theological Tradition
and Greek Theological Categories
of Thought.
Pope Leo wrote in
the language of the Western theological tradition and did not even pose the
question about how one should translate his confession into Greek and how one
should express orthodox truth in the categories of the Greek tradition. This
weakness of the papal Tome was immediately observed. Nestorius saw in it a
confession of his own faith. The Chalcedonian fathers saw in it the "faith of
Cyril." However, others of them — and, curiously, the Illyrian bishops —
vacillated over accepting the Tome until they were assuaged by direct
references to St. Cyril. All depended on how the Roman epistle was to be read,
how it was to be "translated" and which theological categories were to be
used.
Pope Leo proceeds
from soteriological motives. Only the acceptance and assimilation of our own
nature by him, whom neither sin could ensnare nor death could imprison, could
open up the possibility of victory over sin and death — nisi naturam nostram
Ille susciperet et suam faceret "And it is equally dangerous to confess the
Lord Jesus Christ only as God without humanity and only as man without Divinity"
— et aequalis erat periculi, Dominum Jesum Christum aut Deum tantummodo sine
homine, aut sine Deo solum hominem credidisse. The denial of human
consubstantiality between us and Christ overturns the whole "sacrament of
faith." A genuine connection with Christ does not appear, is not established
"unless we recognize in him the flesh of our race." If he has only the "form of
a man" — formam hominis — but does not take from his Mother the "truth of
the body" — et non materni corporis veritatem, then redemption is vain.
The miracle of the Virgin Birth does not violate the consubstantiality of Mother
and Son — the Holy Spirit provided the power of the birth but the "reality of
the body is from the body" — veritas corporis sumpta de corpore est.
Through this new — because it is pure — birth, the Son of God enters this
earthly world. But this birth in time does not weaken his eternal birth from the
Father. The Only-Begotten Son of the Eternal Father is born of the Holy Spirit
through the Virgin Mary. In his Incarnation he is truly united and "there is no
deception in this unity." He who is true God is also true man — qui enim
verus est Deus, verus est homo. Two natures are united in a unity of person
— in unam coeunte personam — and the "properties" of the natures remain
"unchanged" — salva proprietate. Grandeur accepts nothingness, might accepts
weakness, eternity unites with mortality, an "inviolable" nature unites with a
suffering one. God is born in the perfect nature of a true man, uniting in this
the completeness and integrity of both natures — in Integra ergo veri hominis
perfectaque natura verus natus est Deus, totus in suis, lotus in nostris. He
acquired the human without losing the Divine — humana augens, divina non
minuens. And this occurrence of the Invisible was an impulse of goodness,
not a belittling of might. The acceptance of human nature by the Logos was to
extol human nature; it was not the diminution of Divinity.
The Lack of a
Definition of Person.
Pope Leo achieves a
greater expressiveness in this game of contrasts and antitheses. He defines the
completeness of union as the unity of Person. However, he never defines directly
and precisely what he means by "person." This was not an accidental oversight.
It would be inappropriate to pass this over in silence in a dogmatic
Tome. But Pope Leo did not know how to define "person." In his early
sermons Pope Leo spoke of the union of God and man sometimes as a "mixture,"
sometimes as a "co-dwelling." Once again he could not find the words. He
achieves great clarity in his Tome, but in his descriptive synthesis
rather than in his individual definitions. An ineffable union has been
completed, but in the union each nature — each "forma" — retains its
properties — "features" or proprietas. Each form retains the feature of
its activity and the duality of activities does not destroy the unity of person.
A duality of activities and operations in the completed union of an indivisible
person — such is the Gospel image of Christ. One Person. But one side shines
with miracles while the other succumbs to suffering. One is a source of weakness
common to both while the other is a source of common glory. By virtue of the
unity of person in two natures — in duabus naturis, both weakness and
glory are reciprocal. Therefore one may say that the Son of Man descended from
Heaven, although in actual fact the Son of God received a body from the Virgin.
And from the other perspective, one may say that the Son of God was crucified
and buried, although the Only-Begotten Son suffered this not in his Divinity
which is ever-eternal and consubstantial with the Father, but in the weakness of
human nature. In the sequence of events’in the Gospels one feels a certain
growth of mysterious manifestations — the human becomes clearer and clearer, and
Divinity becomes more and more radiant. A baby’s swaddling clothes and the words
of angels, the baptism by John and the Father’s evidence on the Jordan — these
are the outward signs. Hungry and thirsty, wandering without shelter, and the
great Miracle-Worker. Mourning a dead friend, and then resurrecting him with a
single word of command. Something more is revealed here. Tears and the admission
"My Father is greater than I" bear witness to the completeness and authenticity
of human self-awareness. And the affirmation "the Father and I are one"
discloses Divinity. Not two, but One; but not one, but two (natures). After the
resurrection the Lord holds discourse with the disciples, eats with them, but
passes through closed doors. He lets them feel him, but imparts the Spirit to
them through his breath. This is done simultaneously and immediately so that
they may recognize in him the indivisible union of two natures and understand
that the Logos and the flesh form a single Son without merging the
two.
A Lucid
Confession of Faith in a Radiant Fog.
In Pope Leo’s
portrayal a unified Christ can really be seen. He clearly and confidently
reproduces the Gospel image of the God-Man. This was evidence of a strong and
lucid faith which was bold and tranquil in its comprehension. Of course, Pope
Leo was indeed expounding "Cyril’s faith," although not at all in Cyril’s
language. They are united not by formulas but by a community of vision, and the
same almost naive method of perceiving or observing the unity of God and Man.
However, Pope Leo was even less able than Cyril to suggest or anticipate a
monosemantic dogmatic definition. His words are very vivid, but as if
shrouded by a radiant fog. It was not an easy or a simple matter to secure
his words in the terms of dogmatic theology. It still remained unclear whether
Pope Leo’s persona corresponded to Cyril’s υπόστασις or φυσίς or to Nestorius’
πρόσωπον της ένώσεως. Does the Latin word natura correspond to the
Hellenic φύσις? How exactly is this unity of person in two natures,” this
“meeting” of two natures “in one person” to be understood? Finally, what is most
unclear in Pope Leo is this concept of "form," which he took from a distant but
still Tertullian tradition. In any case Pope Leo’s Tome was not clear enough to
take the place of the disputed "covenant" of 433. A genuine catholic definition
was heard not from the West, but from the East, at Chalcedon in
451.
The Chalcedonian
Oros.
A Stumbling
Block and a Temptation for the Egyptians.
The Chalcedonian
oros or definition was a revision of the exposition of faith of 433. The
fathers of 451 did not immediately consent to the composition of a new
definition of faith. It seemed possible to once more make do with a general
reference to tradition and with prohibitions against heresy. Others were
prepared to be content with Pope Leo’s Tome. Apparently many were stopped
here by fear of antagonizing the blind followers of St. Cyril through a
premature dogmatic definition. These people were clinging to an inert
stubbornness — not so much to his teachings as to his words. This fear was
justified — the Chalcedonian oros or definition proved to be a stumbling
block and a temptation for the "Egyptians" through its language and terminology
alone. However, given the circumstances which had taken shape, to have stayed
with the unreliable, ambiguous and debatable formulas would have been no less
dangerous. We are unable to follow the history of the compositions of the
Chalcedonian definition in all its details. From the council "acts" we can only
guess at the disputes which took place. They quarrelled more outside of the
general gathering, at private meetings and during the
breaks.
The Text of the
Chalcedonian Oros.
The text which was
accepted reads thus:
"Following the holy fathers,
we all agree to teach the confession of the Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ, who was
perfect both in Divinity and perfect in humanity; who is both truly God and
truly man, from the soul of reason and the body, consubstantial with us in his
humanity, similar to us in everything except sin, born before the ages of the
Father in his Divinity, and in recent days (born) of Mary the Virgin Theotokos
in his humanity, for us and for our salvation; at one and the same time Christ,
Son, Lord, the Only-Begotten; acknowledged in two natures without confusion,
without change, without division, without separation, so that the difference
between the natures is in no way violated by the union but rather the
distinctive character of each nature is preserved and is united in a single
person and a single hypostasis, not divided or separated into two persons but at
one and the same time the Only-Begotten Son, God the Logos, Our Lord Jesus
Christ; as the prophets of old taught of him and the Lord Jesus Christ himself
taught us, and as the symbol of our fathers has come down to
us."
The Formula of
Reunion of 433 and the Chalcedonian Oros.
The closeness to
the Formula of Reunion of 433 is at once evident, but they have made a very
characteristic addition to it. First, instead of "for the union of two natures
was completed — δύο γαρ φύσεων ενωσις γέγονe — it states acknowledged “in two
natures” — εν δύο φύσεσιν. There was a debate at the council over this
expression. In the original sentence, which has been lost, it read “of two
natures” — εκ δύο φύσεων. And, apparently, the majority liked this. An objection
was raised from the "Eastern" side. The formula seemed evasive. This was not a
"Nestorian" suspicion. In actual fact, "of two" sounded weaker than simply
"two." After all, even Eutyches agreed to speak of "two natures" before union —
which is precisely what "of two" corresponds to — but not in the union itself.
And Dioscorus declared flatly at the council that he would accept "of two" but
not "two." Pope Leo had "in two natures" — in duabus naturis. After the new
drafting conference, his formulation "in two" was accepted. This was sharper and
more definite than the former "union of two" and more importantly it shifted
attention away from the moment of union to the single Person
himself.
The Cutting Edge
of the Chalcedonian Oros.
One can ponder the
Incarnation in one of two ways — either in contemplation of God’s logical
oikonomia to arrive at the event of the Incarnation — "and the union was
completed" — or to proceed from contemplation of the Person of God and Man, in
which the two-ness is identified and which is revealed in this duality. St.
Cyril usually thought in the first way. However, all the emotional content of
his assertion is connected with the second — one ought not to speak of the Logos
Incarnate in the same way as before the incarnation, for the union was
completed. And in this regard the Chalcedonian formula is very close to St.
Cyril’s spirit. Secondly, in the Chalcedonian definition the expressions "one
person" and "one hypostasis — εν πρόσωπον και μία υπόστασις — are concretely and
resolutely put on the same basis. The first is strengthened and at the same time
intensified through the second. This identification of the one concept with the
other is perhaps the very cutting edge of the oros. Some of the words are taken
from Leo — in unam coeunte personam becomes in the oros: εις εν πρόσωπον και
μίαν ύπόστασιν συντρεχούσης. But added to that is the most significant “and in a
single hypostasis.” It is here where the pointed and burning question of
Christological terminology comes up.
The descriptive
"Person" — not "personality" — is shifted onto the ontological plane —
hypostasis. With this, the Chalcedonian oros clearly distinguishes two
metaphysical concepts — "nature" and "hypostasis." This is not a simple contrast
of the "common" and the "particular" — as was established by St. Basil the
Great. In the Chalcedonian definition "nature" is not an abstract and general
concept — it is not "the general as distinct from the particular," allowing for
the "isolated" traits. Unity of hypostasis signifies unity of subject, while the
two-ness of natures signifies the completeness of the concrete definitions
(traits, features) through two natures, on two actual planes — "perfection"
which is precisely this completeness of traits both "in Divinity" and "in
humanity."
The Paradoxical
Unspokenness in the Chalcedonian Oros.
There is a
paradoxical unspokenness in the Chalcedonian definition. Through the sequence of
the discourse it is readily apparent that what is recognized as the hypostatic
center of the unity of God and Man is the Divinity of the Logos — "at one and
the same time Christ, the Son, the Logos, the Only-Begotten, acknowledged in two
natures." Both the Son and the Only-Begotten. This is not said directly,
however. The unity of the hypostasis is not defined directly as the hypostasis
of the Logos. Hence, the further vagueness about the human "nature." What does
it mean to recognize "nature" but not "hypostasis?" Can there really be a
"hypostasis-less nature?" Historically speaking, such was the main objection to
the Chalcedonian definition. It clearly professes the absence of human
hypostasis and to a certain extent precisely the "hypostasis-lessness" of the
human nature in Christ. But it does not explain how this is possible. Here lies
the intimacy of the definition and St. Cyril’s theology. Admitting human
"hypostasis-lessness" is admitting an asymmetry in the unity of the God-Man. In
this the definition moves away from the "Eastern" way of thinking. In addition,
two parallel ranks of "traits" and definition stretch out — "in two natures,"
"in Divinity" and "in humanity." This is precisely what is in Leo’s Tome. But
they close not only in unity of person but in unity of hypostasis. Un-spokenness
harks back to unspeakability. The paradox of the Chalcedonian oros lies in the
fact that it immediately professes the "perfection" of Christ’ "in humanity" —
"consubstantial with us in his humanity, similar to us in everything except sin,
which means that everything that can and should be said about a man as a man,
except for sin, can and should be said about Christ. And this denies that Christ
was an ordinary man — he is God Incarnate. He did not "receive a man," but
"became a man." Everything human can be said about him. He can be taken for a
man but he is not a "man" but God. This is the paradox of the Truth about Christ
which is expressed in the paradoxical nature of the Chalcedonian
definition.
The Fathers of
Chalcedon and Their Two-Sided Problem.
The Chalcedonian
fathers were faced with a two-sided problem — removing the possibility of
"Nestorian" thought on the one hand — that is why identically ("both;" "at one
and the same time") is so clearly expressed in the oros, and why the
unity of person is defined as the unity of hypostasis. On the other hand is the
assertion of perfect "consubstantiality" or "likeness" (that is, the coincidence
of all qualitative attributes) of Christ through his humanity with the entire
human race whose Savior he was, precisely because he became its Head and was
born of the Virgin Mary. This is what is emphasized by the profession of two
natures; that is, strictly speaking, by defining the "human" in Christ as a
"nature" which is perfect, complete, and consub -stantial. There obtains a sort
of formal discrepancy — "completeness of humanity" but not "a man." All the
expressiveness of the Chalcedonian oros is in this so-called
"discrepancy."
But in it there is
also a real unspokenness and a certain incompleteness. The oros makes obligatory
its fixed "dyophysite" terminology, thereby prohibiting any other terminology.
This ban applies, first of all, to St. Cyril’s terminology, to his "literary"
‘Monophysitism." This was necessary, first of all, because acknowledging a
single nature would cover up a real Apollin -arianism or Eutychianism — that is,
a denial of Christ’s human consubstantiality." But secondly, this was also
necessary for Precision in the concepts. St. Cyril spoke of "a single nature"
and spoke only of Divinity in Christ in the strict sense of the term as a
"nature" — precisely in order to emphasize the "hypostasis-lessness" of humanity
in Christ, in order to express Christ’s non-commensurability with (ordinary)
people because of the "form of existence" of humanity in him and certainly not
because of the traits or qualities of his human composition. For him, the
concept of "nature" signified precisely the concreteness of existence —
existence itself, not only the "form" of existence; that is, in the sense of
Aristotle’s "first essence." Therefore he inevitably did not have enough words
for a more exact definition of both the composition and the form of the
existence of the human attributes in Christ.
The Disturbing
Vagueness to the Easterners.
Thus arose the
vagueness which disturbed the "Easterners." It was necessary to clearly
differentiate these two elements: the composition and "form of existence." This
was achieved through a kind of subtraction of "hypostasis-ness" from the concept
of "nature," but without letting this concept change from the concrete
("particular") to the "general" or "abstract." Strictly speaking, a new concept
of "nature" was developed. However, this was neither stipulated nor explained
with sufficient clarity, neither in the oros itself nor in the council’s "acts."
And the "single hypostasis" was not directly defined as the Hypostasis of the
Logos. Therefore, the impression could be created that the "completeness of
humanity" in Christ is being asserted too abruptly, while the "form" of its
existence remains unclear. This was not a flaw in the definition of faith,
but it did demand a theological commentary. The council itself did not provide
one.
The Necessity
for a Theological Commentary.
This commentary was
given much later — almost one hundred years after the Chalcedonian Council
during Justinian’s time by Leontius of Byzantium and other "Neo-Chalcedonians."
The Chalcedonian oros, as it were, anticipated events — even more than the
Nicene Creed had in its time. Perhaps its hidden meaning remained unclear to
some at the council until the very end, just as at Nicaea not all understood the
whole significance and resolute -ness of professing the Logos as consubstantial
with the Father. One should be reminded that in the Nicene Creed, too, there was
a certain formal awkwardness and discrepancy — and almost the same one, for it
makes no distinction between the concepts of "essence" and "hypostasis" and
between "consubstantiality" and "from the essence of the Father." This created
the need for farther discussion and debate. The only thing that was immediately
clear was the polemical or "agonistical" sense of the new definition -the line
of demarcation and circumscription was confidently drawn. A positive confession
still has to be revealed in the theological synthesis. A new theme was given for
it. It still needs to be mentioned — the "union of natures" (or "the unity of
hypostasis") is defined in the Chalcedonian oros as non-continuous, inalterable,
indivisible, and inseparable — άσυγχύτως, άτρέπτως, αδιαιρέτως, άχωρίστως. All
these are negative attributes. "Inseparability" and "indivisibility" define the
unity, the form of the union. "Non-continuous" and "inalterability" refer to the
"natures" — their traits ("features") are not removed or changed by the union
but remain "immutable." They are even somehow strengthened by the union. The
cutting edge of these negations is directed against all kinds of Apollinarianism
and against any idea about the union as a transubstantiating synthesis. The oros
flatly rules out any thought of "fusion" — συγχυσις — or “mixing” — κράσις: This
signified a repudiation of the old language. In the fourth century the unity of
the God-Man was usually defined as a “mixing” — κρασίς or μιξις — just to
protect against Apollinarius. Now this seemed dangerous. And once again they did
not utilize a precise word to express the form of the ineffable union in some
simile or analogy.
The Reaction to the Council
of Chalcedon.
The Reaction in
Alexandria.
Emperor Marcian’s
congratulations were premature. Unity had not been restored. The result of the
Council of Chalcedon was divisive, despite its orthodox definition of faith.
What was the reaction of Alexandria to the Council of Chalcedon? First,
Alexandria considered the Council of Chalcedon heretical because their
expression of "one nature," held by that see since St. Cyril, had been abandoned
while simultaneously the Council of Chalcedon invoked the name and writings of
St. Cyril with respect and as onhodox. Secondly, Alexandria lost more
"territorial" oversight as a result of the Council of Chalcedon — not only did
the Twenty-Eighth Canon give Constantinople the rank second only to Old Rome but
the Council of Chalcedon’s canons transferred the three civil dioceses of
Asiana, Pontica, and Thrace to Constantinople, dioceses formerly under the
jurisdiction of Alexandria. Thirdly, the Council of Chalcedon represented a
victory of Greeks over Copts and Syrians. Fourthly, the Alexandrians were
infuriated with the way Dioscorus was treated. Dioscorus had taken his stand
with "Ephesus and Cyril." He had not been condemned on doctrinal grounds but
rather for his treatment of Flavian. Dioscorus had protested that he did not
accept any mixing of the two natures and, according to the account in Mansi (6,
676), no one could prove that he had mixed the two natures — Διόσκορος ειπεν
oυτε συγχύσιν λέγομεν ουτε τομήν ούτε τροπήν. ανάθεμα τω λέγοντι σύγχυσην η
άνάκρασιν. He was not refuted when he declared that "Flavian was rightly
condemned because he still maintained two natures after the union. I can prove
from Athanasius, Gregory, and Cyril that after the union we ought rather to
speak only of one incarnate nature of the Logos. I will be rejected together
with the Fathers, but I defend the doctrine of the Fathers and I yield on no
point." Dioscorus was ready to denounce Eutyches "even to fire, should Eutyches
teach incorrectly" (Mansi 6, 633). Dioscorus left the Council of Chalcedon. In
the first session of the Council of Chalcedon the Robber Council was annulled
and Dioscorus — along with others participating in the Robber Council who did
not acknowledge their "error" — was deposed. Juvenal of Jerusalem who supported
Dioscorus at the Robber Council did not support him at the Council of Chalcedon
— Zacharias writes in his Church History (3, 3) that Juvenal changed
sides at the Council of Chalcedon to secure the patriarchate of Jerusalem. Most
of the bishops who had taken part in the Robber Council were present at
Chalcedon — it appears from Mansi (6, 936) that only twenty-six bishops who
attended the Robber Council did not attend the Council of Chalcedon. Dioscorus
was cited three times to defend himself against the charges of injustice,
avarice, adultery and other vices. He did not appear and was deposed — he was
exiled to Gangra. The shouts went up: "The impious must always be overthrown!
Christ has deposed Dioscorus, the murderer [of Flavian]. This is a righteous
judgment... a righteous council!" At the second session the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, two letters of St. Cyril — but not his Twelve
Anathemas — and Pope Leo’s Tome to Flavian were read. The bishops exclaimed:
"That is the faith of the fathers! That is the faith of the apostles! So we all
believe! So the orthodox believe! Anathema to him who believes otherwise!
Through Leo, Peter has spoken. Even so did Cyril teach! That is the true faith!"
In the eyes of the Egyptians Dioscorus had been a martyr.
The Opponents to
the Council of Chalcedon
as "Dissidents" not "Heretics" and their Political
Loyalty.
For more than a
century there was to be hostility towards the Council of Chalcedon. It is
important to point out that those who rejected the Council of Chalcedon were not
labelled "heretics" — even St. John of Damascus considered the Monophysites as
"dissidents" and not as "heretic," and this as late as the eighth century. It
was in Egypt where the Council of Chalcedon was rejected almost by all. But the
rejection of the Council of Chalcedon and separation from communion did not mean
at this time a political succession from the empire. The imperial tradition and
its symbiosis with the Church since the Council of Nicaea were too strong. The
opponents of Chalcedon might call Marcian a "new Assyrian," Pulcheria a "false
virgin," and Anastasius a "Manichee" but succession was not an option. Michael
the Syrian (1126-1199) relates in his Chronicle (8, 14) — the original
Syriac text was discovered in 1888 — that Marcian was to blame precisely for
causing a disunity in the empire. The basic frame of mind was to wait for a new
emperor, for a new change of events within the empire. The formal break does not
occur until the time of Severus of Antioch and it was precisely a result of his
attitude towards the reception of the holy sacraments from Chalcedonians, a
result of his ακρίβεια. In Egypt where the Coptic identity was so strong it
would take another century before the Coptic Monophysites consciously considered
themselves to be opposed to the empire, to be anti-imperial in strictest sense
of that terminology. Until then, emperors will still be prayed for and armies
will still be blessed. "In the fifth and sixth centuries no eastern bishop dared
to excommunicate an emperor even in the heat of controversy." The turbulence,
the social unrest, the violence are still within a religious world perspective.
Political succession from the empire or any kind of "disorder" which seriously
threatened imperial rule would be considered anarchy. That, however, does not
mean that the very fabric of the future political division was not already there
m seed, in seed that much later will sprout forth into regional, national or
ethnic splits. It also does not mean that there was no dislike among the Copts
and Syrians for the "Greeks" — there was a strong hostility. But the line must
be drawn, the integrity of empire was still a reality after
Chalcedon.
The Alexandrians
and Proterius.
The Council of
Chalcedon, upon deposing Dioscorus, appointed Proterius to be bishop of
Alexandria. The Egyptians considered Proterius as a renegade, as a traitor, as
one who had abandoned principle in order to secure the patriarchate. In fact
Proterius had no influence except with the imperial officials — the clergy, the
monks, and the laity separated from communion with him.
Proterius
encountered personally this violence, this reaction to Chalcedon. The people of
Alexandria took to the streets and rioting broke out. The imperial forces were
defeated in street fighting — in fact, some soldiers were burned alive by the
rioting mob. Reinforcements finally subdued the violence and "order" was
restored. The imperial wrath took its revenge — the baths were closed, food
distribution was cut off, property was confiscated, and some executions took
place. The Alexandrians blamed, of course, the entire outbreak of violence on
Proterius. Proterius, as Juvenal of Jerusalem, had to be protected by a
bodyguard. The Egyptian Christians still regarded Dioscorus, exiled in Gangra,
as their patriarch.
The Reaction in
Jerusalem: Juvenal and Theodosius.
Violence awaited
Juvenal on his return to Jerusalem from Chalcedon. A certain Theodosius, born in
Alexandria and a monk in Palestine, had accompanied Juvenal to Chalcedon. As
soon as Juvenal withdrew his support for Dioscorus, Theodosius left the council
and returned to Palestine to spread the word of Juvenal’s "apostasy." Furious
monks awaited Juvenal and refused to let him enter Jerusalem unless he
anathematized the Council of Chalcedon. Juvenal refused, returned to
Constantinople, and sought support from the emperor. While Juvenal was back in
Constantinople, the Monophysites elected Theodosius patriarch. The sources tell
us that Theodosius was reluctant but it was argued that Juvenal’s "apostasy" had
made his consecration null and void. Chalcedonian sources claim that Theodosius
was a man of vile character, that he persecuted the orthodox, and that he even
had one deacon put to death for challenging him and accusing him of atheism.
Theodosius made several appointments, consecrated several bishops to sees that
were then vacant because of the violent rivalry between the Monophysites and the
Chalcedonians. The Council of Chalcedon had added jurisdiction to the see of
Jerusalem — it recognized Jerusalem as a patriarchal see at the expense of the
metropolitan see of Caesarea and the patriarchal see of Antioch — and Theodosius
utilized this when consecrating new bishop.
Juvenal returned to
Jerusalem accompanied by imperial forces and a personal bodyguard. The
Monophysites resisted his entry into the holy city. Rioting and street fighting
erupted. Evagrius Scholasticus (c. 536-600) tells us in his Church History that
both sides did what their anger allowed. The Chalcedonians in Nablus took their
revenge on the Monophysite monks and a massacre resulted. Theodosius fled to the
mountains of Sinai. With the aid of imperial forces Juvenal was able to expel
the Monophysites-bishops from their sees and monks from their monasteries. The
Monophysite historian, Zacharias, relates an incident that casts a positive
aspect on the character of Juvenal (3, 8). A beggar approached Juvenal to ask
for his blessing. The beggar was a Monophysite zealot who poured a basket of
"filth and ashes" on Juvenal’s head and clothing, shouting that Juvenal was a
"liar and persecutor." Just as Juvenal’s bodyguard was about to strike the
beggar, Juvenal, "moved to repentance," sent the beggar away with enough money
to leave the area.
Theodosius did not
remain on Sinai. Rather, he disguised himself as a soldier and went about in the
countryside to rally support for his party. He was captured and sent to a
monastery until his death. Though Theodosius’ supporters claim that he was
confined in a cell in extremely bad condition, Theodosius was able to write
books against a certain John, another Monophysite whose views were more extreme.
The divisions among the Monophysites had already begun.
The Special
Situation of Palestine.
Juvenal remained
patriarch of Jerusalem until his death in 458 — order had been reestablished in
453. Emperor Marcian and Empress Pulcheria wrote to the recalcitrant monks in an
attempt to explain why the Council of Chalcedon should be accepted. In general,
Palestine represented a special situation. Situated between Egypt, which was
almost entirely Monophysite, and Syria, which was increasingly becoming more and
more Monophysite, Palestine consisted in general of numerous monasteries which
were more Greek than Syriac and which were at that time pro-Chalcedonian. The
Monophysites at this time did not control all the monasteries in Palestine. But
already in the time of Justinian we know that the Chalcedonian monks in
Palestine were fewer in number. Moreover, Palestine will represent a special
situation throughout the Monophysite controversy, always being somewhat inclined
towards Chalcedon, the reasons for which are varied. In part it was because the
very existence of the patriarchal see of Jerusalem depended on the canons of the
Council of Chalcedon. In part it was because of the holy places which attracted
pilgrims from throughout the empire, a fact which by itself opened Palestine to
more communication with Constantinople and with the Latin West. Unlike Egyptian
monasticism which was in general ethnic in character, especially from the time
of the expulsion of the Greek Origenists" under Patriarch Theophilus,
Palestinian monasticism was "imperial" or "international" in general, for most
of the monks came from all parts of the empire.
The Reaction of
Rome.
Rome was thoroughly
committed to Chalcedon, even though the nuances of the theological problems do
not seem to have been understood there. Constantinople, as the "New Rome," as
the imperial city, shifted with the political realities. Still, there were
theological problems to resolve and not all of the "shifting" was done for
purely political reasons. The Twenty-Eighth Canon of the Council of Chalcedon
also was of importance to the imperial city and it was a canon which Rome would
consistently refuse to accept. The Romans legates who were present when the
Twenty-Eighth Canon was promulgated protested vigorously. Indeed, they called
attention quickly to the canons of the Council of Nicaea, canons that had
determined the order of the hierarchy among the patriarchal sees. On the one
hand Rome simply ignored the Twenty-Eighth Canon, at times claiming it had never
heard of it. On the other hand Pope Leo reacted strongly. Indeed, he refused to
confirm the Council of Chalcedon at first. Then in May of 452 Pope Leo annulled
all acts of the Council of Chalcedon that contradicted the canons of the Council
of Nicaea. He wrote in protest to Emperor Marcian, to Empress Pulcheria, and to
Patriarch Anatolius. It was not until March of 453 that Pope Leo finally
confirmed the decrees of the council but even then he carefully stipulated that
he was confirming only that which was decreed concerning the faith. Pope Leo,
always cognizant of the Roman see’s consciousness of itself as principatus
apostolicus considered the Twenty-Eighth Canon to be dangerous, untraditional,
and invalid. Always deeply concerned that the Church have a uniformity in
canonical as well as liturgical practices — utfide et actibus congmamus —
Pope Leo would never accept what he considered to be a novelty in the hierarchy
of the Church. He did not consider the papal primacy to be a result of political
considerations but rather to be established on the primacy of St. Peter.
Although he places the greatest significance on the canons of the Council of
Nicaea, especially the Sixth Canon, Pope Leo ignores in silence the Third Canon
of the Second Ecumenical Council. Indeed, Patriarch Anatolius did respond to
Pope Leo on the subject: "Concerning the decree of the Ecumenical Council of
Chalcedon in favor of the See of Constantinople, Your Holiness may be certain
that I had no part in it so that I have peace and tranquillity since my youth.
The venerable clergy of the Church of Constantinople took this initiative in
accord with the pious bishops of our regions who insisted on the measure. But
all its efficacy and its confirmation have been reserved to the authority of
Your Holiness" [Epistula 132, Anatolii ad Leonem]. The
Twenty-Eighth Canon of the Council of Chalcedon would be confirmed by Emperor
Justinian in his One Hundred and Thirty-First Novelle. Latin canonical
collections would consistently omit it. Indeed, Rome never would accept this
canon. It was only during the Latin period of occupation of the patriarchate —
when it was a Latin patriarchate at Constantinople — did Rome acknowledge that
the patriarch of Constantinople held the rank next to the patriarch of Rome.
This was acknowledged in 1215 under Pope Innocent III by the Fourth Lateran
Council. But the special circumstances surrounding this acknowledgement must be
stressed.
The Reaction in
Antioch.
There is an
enormous lacuna of information on the reaction to the Council of Chalcedon in
Antioch. Maximus, the bishop of Antioch, although he was promoted to this
position by the Robber Council, was a dyophysite. Yet, not long after this
Antioch, at least in its representation in the patriarchate, will become
Monophysite. It is not sufficient to attempt to explain this by the "demotion"
of the patriarchate by the Council of Chalcedon. The essential answer must be
sought elsewhere. In essence Antioch was a Greek city planted in a Syriac land.
Indeed, it may appear odd that the famous Antiochene school with its emphasis on
the historical Jesus, with its emphasis on the human nature in Christ, could
fall under the sway of a theological vision which, at very least, minimalized
the human nature in Christ. The explanation that Antioch succumbed to
Monophysitism because of the influence of the monks who, it is claimed, tended
towards Monophysitism, is also an inadequate explanation, though it is partly
true that monasticism in general was prone towards Monophysitism — the monastery
associated with St. Simeon the Stylite, who was himself vociferously
pro-Chalcedonian, became Monophysite not long after St. Simeon’s death in 459.
Yet, the problem cannot be explained adequately on historical grounds. The
problem was one of a theological nature which in fact transcended regional areas
or ethnic factionalism.
Peter the
Fuller’s Arrival in Antioch and
the Alteration of the Trisagion
Hymn.
Peter the Fuller —
his name γναφεύς obviously comes from his monastic profession as a “fuller” —
had been a monk in Constantinople at the Acoemetae Monastery — (from άκοίμηταί
meaning the “sleepless ones”). He appears to have disputed with “the brethren”
there and journeyed to Syria. His strong anti-Chalcedonian tendencies won him
the support of many and he was consecrated patriarch of Antioch while the
canonical patriarch, Martyrius, was in Constantinople. Peter was patriarch this
time for only one year but he used that year to introduce a change in the
liturgy at Antioch. To the Trisagion Hymn of "Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy
Immortal, have mercy on us," Peter added "Thou who was crucified for us" before
"have mercy on us" — άγιος ό Θeoς, άγιος ισχυρός, άγιος αθάνατος, ό σταυρωθεις
δι’ ήμας. By itself there was nothing unorthodox with this formula if it
referred to the person of the Logos in the flesh. But it could also easily be
interpreted in a Monophysitical way — and indeed it was to become a type of
sacred phrase among Monophysites. Thus Antioch experienced a formula of
Monophysitism in its very liturgical life, even if the duration under Peter was
brief.
The Death of
Emperor Marcian and the Return to Alexandria of the Exiled Opponents to the
Council of Chalcedon.
Emperor Marcian
died in early 457. With his death the Theodosian dynasty died also. It was
Marcian who had assembled the Council of Chalcedon and it was he who was
responsible for upholding the authority of the council, from preventing an open
revolt on the part of the Monophysite party. Scarcely had he been buried when
the battle over Chalcedon broke out. It was Alexandria, of course, where the new
struggle was unleashed. And who better to spark the new struggle than Dioscorus
— this time in death, however. Dioscorus had died in exile in 454 but he was
never forgotten by the Egyptians. One source, the Vita Petri Iberi (63),
portrays Proterius as "hard-hearted," as "blood-thirsty," and as "rejoicing"
over the death of Dioscorus. The decree exiling those who participated in the
Robber Council had become void upon the death of Emperor Marcian. Hence, the
exiles returned to Alexandria. Simultaneously, the imperial military commander
of Alexandria — Dionysius — was not in the city at this time. The Monophysite
party, never regarding Proterius as the legitimate patriarch, determined to
elect their own patriarch to the legitimate one, the now departed "confessor"
Dioscorus.
The Monophysite
Election of Timothy Aelurus
as Patriarch of Alexandria and the Murder of
Proterius.
Their choice was
one Timothy “Aelurus” — the nickname “weasel” or “cat” came from the Greek
αίλουρος. His followers claimed the nickname came from his small and emaciated
stature; his opponents claimed it came from his "nightly prowlings" from cell to
cell to solicit the position of patriarch for himself. When the death of Emperor
Marcian became known in Alexandria, Timothy Aelurus was smuggled into the city.
The mass of people supported Timothy. The bishops were hesitant. Indeed, only
two bishops could be found to consecrate Timothy, only one of whom came from the
area. The other was the interesting personality of Peter the Iberian —
Nabarnugios, a barbarian prince, a one-time hostage, an ascetic and monk, and
finally a bishop. Severus in his Letter 2 (3) claims there were three bishops
but admits that the entire procedure was irregular, secret, and hurried. Peter
the Iberian played a significant role in Egypt in undermining Proterius’
position. Indeed, some have speculated that Proterius might have been able to
win over the populace had it not been for the influence of Peter. It was the
dowager Empress Eudokia, settling near Jerusalem in 443, who supported Peter the
Iberian. Peter had always had good connections with the imperial court and they
continued while he was the head of a monastery in Palestine. When Eudokia died
in 460, Peter left for Egypt and there worked for the Monophysite cause. The
Vita Petri Iberi relates that as early as 453 "shouts inspired by God" were
heard in the the theater: "Bring Dioscorus to the city! Bring the orthodox to
the city! Bring the confessor to his throne. Let the bones of Proterius be
burned! Banishment to Judas! Throw Judas oat!" To the Alexandrians Dioscorus was
the true confessor, the one who had stood up for the truth, the one who had
defied the emperor and excommunicated the bishop of Rome. Dioscorus had become a
national hero; Proterius had become linked with the imperial policy and the
Council of Chalcedon. Emperor Marcian had written to Palladius, the praetorian
prefect, in August of 455 to order the same penalty for the followers of
Eutyches and Apollinarius as was in effect for the Manichees. Proterius knew
that policy was being made by circumventing him. He had even tried in vain to
persuade Pope Leo to allow a more flexible interpretation of Chalcedon in Egypt.
Leo flatly refused, claiming that Chalcedon had to be accepted in full with no
dilution and no wavering of interpretation. Proterius had waged a long dispute
with Leo over the date of Easter and on this he had been successful. Otherwise,
Proterius had no influence.
When Dionysius had
realized that Timothy had been consecrated, he hurried back to his post in
Alexandria and arrested Timothy. Such violence broke out that Dionysius released
Timothy under surveillance. A type of compromise was reached temporarily — they
divided the churches in Alexandria, some to be under Timothy, some under
Proterius. The lack of influence that Proterius had was reflected in the fact
that, although it was Holy Week and the time for baptismal candidates to present
themselves, only five baptismal candidates received baptism from Proterius.
Twelve days after the consecration of Timothy Aelurus, Proterius was murdered in
the baptistery of his own cathedral on Holy Friday. His body was dragged through
the streets and burned in the Hippodrome.
Who now was to be
patriarch? Proterius was dead. It appears that both the imperial officials and
the followers of Proterius were willing to accept Timothy but on one condition.
Could Timothy convince his followers to accept the "Proterians?" This he could
not do. The matter was referred to the new emperor for a
decision.
The Coronation
of Emperor Leo I and Policy in Alexandria.
Emperor Leo I
(457-474) was a competent soldier — tribunus — and statesman but no theologian.
Like Marcian, Leo was a Thracian staff-officer. Leo was also the first emperor
to receive his crown from the patriarch of Constantinople. From this point on
all Byzantine Emperors would be crowned by the patriarch of Constantinople. In
addition, he owed his throne to the Alan Aspar [see the interesting article on
Aspar’s influence by G. Vernadsky, "Flavius Ardabur Aspar," in
Sudost-Forschungen 6 (1941), 38 ff.] Leo I was a Chalcedonian. His puritanical
tendencies did not unnoticed — he attempted to compel rest on Sunday and
proohibited musical instruments. This situation in Alexandria he viewed as one
of "public order," failing to perceive the profundities of the theological
problems involved in the situation. The eauence of events given in the Vita
Petri Iberi, the Church History (4, 1) of Zacharias, Evagrius’ Church
History (2, 8), and Theodore Lector’s Church History (1, 8-9)
indicate that, prior to the murder of Proterius, Emperor Leo I was inclined to
favor Timothy Aelurus — this could very well have been the influence of Aspar
whose own interests for his Goths would have favored a weakened patriarch of
Constantinople. As soon as he learned of the murder, Leo I sent officials to
investigate.
The Monophysite
party in Alexandria requested a council to be held in Ephesus to decide the
issue of the Alexandrian patriarch. Obviously they wanted it held in Ephesus
because it was the place of the two victories of Alexandria — at the Third
Ecumenical Council under St. Cyril in 431 and at the Robber Council under
Dioscorus in 449. They obviously wanted to reopen the entire question of the
validity of the Council of Chalcedon. Emperor Leo I rejected this request. The
patriarch of Constantinople, Anatolius, suggested and the emperor accepted the
suggestion of asking all bishops in the empire what they thought of two issues:
the consecration of Timothy; and the Council of Chalcedon. The responses on the
consecration of Timothy were unanimous — the consecration was condemned. On the
question of the Council of Chalcedon only one bishop — Amphilochius of Side —
condemned the council. All other bishops claimed that they adhered to the
decisions of the Council of Chalcedon. Odd mathematics take place within fifteen
years. In 458 approximately two thousand bishops claimed they adhered to
Chalcedon. Fifteen years later Emperor Basiliscus (475-476) issued an encyclical
which essentially condemned the Council of Chalcedon and approximately five
hundred bishops ascribed to it!
The Exile of
Timothy Aelurus and the Election of
Timothy
Salafaciolus as Patriarch of Alexandria.
Emperor Leo I
acted. Timothy Aelurus was ordered out of exandria. A new patriarch was to be
chosen and consecrated, one who would adhere to the Council of Chalcedon.
Timothy was encedto exile in Gangra. He was arrested and sent into exile. As he
was leaving Alexandria, the populace rioted. This time the authorities were
prepared and quelled the riots. As he journeyed to his exile, Timothy was met
with respect along the way. In Beirut [Berytus] the bishop, Eustathius, despite
the fact that he had signed the acts of the Council of Chalcedon and had
responded favorably to Emperor Leo I’s request for his attitude towards the
Council of Chalcedon, told Timothy that he was in complete agreement with him
and his doctrine. Timothy is said to have challenged Eustathius, claiming that
he was insincere and that, if sincere, then he should follow him into
exile.
The respect that
Timothy Aelurus commanded on his way into exile gave die imperial authorities
food for thought, for it clearly revealed how strong the Monophysites were in
those regions. The authorities initiated action against many of these leaders.
Timothy reached his exile in Gangra. Later, he was exiled to the more remote
Cherson, a step which indicated how serious the state considered Timothy’s
influence. Timothy wrote bitterly in exile. "Exiled I am only and simply because
of my loyalty to the Council of Nicaea and my loyalty to the fathers, and for my
renunciation of the open denial of Christ at Chalcedon. The sentence against me
is thoroughly illegal, and it was obtained through bribery. Neither was I given
any opportunity to defend myself."
In the spring of
460 a patriarch was selected for Alexandria, another Timothy who picked up the
nickname of Salafaciolus as well as that of "Basilicus." The latter meant that
he was the "emperor’s man." The Monophy sites describe Timothy as a popularity
seeker, as a man feeble in act, and as a man "soft in manners." But he stunned
most people of his time because he refused to persecute his opponents. This
could partly be a result of his "soft" or kind nature but there was something
else involved. Timothy Salafaciolus believed that the various Christian parties
should be allowed to honor "Our Lord as each sees fit." Timothy was in essence
advocating the right of religious conscience and the right of toleration. This
did not go unnoticed. Pope Leo the Great wrote Timothy Salofaciolus a rebuke. To
a great extent Pope Leo was correct, for even the Monophysites despised Timothy
for his toleration — they even resented the opportunity of being considered
martyrs. But his kindness ultimately won the populace. It is recorded that the
Alexandrian populace shouted: "We will not be in communion with you, but we love
you." Timothy Salafaciolus even took the extraordinary step of restoring
Dioscorus1 name to the diptychs, despite a vigorous protest from Pope Leo the
Great who cut him off from communion with Rome. It seems, however, that he later
corrected himself and again removed Dioscorus’ name the
diptychs.
Under the kind and
mild rule of Timothy Salofaciolus no violence erupted in Alexandria. Emperor Leo
I was able to live the remainder of his life with a restored, albeit tentative,
order in Alexandria. But Alexandria was kept peaceful precisely because its
Chalcedonian patriarch did not enforce Chalcedon.
The Deposition
of Peter the Fuller in Antioch, the Return of Patriarch Martyrius, and Splits
within Monophysitism.
In Syria and
Palestine Peter the Fuller had kept the Monophysite party alive. He was deposed
by imperial order and Martyrius was replaced as the legitimate patriarch of
Antioch. But Martyrius returned worn out by intrigues and renounced the
patriarchate of Antioch: "I renounce a recalcitrant clergy, an unmanageable
people, and a defiled church," as Theodore Lector writes in his Church
History (1,21). Peter Fuller was allowed to live in Constantinople under
alleged surveillance. Actually he was quite active in Constantinople where there
was a party of Monophysites led by Acacius, the future patriarch of
Constantinople.
The Chalcedonians
could discern a visible fragmentation of theological thought among the
Monophysites. The internal divisions within Monophysitism would increase. At
first there were two discernible splits. One group objected to the Chalcedonian
formula of "in two natures." A second group actually taught the doctrine of
Eutyches that the humanity of Christ was not the same as ours. From these two
initial groups a proliferation of theological views was to emerge — indeed, a
proliferation of sects within Monophysitism. The two initial groups both claimed
Timothy Aelurus as their theological father — indeed, Timothy was venerated as a
confessor and as a second St. Athanasius.
The Influence of
the Germanic Tribes on the Latin West and on
Byzantium.
During this period
events were taking place in the Western part ot the Empire that would have
lasting results. In the West the jpurder of Valentinian III in 455 had paved the
way for power to fall into the hands of Ricimer who, like Aspar in the East,
controlled the making and unmaking of the emperors in the West. R e Germanic
Goths had gained effective influence over the Roman Empire. During Valentinian’s
rule in the Western half of the Empire from 425 to 455, there was a period of
relative peace between the two parts of the Empire. But a cultural estrangement
was already settling in. In the Latin West a knowledge of Greek was ebbing,
while in the Greek East Latin was giving way to Greek, even though Latin would
remain for some time the official imperial language of the
East.
The Defeat of
Attila and the Increase of Germanic Influence.
In the 440s the
Eastern empire had to confront the vitality of the Huns under Attila. After
devastating the Balkans and after having obtained numerous financial payoffs
from the Eastern emperors, Attila turned westward. He was finally defeated in
451 by Aetius, the Roman general of the West. But in 454 Attila was making
serious conquests in Italy when he suddenly died. With his death his large
empire dissolved. Yet it was only to be replaced by Germanic tribes who now set
up their own kingdoms — in Africa the Vandals; in Gaul and Spain the Visigoths.
A new theological reality entered the Latin part of the Empire — these Germanic
tribes were Arians. The political vacuum created by this situation in the West
was filled by the bishop of Rome, Pope Leo the Great
(440-461).
Emperor Leo I
and the Termination of the Influence of Aspar the
Ostrogoth.
Emperor Leo I
(457-474) tried to free himself from the dependence on the Germans. Both Emperor
Leo and his predecessor Martian had served in the military under the command of
Aspar the Alan, an Ostrogoth. To free himself from Aspar’s control Emperor Leo I
enlisted the support of the Isaurians. The chief of the Isaurians,
Tarasicodissa, entered Constantinople with his army, took the Greek name of
Zeno, and married Emperor Leo’s oldest daughter Ariadne in 466. This changed the
imperial policy in the East towards the Germanic advances in the West. No longer
indifferent to the Western cries for help, Emperor Leo I sent a rather large
military force against the Vandals in Africa. The result was a disaster for the
imperial forces — partly because of the competence of the Germanic Gaiseric and
partly because of the incompetence of the imperial commander, Basiliscus,
Emperor Leo I’s brother-in-law. Aspar again made his presence felt in the East —
his son Patricius married Emperor Leo’s second daughter. Despite the fact that
Patricius was an Arian, he was made the heir to the throne and received the
title of Caesar. But vehement anti-Ger ment broke out in Constantinople. In 471
Aspar and his Ardabur were assassinated, while his son Patricius, escaping with
serious wounds, was divorced from Emperor Leo’s daughter and his position as
Caesar annulled.
Emperor Zeno and
Isaurian Influence.
Zeno, the Isaurian
leader, now took the control once in the hands of Aspar and with this Isaurian
influence increased. Emperor Leo I died in 474 and was succeeded by his grandson
Leo II, the son of Zeno and Ariadne. But Zeno was co-emperor. That same year Leo
II died and Zeno — Tarasicodissa the Isaurian — became Emperor. The Isaurians
were imperial subjects and hence could not technically be referred to as
barbarians. Yet the Germanic Goths, although technically barbarians, were
culturally more sophisticated than the Isaurians, especially as a result of
their long contact with the Empire. Still, the Isaurians were regarded as
"foreigners" and there was as much anti-Isaurian hostility in the empire as
there had been anti-German sentiment. In January of 475 there was a plot to
remove Zeno. He was replaced for approximately eighteen months by his
brother-in-law Basiliscus. Zeno again regained the throne and was able to hold
it, despite constant plots and civil war, for another fifteen years, from 476
until 491. Zeno’s second accession to the throne coincided precisely with the
final collapse of the western half of the Roman Empire. Constantinople was
compelled to recognize Odoacer as the new ruler in Italy. Odoacer did not make a
claim to imperial title — he was satisfied with having real power and received
the title of magister militum per Italian, governing Italy as the viceroy
of Emperor Zeno. Externally the appearance of a united empire remained but in
fact Italy, as the rest of the Western Empire, was now lost and under German
rule.
Zeno now set out to
remove the remaining Germanic threat in the East. The Ostrogoths still had
substantial military forces under Theodoric Strabo in Thrace and under Theodoric
the Amal in Illyricum. The Germanic forces were constantly fluctuating between
serving the imperial government and rising up against it. The threat from
Theodoric Strabo ceased in 484 with his death. In 488 imperial diplomacy devised
a way to rid itself of Theodoric the Amal by requesting that he move westward
against Odoacer if successful, Theodoric the Amal would rule Italy. The two
Germanic forces met in a fierce battle in 493 — Theodoric killed Odoacer with
his own hands. Control of Italy now fell to Theodoric the Amal, who took the
title of Theodoric the Great Zeno, rid of the Germanic threat, now had to face
constant warfare with other Isaurian chieftains. With the loss of the West came
the loss of the only thoroughly Chalcedonian part of the
Empire.
The Loss of the Chalcedonian
West to Theodoric
and Emperor Basiliscus’ Attempt to Reach a Compromise
With the Non-Chalcedonians.
Zeno realized that there was
now no reason not to make some compromise with the moderate Monophy sites. A
delegation of Alexandrian monks journeyed to Constantinople to solicit Zeno to
denounce the Council of Chalcedon. Before Zeno had a chance to implement any
such policy, a palace revolt dethroned him and put his brother-in-law,
Basiliscus, on the throne. The monks arrived to find Basiliscus as the new
emperor. One of the Alexandrian monks happened to be the brother of one of
Basiliscus’ senior ministers.
One of the first
acts of Basiliscus was to recall Timothy Aelurus from exile in Cherson — Timothy
had been in exile for at least seventeen years. On his way back to Alexandria
Timothy stopped at Constantinople and had an audience with the new emperor.
Sailors from Alexandria structured a parade in the capital for their confessor.
According to Zacharias (5, 1), Theophanes in his Chronographia, and Theodore
Lector (1, 30), Timothy, apparently in imitation of our Lord’s entry into
Jerusalem, entered Constantinople on a donkey. Emperor Basiliscus went out to
receive him. Theodore Lector relates that Timothy degraded the triumphal entry
somewhat by falling off the donkey. The new bishop of Rome, Simplicius, was
scandalized and wrote in his Letter (4): "How can it be that you should honor
that heretic, that parricide more detestable than Cain?" Peter the Fuller was
also in Constantinople and Timothy and Peter drafted an encyclical to all
bishops which Basiliscus signed. This encyclical based itself on a confirmation
of the Council of Nicaea, the Second Ecumenical Council (Constantinople, 381),
and both councils of Ephesus — the Third Ecumenical Council (431) and the Robber
Council (449). It declared anathema to the Tome of Leo "and all things said and
done at Chalcedon in innovation of the holy creed of Nicaea." The encyclical was
to be enforced by the laws against heresy estab -lished by Theodosius II.
Bishops who did not sign the encyclical were to be banished. This encyclical
paved the path in the future for the Henotikon of Zeno.
The Encyclical
of Basiliscus 476.
"Emperor Caesar
Basiliscus, pious, victorious, triumpliant,· supreme, ever-worshipful Augustus
and Marcus the most illustrious Caesar, to Timothy, Archbishop of the great see
of the Alexandrians, most reverend and beloved of God."
"It has ever been
our pleasure that whatever laws have been decreed on behalf of the true and
apostolic faith by those pious predecessors of ours who have maintained the true
service of the blessed and undecaying and life-giving Trinity should never be
inoperative. But we are rather disposed to announce them as of our own
enactment. We, preferring piety and zeal in the cause of our God and Savior
Jesus Christ, who created and has made us glorious, before all diligence in
human affairs, and being further convinced that unity among the flock of Christ
is the preservation of ourselves and our subjects, the sound foundation and
unshaken bulwark of our empire. Being moved by these considerations with godly
zeal, and offering to our God and Savior Jesus Christ the unity of the Holy
Church as the first-fruits of our reign, we decree that the basis and settlement
of human felicity, namely, the symbol of the three hundred and eighteen holy
Fathers who were assembled, in concert with the Holy Spirit, at Nicaea, into
which both ourselves and all our believing predecessors were baptized, that this
alone should have reception and authority with the orthodox people in all the
most holy churches of God, as the only formulary of the right faith, and
sufficient for the utter destruction of every heresy and for the complete unity
of the holy churches of God. And this, without prejudice to the force of the
acts of the hundred and fifty holy Fathers assembled in this Imperial city in
confirmation of that sacred symbol itself and in condemnation of those who
blasphemed against the Holy Spirit. And without prejudice to all the acts passed
in the Metropolitan city of the Ephesians against the impious Nestorius and
those who subsequently favored his opinions."
But the proceedings
which have disturbed the unity and order of the holy churches of God and the
peace of the whole world, that is to say, the so-called Tome of Leo, all things
said and done at Chalcedon in innovation of the before-mentioned holy symbol of
the three hundred and eighteen holy Fathers, whether by way of definition of
faith, or setting forth of symbols, or of interpretation, or instruction, or
discourse, we decree that these shall be anathematized both here and everywhere
by the most holy bishops in every church, and shall be committed to the flames
whenever they shall be found, inasmuch as it was so enjoined respecting all
heretical doctrines by our predecessors, of pious and blessed memory,
Constantine, and Theodosius the Younger. And that, having thus been rendered
null, they shall be utterly expelled from the one and only Catholic and
Apostolic Orthodox Church, as superseding the everlasting and saving definitions
of the three hundred and eighteen Fathers, and those of the blessed Fathers who,
by the Holy Spirit, made their decision at Ephesus; that no one in brief either
of the priesthood or of the laity, shall be allowed to deviate from that most
sacred constitution of the holy symbol. And that together with all the
innovations of the sacred symbol which were enacted at Chalcedon there be also
anathe -matized the heresy of those who do not confess that the Only-Begotten
Son of God was truly Incarnate and became man of the Holy Spirit, and of the
holy and ever-virgin Mary, Theotokos, but, according to their strange conceit,
either from heaven or in mere phantasy and ap -pearance. And, in brief, every
heresy and whatever other innovation in respect either of thought or language,
has been devised in violation of the sacred symbol in any manner or at any time
or place. And, inasmuch as it is the special task of imperial providence to
furnish their subjects with forecasting deliberation, abundant means of
security, not only for the present but for the future time, we decree that the
most holy bishops in every place shall subscribe to this our Sacred Encyclical
when exhibited to them, as a distinct declaration that they are indeed ruled by
the sacred symbol of the three hundred and eighteen Fathers alone — which the
hundred and fifty holy Fathers confirmed. And as it was also defined by the most
holy Fathers who subsequently assembled in the Metropolitan city of the
Ephesians, that the sacred symbol of the three hundred and eighteen holy Fathers
ought to be the only rule — while they anathematize every stumbling block
erected at Chalcedon to the faith of the orthodox people and utterly eject them
from the churches as an impediment teethe general welfare and our
own."
"Those, moreover,
who, after the issuing of this our acred letter, which we trust to have uttered
in accordance with the will of God in an endeavor to accomplish that unity which
all desire for the holy churches of God, shall attempt to bring forward or so
much as to name the innovation of the faith which was enacted at Chalcedon,
either in discourse or instruction or writing, in whatever manner, place, or
time — with respect to those persons being the cause of confusion and tumult in
the churches of God and among the whole of our subjects, and enemies to God and
our safety, we command, in accordance with the laws decreed by our predecessor
Theodosius, of blessed and sacred memory, against such sort of evil designs,
which laws are subjoined to this our Sacred Encyclical — that if bishops or
clergy, they be deposed; if monks or laypersons, that they be subjected to
banishment and every mode of confiscation, and the severest
penalties."
"And so the holy
and consubstantial Trinity, the Creator and Vivifier of the universe, which has
ever been adored by our Piety, receiving at the present time service at our
hands in the destruction of the before-mentioned tares and the confirmation of
the true and apostolic traditions of the holy symbol, and being thereby rendered
favorable and gracious to our souls and to all our subjects, shall ever aid us
in the exercise of our sway and preserve the peace of the world."
[PatrologiaGraeca&6, 2599-2604].
The Refusal of
Patriarch Acacius to Sign the Encyclical.
Timothy Aelurus and
Peter the Fuller, representing respectively the patriarchates of Alexandria and
Antioch, signed their document. Anastasius, the patriarch of Jerusalem, also
signed, as did approximately five hundred bishops. But Acacius, the patriarch of
Constantinople, refused to sign it. His reason for not signing does not seem to
be theological, for Acacius had been a leader among the Monophysites and the
anti-Chalcedonians while he was a priest in the capital. It is commonly thought
that Acacius neid to Chalcedon because of its Twenty-Eighth Canon which elevated
the see of Constantinople to a type of co-equality with Old Rome. This may well
be an oversimplification. Acacius had also two letters from Pope Simplicius
urging him not to sign the encyclical. Acacius was pronounced deposed but the
sentence does not appear to have been carried out.
Timothy Aelurus’
Rejection of Extreme Monophysitism.
Timothy Aelurus
finally disappointed the Eutychian wing of the Monophysite party, for he clearly
established his position on the nature of the humanity in Christ. "Christ was of
the same nature with us in the flesh and of the same nature with the Father in
the Godhead." It appears clear that the Eutychians held that the divine nature
of Christ had completely absorbed the human nature and that Christ’s flesh was
"heavenly." The Eutychians from this time on were to regard Timothy Aelurus and
Peter the Fuller as Chalcedonians. Timothy was successful, however, in obtaining
his greatly desired new council to be held at Ephesus.
Timothy Aelurus’
Council of Ephesus.
Timothy Aelurus
presided over a council of approximately six hundred bishops at Ephesus.
Timothy’s council promulgated an anathema of the Council of Chalcedon, that
council which "turned the world upside down." His council also annulled the
patriarchal rights conferred to the see of Constantinople. Peter the Fuller then
returned to Antioch unopposed — the see was then vacant because of the death of
bishop Julian. Timothy Aelurus entered Alexandria triumphantly. His behavior was
beyond reproach. He treated kindly the officer who had arrested him seventeen or
eighteen years previously. He also behaved with kindness towards Timothy
Salafaciolus, granting him a stipend from the revenues of the church — one
denarius per day, sufficient for a monk. Timothy Salafaciolus offered no
resistance, returning to the monastery he had previously left to take up the
burdensome task of patriarch. Timothy Aelurus’ gentleness and kindness irritated
many of his supporters, for he refused to take the "strict" approach with the
Proterians. Rather, he required only a verbal renunciation of the Council of
Chalcedon as the prerequisite for communion. Timothy had the remains of the body
of Dioscorus brought back to Alexandria and buried with honor with the other
patriarchs of that city.
Timothy Aelurus
appeared to have achieved victory. He had not, however, expected the challenge
he was to receive from Patriarch Acacius. The patriarch of Constantinople began
to intrigue for the restoration of Zeno as emperor — he had assistance also from
the Dowager Empress Verina. It was not an unclever move, for Zeno had behind him
the most powerful military force in the empire — Isaurians. Acacius could divine
that the capital still had numerous supporters of Chalcedon and that Basiliscus’
clical had only infuriated those Chalcedonians and had also brought others to
the defense of Chalcedon, either for theological reasons or for the importance
they attached to the Twenty-Eighth Canon. Patriarch Acacius now appealed to the
famous Daniel the Stylite.
Patriarch
Acacius and St. Daniel the Stylite.
St. Daniel (d. 493)
was the most famous of the disciples of St. Simeon the Stylite — in fact, it was
Daniel who received St. Simeon’s cowl upon the latter’s death. Daniel spent his
early years at Samosata and at other monasteries in the East. He was already
forty-seven years old when he arrived in Constantinople. He positioned his
pillar four miles from Constantinople where he was to live for another
thirty-three years. Daniel was considered a prophet and he had the complete
confidence of the former Emperor Leo I and of St. Gennadius, the patriarch of
Constantinople from 458 until 471. St. Gennadius had an excellent reputation in
Constantinople and elsewhere. St. Gennadius’ ordination of St. Daniel enhanced
even more the reputation of the latter. With the emperor present, St. Gennadius
ordained Daniel priest without Daniel leaving his pillar. St. Gennadius’s life
of holiness and his power of prayer had become famous throughout the empire.
Moreover, St. Gennadius was a theologian and an exegete. Although early in his
life in 431 St. Gennadius had written a scathing critique of St. Cyril’s
Twelve Anathemas and had accused St. Cyril of blasphemy in his Ad
Parthenium, his work in praise of Pope Leo’s Tome, fragments of which are
extant, established his orthodoxy. Blessed by St. Gennadius and having
established his own fame for holiness and prophetic gifts, St. Daniel was
approached by Patriarch Acacius in an appeal "to save the Church trom
persecution." For the only time St. Daniel descended from his pillar to aid
Acacius. The very act by itself created a sense of dramatic tension. The Vita
Danielis relates that when St. Daniel confronted Emperor Basiliscus one of
the Gothic guards "fell aead and Basiliscus was threatened with judgment. The
spiritual presence of St. Daniel essentially forced Basiliscus to apologize and
to alter his strategy. At the some time Acacius had received a reply from Pope
Simplicius, who praised Acacius for his strength of will m a critical situation.
Pope Simplicius also wrote to Basiliscus and to all the archimandrites in
Constantinople insisting on the removal of Timothy Aelurus. Basiliscus finally
gave in A new encyclical was issued, another "holy encyclical," which though it
did not mention Chalcedon, denounced both Nestorius and Eutyches along with "all
other heresies." Moreover, it reaffirmed the rights of the patriarch and
condemned any reconvening of a new council.
The Return of
Emperor Zeno and the Murder of Basiliscus.
Toward the end of
August in 476 Zeno had returned to Constantinople with his Isaurian troops. By
December an edict had abrogated the authority of Emperor Basiliscus , who
vanishes from history. The rumor was that he as "immured in a wall," which was
close to the truth — Basiliscus and his family were interred in a cistern in
Cappadocia and there died of starvation.
The five hundred
bishops who had signed Basiliscus’ first encyclical hurried to make amends with
Patriarch Acacius with the exception, of course, of Timothy Aelurus. There were
also two other bishops who held their ground — Anastasius of Jerusalem and
Epiphanius of Mygdala. The bishops claimed that they had been "compelled" to
sign and such an excuse was accepted for obvious reasons.
The Death of
Timothy Aelurus and the Election of Peter Mongus.
The two Monophysite
patriarchs, Timothy Aelurus in Alexandria and Anastasius in Jerusalem, were left
alone because of their age — it was reasoned that it was wiser to let death take
them. Pope Simplicius in his Letter 8 suggested that Zeno should execute Timothy
Aelurus as an offering of thanksgiving for his return to the imperial throne.
Zeno rejected the advise. Timothy died in mid 477, not long after Zeno had
regained the throne. At once the Monophysites in Alexandria elected and
consecrated Peter Mongus, a former exiled companion of Timothy Aelurus. Again
there were accusations of an irregular consecration. In his letter to Simplicius
(Letter 8) Acacius claimed that Peter Mongus was consecrated by only one bishop,
hurriedly in the middle of the night before Timothy had even been buried. That
Peter was consecrated at night was in accordance with the common practice in
Alexandria and Acacius should have been aware of this. In Alexandria the
patriarchal successor was expected to keep a vigil besides the corpse of the
deceased patriarch and take with his own hands the pallium of St. Mark from the
deceased patriarch’s neck. That only one bishop consecrated Peter Mongus is
another accusation which, if true, was in violation of canonical law. There is
little doubt that Peter was accepted by the populace. What was to frustrate and
infuriate the Roman Pope was Patriarch Acacius’ request that Peter Mongus not be
recognized only to discover that Acacius was negotiating with Peter Mongus. At
this time the Roman Pope was supporting two Chalcedonians — Timothy Salafaciolus
in Alexandria and Calendion in Antioch.
A Time of
Trouble in Antioch.
In mid 478
Anastasius, the patriarch of Antioch, died. Martyrius, an opponent of the
Council of Chalcedon, was elected and consecrated patriarch of Antioch.
Martyrius wasted little time in letting his position be known. Zacharias gives
the text of an encyclical sent out by Martyrius in which he claimed that the
true faith was to be found in the first three councils of Nicaea,
Constantinople, and Ephesus. Moreover, anyone accepting any other teaching or
doctrine from any different council, "whether Sardica, Ariminum, or Chalcedon,"
was to be anathematized. The situation in Antioch bordered on anarchy. The
majority of the populace in Antioch were anti-Chalcedonian but there still
remained, unlike in Alexandria, a rather strong Chalcedonian group, mainly
consisting of the upper class and the imperial officers. According to John
Malalas’ Chronographia(l5, 103), the Jews in Antioch supported the
Chalcedonians, one result of which was a massacre of Jews by the
anti-Chalcedonians.
The Appointment
of Calendio as Patriarch of Antioch.
Emperor Zeno had
Peter the Fuller deposed and exiled. On his journey into exile Peter escaped and
entered a monastery of his supporters where the imperial arm could not reach
him. The supporters of Peter the Fuller put forward John Codonatus as the
candidate for patriarch, a man whom Peter the Fuller had ordained as bishop of
Apamea, though John had never resided there. The imperial authorities rejected
the candidate and elected Stephen I. immediately the Monophysites accused
Stephen I of being a Nestorian, an accusation they could not substantiate. In
any case, Steh l Was Soon thereafter murdered by a mob. Another Pnen was
consecrated by Patriarch Acacius to take the place of the murdered patriarch.
And this act by Acacius led to furthe accusations, even from Pope Simplicius.
This time the issue was the "power" and "authority" of the see of Constantinople
and its encroachment on the rights of the other sees. Acacius responded to Pope
Simplicius that he had only acted to ensure that an orthodox bishop fill the see
of Antioch and not to set a precedent. Simplicius relented and accepted the
"irregular election" on the condition and understanding that ne in uswn
posteritatis veniat et statuta patrum confundat. The Stephen consecrated by
Acacius soon died and the Monophysites again put forward the candidacy of John
Codonatus. Zeno, determined to have nothing to do with the party that supported
Basiliscus, conferred with Patriarch Acacius and the two agreed on Calendio, the
apocrisiarius of Antioch at Constantinople. Some sources — Theophanes and
Theodore Lector — claim that Calendio was also consecrated at Constantinople but
this seems unlikely, especially in the light of the letters of Pope Simplicius
to Patriarch Acacius. He was most probably consecrated in Antioch under close
imperial scrutiny. The portrait of Calendio from the sources is most refreshing.
His character comes through as one of principle. He was a solid supporter of the
Council of Chalcedon and, though he was always willing to offer concessions, no
concession would be exchanged at the sacrifice of his theological principles and
beliefs.
Calendio
anathematized Peter the Fuller but let his addition to the Trisagion stand but
with an important change — before "who was crucified for us," Calendio added
"Christ our King." It was a brilliant stroke, for neither the Monophysites nor
the Chalce -donians could object to this wording. Calendio accomplished
something else of significance, something long since forgotten in the Western
Church — he reconciled the "schismatic" Eustathians. Calendio, by having the
bones of St. Eustathius brought from his grave in exile to Antioch, reconciled
the Eustathians to the Church at Antioch and thus healed a schism which had
lasted one hundred and fifty years.
Political and
Ecclesiastical Intrigues.
Acacius, pragmatist
as he always was, realized quite well what the actual state of affairs was.
There was no longer an emperor in the West, a fact that meant that Simplicius of
Rome was dependent upon Zeno. He was also informed of new schisms within the
body of the anti-Chalcedonians. Zacharias informs us in his Church History (5,
4) that the bishop of Joppa, Theodotus, was insisting on a complete eradication
of the Council of Chalcedon and the Tome of Pope Leo — it is claimed that he was
supported by thirty thousand Egyptian monks. The former Proterians were
attempting reconcile themselves with Peter Mongus, who, upon hearing of treats
of deposition and exile by Zeno, simply lived in the Monophysite monasteries
without relinquishing his patriarchate the imperial arm could not reach him in
these monasteries. Zeno now insisted that Timothy Salafaciolus be placed upon
the Alexandrian throne for the rest of his life. This action was taken. The
result was the outbreak of more violence in Alexandria and this time the
populace placed the blame on Timothy Salafaciolus. Toward the end of 481 and the
beginning of 482 Timothy Salafaciolus, an old man who knew he was not to live
much longer, sent his friend and fellow Pachomian monk, John Talaia, to
Constantinople to request that his successor be chosen from the Egyptian
clergy.
John Talaia and
Peter Mongus.
The Isaurian
military commander, Illus, who paved the way for Zeno’s successful return to
Constantinople, now becomes involved in the intrigue against Zeno. It appears
that John Talaia sought out Illus in Constantinople. Zeno, who had approved the
"free election" in Alexandria, was aware that Illus was plotting against him
with the prefect of Alexandria. Before leaving Constantinople the authorities
extracted an oath from John Talaia that he would not seek the patriarchal throne
of Alexandria. Timothy Salafaciolus died shortly thereafter — there is vagueness
as to the actual date but Schwartz places it in February of 482. The populace of
Alexandria reconfirmed their choice of Peter Mongus. John Talaia, breaking his
oath, was consecrated as the Chalcedonian patriarch of Alexandria. The
information from Liberatus of Carthage in his Breviarium causae Nestorianorum et
Eutychianorwn (17, 3) is that John Talaia informed Illus, then in Antioch, of
his election but did not inform either Acacius or Zeno. The emperor was furious
that John Talaia had broken his oath and accused him of perjury. In Evagrius
Scholasticus’ Church History (3, 15) Zeno is quoted as informing Pope Simplicius
that he in no way would recognize John, a man who committed perjury, and that
this was the sole reason why his consecration was not to be recognized. Zeno
opted for Peter Mongus but with conditions. Peter was to accept a theological
profession of faith which was to e drawn up by Acacius — Peter had sent a
delegation to Constantmople to argue his case. The profession of faith drawn up
by Patriarch Acacius was to become the famous Henotikon of Zeno. It was ready in
mid 482.
The Henotikon of
Zeno 482.
"The Emperor Caesar
Zeno, pious, victorious, triumphant, supreme, ever-worshipful Augustus, to the
most reverend bishops and clergy, and to the monks and laity throughout
Alexandria, Egypt, Libya, and Pentapolis."
"Being assured that
the origin and constitution, the might and invincible defense of our sovereignty
is the only right and true faith, which, through divine inspiration, the three
hundred and eighteen holy Fathers assembled at Nicaea set forth, and the hundred
and fifty holy Fathers who, in like manner, met at Constantinople, confirmed, we
day and night employ every means of prayer, of zealous pains, and of laws so
that the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church in every place may be multiplied,
the incorruptible and immortal mother of our scepter. And that the pious laity,
continuing in peace and unanimity with respect to God, may, together with the
bishops, highly beloved of God, the most pious clergy, the archimandrites and
monks, offer up acceptably their supplications on behalf or our
sovereignty."
"As long as our
great God and Savior Jesus Christ, who was Incarnate and born of Mary, the Holy
Virgin and Theotokos, approves and readily accepts our concordant glorification
and service, the power of our enemies will be crushed and swept away, and peace
with its blessing, kindly temperate, abundant fruit, and whatever is beneficial
to man, will be liberally bestowed."
"Since then the
irreprehensible faith is the preserver both of ourselves and the Roman realm,
petitions have been offered to us from pious archimandrites and hermits, and
other venerable persons, imploring us with tears that unity should be procured
for the churches, and the limbs should be knit together, which the enemy of all
good has of old time been eagerly bent upon severing, under a consciousness that
defeat will befall him whenever he assails the body while in an entire
condition. For, since it happens that of the unnumbered generations which during
die lapse of so many years time has withdrawn from life, some have departed
deprived of the laver of regeneration, and others have been borne away on the
inevitable journey of man without having partaken in the divine Eucharist. And
innumerable murders have also been perpetrated. And not only the earth but the
very air has been defiled by a multitude of blood shedding. That this state of
things might be transformed into good,who would not pray? For this reason we
were anxious that you should be informed that we and the churches in every
quarter neither have held nor do we or shall we hold, nor are we aware of
persons who hold, any other symbol or teaching or definition of faith or creed
than the before-mentioned holy symbol of the three hundred and eighteen holy
Fathers, which the aforementioned hundred and fifty holy Fathers confirmed. And
if any person does hold such, we deem him alien. For we are confident that this
symbol alone is, as we said, the preserver of our sovereignty and on their
reception of this alone are all the people baptized when desirous of the saving
illumination."
"And it was this
symbol which all the holy Fathers assembled at Ephesus also followed, who
further passed sentence of deposition on the impious Nestorius and those who
subsequently held his sentiments. This Nestorius we also anathematize, together
with Eutyches and all who entertain opinions contrary to those above-mentioned,
receiving at the same time the Twelve Chapters of Cyril, of holy memory,
formerly Archbishop of the Holy Catholic Church of the
Alexandrians."
"Moreover, we
confess that the Only-Begotten Son of God, himself God, who truly assumed
manhood, namely our Lord Jesus Christ, who is consubstantial with the Father in
respect of the Godhead, and consubstantial with ourselves as respects the
manhood, that he, having descended and become Incarnate of the Holy Spirit and
Mary, the Virgin and Theotokos, is one and not two. For we affirm that both his
miracles and the sufferings which he voluntarily endured in the flesh are those
of a single person. For we do in no degree admit those who either make a
division or a confusion, or introduce a phantom. For his truly sinless
Incarnation from the Theotokos did not produce an addition of a Son because the
Holy Trinity continued a Trinity even when one person of the Trinity, God the
Logos, became Incarnate. Knowing then that neither the holy orthodox churches in
all parts nor the priests highly beloved by God who are at their head nor our
own sovereignty have allowed or do allow any other symbol or definition of faith
than the aforementioned holy definition, we have united ourselves thereto
without hesitation."
"And these things
we write not as setting forth a new form of faith, but for your assurance. And
every one who has held or holds any other opinion, either at the present or
another time, whether at Chalcedon or in any synod whatever, we anathematize.
And specially the aforementioned Nestorius and Eutyches, and those who maintain
their doctrines. Link yourselves, therefore, to the spiritual mother of the
Church, and in her enjoy the same communion with us, according to the
aforementioned one and only definition of the faith, namely, that of the three
hundred and eighteen holy Fathers. For your all-holy Mother, the Church, waits
to embrace you as true children, and longs to hear your loved voice, so long
withheld. Speed yourselves, therefore, for, by so doing, you will both draw
towards yourselves the favor of our Master and Savior and God, Jesus Christ, and
be commended by our sovereignty." [Patrologia Graeca 86,
2619-2626].
The Henotikon would
remain the official policy of Zeno throughout his reign and it continued into
the reign of Emperor Anastasius I (491-518). The Henotikon was quickly accepted
by the patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, and Jerusalem. The theological
test for Peter Mongus had become the vehicle for unity in the East. Simplicius
of Rome rejected it outright, as was to be expected. Simplicius was already
defending the claim of John Talaia to the patriarchal throne of Alexandria —
John had fled to Rome upon the recognition of Peter Mongus. The best Rome could
do for John was to make him bishop of Nola. Simplicius died soon thereafter in
483.
Pope St. Felix
III.
The new bishop of
Rome, St. Felix III (483-492), was to take decisive action. Felix sent a
delegation of legates to Constantinople to demand the deposition of Peter
Mongus. The papal delegation managed to fail in its mission — the delegation
communed with Patriarch Acacius and heard the names of Dioscorus and Peter
Mongus read from the diptychs. St. Felix III held a Roman council in July of 484
which suspended the legates and excommunicated Acacius. Thus began the Acacian
Schism, a schism between Rome and Constantinople that would last for thirty-five
years. Felix III wrote a letter to Zeno in which he advised him to "learn
spiritual things from those in charge of them" and not "to desire to teach" the
Church. This letter is often considered the beginning of the confrontation
between papacy and empire — ironic in a sense because St. Felix III seems to
have been the first bishop of Rome to announce his election to the
emperor.
The Exile of
Calendio and the Return of Peter Mongus.
The situation in
Antioch did not go as smoothly as Zeno and Acacius had hoped. When they had
consecrated Calendio as patriarch, they knew he was firmly behind the Council of
Chalcedon. Calendio was not about to acquiesce to an imperial request when it
involved a matter of principle connected with theological faith. He was now
ordered to condemn Chalcedon and to establish communion with Peter Mongus. He
refused. Zeno and Acacius apparently decided to rid themselves of Calendio.
Philoxenus of Hierapolis [Mabbug] (c. 440-523) came forth as an accuser of
Calendio. Philoxenus had been appointed bishop of Mabbug by Peter the Fuller in
485. Calendio was arrested and tried. The charge was not theological but
political — he was tried and sentenced as a traitor for an alleged complicity in
the rebellious movement of Illus and Leontius in 484. It was not only Calendio
who was deposed. With him nine other bishops, including Nestor of Tarsus and
Eusebius of Samosata, were deposed. Calendio was sent into exile where he was to
die. Peter the Fuller again took the patriarchal throne of Antioch — for the
third time. Peter’s first act was the removal of the words from the Trisagion
made by Calendio — "Christ our King." Peter was to hold the throne of Alexandria
for the brief remainder of his life — he died in 488.
The Confession of Faith of
the Church in Persia.
Only the see of Rome remained
Chalcedonian — all the Eastern patriarchates were now under the control of the
anti-Chalcedonians. To the east, however, outside the Roman Empire the Christian
communities were dyophysite but also anti-Chalcedonian — there the communities
were mainly penetrated by Nestorian thought. Barsoma of Nisibis was organizing
the Church in Sassanid Persia on a doctrinal confession of a Nestorian
understanding of "two natures." A creed from the Church in Persia is extant,
dating from about 486.
"The faith of us all should
be in one confession of one divine nature in three perfect persons: one true and
eternal Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This is the confession by which
heathenism is conquered and Judaism is rebuked. Further, concerning the
oikonomia of Christ, our faith should be in the confession of two natures of
Godhead and manhood. And let no one of us venture to introduce mixture,
confusion, or commingling into the diversities of these two natures, seeing that
the Godhead remains unchanged in its own characteristics, and the humanity in
its own. And we join the diversities of the two natures in one majesty and
adoration because of the perfection and inseparable conjoining — συνάφεια — that
existed between the Godhead and the Manhood. If anyone thinks, or teaches
others, that suffering or change can attach themselves to the Godhead of the
Lord, or if he does not keep to the confession of perfect God and perfect Man in
the unity of the person of our Redeemer, let him be
anathema."
Here the Nestorian
notion of conjunction makes itself clearly felt, and the thought of Theodore of
Mopsuestia’s Christology is apparent. The Nestorian church had come into being.
After 489 its school at Nisibis would provide it with a foundation to continue
its existence outside the Roman empire.
The Schools of Edessa and
Nisibis.
Edessa.
Edessa was a center
of confusion. The pro-Cyrillian Rabbula was bishop of Edessa from 412 until his
death in 435. Rabulla had strongly opposed Nestorianism and specifically
attacked the writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia. Rabulla also translated St.
Cyril’s De recta fide into Syriac and delivered at least one stinging
sermon against Nestorius. Edessa (the present Urfa) was from a very early date
the center of Syriac-speaking Christianity. Its church is thought to be the
oldest known Christian edifice. Edessa was also most probably the home of the
Old Syriac and the Peshitta versions of the New Testament. It was also possibly
the home of the Diatesseron. Edessa was more closely connected with Persia than
to the Hellenic world.
In 436 Ibas
replaced the pro-Cyrillian Rabulla as bishop of Edessa. Ibas (who was
subsequently to be condemned at the Fifth Ecumenical Council, 553) was not
sympathetic to St. Cyril. Ibas wrote a letter to the Persian bishop Maris of
Seleucia-Ctesiphon in which Ibas complains about the outrages of Cyril’s party
in Edessa and denies the communicatio idiomatum. With Ibas as bishop,
Edessa became the refuge of the intransigent Antiochenes. Persian Christians
also came to Edessa. St. Ephraem the Syrian resettled in Edessa (from Persia) in
approximately 365. It was in Edessa that Ephraem established his famous school,
actually called the "School of Persians." It is only after Ephraem that Greek,
primarily Antiochene, influence intensifies. The Greek fathers, hagiographers,
and ascetics are translated. And in the early fifth century people in Edessa are
already theologizing precisely along the model of thought of Theodore of
Mopsuestia and Diodore of Tarsus. It is probably for this reason that the school
in Edessa was temporarily closed under Rabbula. It was reopened under Ibas.
However, dissent very quickly began in the school’s "brotherhood" and in 457 the
intransigents had to move beyond the Persian frontier. With them the famous head
of the school, Narsai, also fled to Nisibis, where the bishop there, Barsumas,
asked him to stay and to establish a school. Narsai became one of the formative
theologians of the Nestorian church. In 489 the school at Edessa was closed
completely at the command of Emperor Zeno.
Nisibis.
During these years
the Persian church completely breaks away from Byzantium and retires into its
local traditions. From then on, Antiochene theology becomes the national, or
rather the state, creed of Persian Christians, and the school at Nisibis becomes
the spiritual center of this "Nestorian" church. However, it is more accurate to
speak not of "Nestorianism" but of "the faith of Theodore and Diodore." The
"Nestorian" church is actually the church of Theodore of Mopsuestia. It was
precisely Theodore who by preference was Father and Teacher in the Syro-Persian
church. All "Nestorian" theology is only an obedient commentary on his works:
"as the holy friend of God, the blessed mar-Theodore, bishop and interpreter of
the holy books, explained the faith." In Greek theology the Antiochene tradition
is severed early. In Syrian theology it receives a new sense, is de-Hellenized,
and becomes more Semitic. The Syrian theologians shunned philosophy as Hellenic
gloss. Theodore’s "historical" theology was the only kind of Hellenism
acceptable to Semitic tastes precisely because for Theodore, too, theology was
more philology than philosophy.
There is also a
certain inner similarity between the "historical-grammatical" method of the
Antiochenes and the rabbinical exegetics of the East. Very characteristic of
Syrian theology is a specific and particular method of scholarship which
partially calls to mind the Talmud. Syrian theology was a "school" theology in
the strict sense of the word. The guiding influence of the theological school is
connected with the school at Nisibis, which very quickly reached its acme.
Already about 535 Cassiodorus of Vivarium points out the school at Nisibis and
the school at Alexandria as "model" Christian schools. The statutes of the
school have come down to us from 496, but it is not difficult to identify in
these statues the features of a more ancient and traditional system. The school
at Nisibis was a typical Semitic school — most of all it reminds one of a Jewish
rabbinical school, a "beth-hammidrash" First of all, it was not only a
school but a dormitory as well. Everyone lives together, by cells, in the school
house. Everyone forms a single "fraternity" composed of both older and younger
students. Those who have finished the course —they are called "investigators" —
remain in the dormitory. This was not a monastery, however. "Let whoever seeks a
strict life," say the statutes, "go to a monastery or into the desert." The
Scripture was, naturally, the subject taught. It was a three-year course. They
began with the Old Testament and studied it all three years. Only in the third
year was the New Testament studied as well. They read the text and copied it.
Then came the exegesis. One of the teachers, "the pronunciation teacher," taught
the Syrian masorthat is, vocalization of the text and the diacritical marks.
Another, "the reading teacher," taught liturgical reading and singing — the
"choirs together with the teacher." The head teacher — or "rabban" — was called
the "Interpreter." In his teaching he was connected with the "school’s
tradition." At first they considered the works of the Venerable Ephraem such a
tradition but very soon it was Theodore of Mopsuestia who was chiefly
recognized. He was considered the only authority in Nisibis. The Nisibisian
"statutes" especially cautioned against "speculation" and
"allegories."
At the end of the
sixth century Genama became head of the school in Nisibis (about 572) and he
attempted to replace Theodore by St. John Chrysostom. This provoked a stormy
protest. In addition, he made use of allegory. The strict Nestorians considered
him as a Manichee. His doctrine of inherited original sin seemed liked fatalism.
With the support of the Persian authorities, Genama managed to hold on to the
management of the school — he composed new statutes for it in 590, but half of
the students had scattered. Other schools remained faithful to the tradition in
other parts of Persia — and the monasteries remained faithful also to the
"tradition" of Theodore.
The council of 585
strictly censured and forbade Genama’s "interpretations" and, in so doing,
confirmed that the opinion of blessed mar-Theodore must be considered the sole
and final criterion of truth in all questions. Thus Syrian theology consciously
stopped at the fifth century. It shut itself off in its archaic school formulas
which had shrivelled and stiffened with age. Creative energy hardly found an
outlet in liturgical singing. There was no internal movement within "Nestorian"
theology, nor could there be. The Nestorians repudiated the vital
inquisitiveness of thought. In Syria Aristotle was studied a lot. The Syrians
taught him and explained him. It was thanks to the Syrians that Aristotle was
noticed by the Arabs and then, subsequently, crossed over to the medieval West.
But Nestorian theology did not even come into contact with this Syrian
Aristotelianism. There is a very characteristic article within the Nisibisian
statutes which forbids the students to live with "physicians," "lest books of
worldly wisdom be studied in the same place as books of holiness." It was
precisely the "physicians" or naturalists who were studying Aristotle in Syria.
The Nestorian theologians avoided speculation, but this did not save them from
rationalism. They lapsed into rationalistic and legalistic thought. To a certain
extent this was a return to archaic Judaeo-Christianity. Such is the historical
dead end of Antiochene theology.
The Emergence of
New Personalities:
Philoxenus and Severus.
Italy was now under
the control of the Arian Germans while the Roman see remained staunchly
Chalcedonian. German Arianism in the Latin West, Persian Nestorianism outside
the eastern border, and the patriarchates of Constantinople, Alexandria,
Antioch, and Jerusalem under the control of the Monophysite or anti-Chalcedonian
Christians — such was the reality of the life of the Church at this
time.
In this situation
new personalities emerge. One such is Philoxenus of Hierapolis or Mabbug.
Theophanes’ comments on Philoxenus are interesting. Theophanes claims that
Xenaias, the Hellenized form of which became Philoxenus, was a Persian and a
slave, that he had no claim to the priesthood before Peter the Fuller ordained
him, that he was born at Tahal in the province of Beth-Garami, and that he had
studied in Edessa and these studies resulted in Philoxenus1 rejection of the
Antiochene school of theology.
Another emerging
personality is that of Severus, who was to become the patriarch of Antioch from
512 until 518. Unlike Philoxenus, Severus was thoroughly Hellenized. The
difference between Philoxenus and Severus represents the range of the
Monophysite influence at the beginning of the sixth century. In this period one
can also begin to discern what would become the Neo-Chalcedonian
defense.
The Death of Patriarch
Acacius and the Situation
Inherited by his Successors,
Fravitta and Euphemius.
Peter Mongus and
Fravitta.
Upon the death in
489 of Acacius, patriarch of Constan -tinople, his successor Fravitta sent out
the usual encyclical of enthronement. Peter Mongus attempted to appease the
numerous monks who wanted an outright condemnation of the Council of Chalcedon.
The monks held substantial power in Egypt, despite the fact that they were
"leaderless" — ακέφαλοι. Peter had previously attempted to appease these monks
by circulating his sermons in which he himself had condemned Chalcedon. This did
not appease them. They wanted an official, imperial condemnation. In his
response to Fravitta’s encyclical Peter Mongus wrote that since the Henotikon
anathematized Chalcedon, it would be proper for him to follow the example of his
predecessor Acacius and to condemn the Council of Chalcedon also. Fravitta died
shortly after his consecration and the letter from Peter Mongus fell into the
hands of Fravitta’s successor, Euphemius, a strong
Chalcedonian.
Patriarch
Euphemius.
The populace at
Constantinople was becoming increasingly Chalcedon but the imperial court still
held back, still kept to the pro-Monophysite position. Euphemius rejected Peter
Mongus’ proposal — moreover, he broke off communion with Peter. Both Euphemius
and Peter engaged in vehement rhetoric against each other — Peter is reported to
have said that he would deal with Euphemius as Cyril dealt with Nestorius. The
death of Peter Mongus in 490 prevented any further development in this rift.
Peter’s successors, Athanasius II and then John I, were primarily concerned with
winning back their "dissidents" — αποσχισταί, with bringing the extreme
Monophysites to a more moderate position, and with placing these “leaderless
dissidents" under the control of the patriarchate of Alexandria. Athanasius II
and John I therefore had little time to engage in controversy with other
patriarchal sees. Imperial policy was to leave such a hotbed as Alexandria
alone, not to stir up any additional trouble in that troublesome patriarchate.
The controversy between the patriarchate of Alexandria and the monks continued
but in an isolation from imperial policy or even concern. Imperial policy turned
its attention to Antioch and other regions in the East.
Euphemius,
Chalcedonian that he was, attempted to bring about a reconciliation with Rome.
Here papal policy blundered again in its relations with the East, for Pope St.
Felix III insisted that the schism could be resolved only if Patriarch Euphemius
anathematized his predecessor Acacius. Such an action would have been
counterproductive and Pope Felix should have realized the senselessness of his
request. Even if the populace of Constantinople was becoming increasingly
pro-Chalcedonian, what possible good could have resulted since the power resided
with Zeno, with an emperor whose Henotikon had brought about a relative peace
among his subjects? Why should Zeno risk this relative, if tentative, peace
within the empire to reconcile Constantinople with a see that was in actuality
outside imperial control at that time?
A new era was being
ushered in from approximately 488 through 491. The death of Peter the Fuller
took place in 488. It was followed by the death of Acacius in 489 and then of
Acacius’ successor, Fravitta, in 490. Peter Mongus died in 490. Then in April of
491 Emperor Zeno died. The next year St. Felix III of Rome would die. The
personalities were changing.
The Death of
Emperor Zeno and
the Selection of Emperor
Anastasius.
A contemporary
account of the atmosphere in Constantinople on the death of Emperor Zeno is
preserved in Constantine Porphyrogenitus’ De cerimoniis (1, 92). Zeno’s
widow Ariadne, together with imperial officials, appeared in the Hippodrome to
address the populace — her address was given by the magister a libellis. "In
anticipation of your desire, we have ordered the most noble ministers, the
sacred senate, together with the approval of the courageous armies, to choose a
Christian and Roman Emperor who possesses every imperial virtue, who is not
enslaved to money, and who is, as much as it is possible for a person, free from
every human vice." According to the source, the populace shouted: "Ariadne
Augusta, you conquer! Ο heavenly king, grant the world an emperor who is not
greedy!" The speech of Ariadne continues: "So that the selection will be pure
and pleasing to God, we have ordered the ministers and the senate, together with
the harmony of the vote of the army, to conduct the election in the presence of
the Gospels and in the presence of the patriarch. This procedure will be
followed to prevent any influence of either friendship or hostility, of kinship
or of any other personal motive so that the vote will be with clear conscience.
Since the election is therefore a serious thing and concerns the well being of
the empire, you must permit us a brief delay until the funeral ceremonies for
Zeno, of pious memory, have been completed properly. Otherwise the election
would be precipitous." The contemporary source quoted by Constantine then gives
the response of the populace: "Long live the Augusta! Expel the thieving prefect
of the city! May all be well in your time, Augusta, if no foreigner is imposed
on us Romans!" Ariadne’s speech, read by the magister, then continues: "We have
already done what you request. Before we came here, we appointed the illustrious
Julian to the office of prefect." The people heartily approved the
appointment.
Ariadne then left
and the ministers held a council about the election. It was suggested that
Ariadne select a candidate. She selected Anastasius, whom Zacharias calls a
"decurio silentiarius" — a decurion silentiary. Anastasius, a civil servant of
about sixty years, was well known in Constantinople especially for his
generosity in almsgiving and in caring for orphans. His imperial function was in
the department of finance where he performed ably — his greatest accomplishment
was fixing the value of the copper follis to the gold coinage. But Patriarch
Euphemius objected vigorously to Empress Ariadne’s choice — and with reason.
Anastasius had already had encounters with Patriarch Euphemius. He had the most
unusual habit of placing a chair in the cathedral where he was wont to give his
own instruction in the faith to selected audiences. Patriarch Euphemius was so
outraged by this practice that he obtained Zeno’s permission to expel Anastasius
from the cathedral and to remove his chair of instruction. It appears that
Anastasius’ theological views were most unorthodox — whether his views were the
result of his mother having been a Manichaean and his uncle an Arian is not
known. He himself was by character a religious enthusiast.
The objection of
Patriarch Euphemius was overruled by Ariadne and the senate. Patriarch Euphemius
was, however, able to insist that Anastasius sign a written profession of
orthodoxy. This was accepted and the document was handed to Patriarch Euphemius
After the coronation, the crowd shouted its approval. These shouts of the
populace as recorded by a contemporary are interesting. "Rule as you have lived!
You have lived in piety! Rule in piety! Restore the army! Rule like Marcian!
Expel the informers!" The sources portray his character quite favorably -highly
educated, intelligent, gentle but energetic, in control of his temper, generous
and pious. A few weeks after his coronation Anastasius married
Ariadne.
Emperor Anastasius’
priority was to subdue the Isaurians, to rid the empire of their influence. They
had served their purpose — they had prevented the control of the empire by the
Germanic Goths. Now it was time to remove them and their power. Indeed, the
choice of Anastasius had alarmed the Isaurians who were expecting Longinus,
Zeno’s brother, to become emperor. Anastasius found a pretext — a riot at the
Hippodrome — to expel the Isaurians from Constantinople. He compelled Zeno’s
brother Longinus to become a monk and exiled him to the Thebaid. The gentle
Anastasius seized all Zeno’s property — even to the extreme of selling off
Zeno’s imperial robes. The expelled Isaurians joined with their fellow
Isaurians. They were defeated at Cotyaeum in Phrygia. Sporadic warfare was
continued in the Isaurian mountains. Finally in 498 the mountain resistance was
quelled. Anastasius fortunately finished off the Isaurians before the outbreak
of a serious war with Persia from 502 until 505. The war with Persia resulted in
the building of a large fortification at Dara which looked down into the Persian
city of Nisibis and the construction of the huge walls in Thrace to protect
Constantinople. Anastasius turned to Theodoric of Italy in 498, offering him the
title of rex and returning to him the ornamenta
palatii.
Anastasius and
Ariadne were to rule the empire for twenty-seven years. Until 510 Anastasius’
religious policy was based on the Henotikon of Zeno. Evagrius
Scholasticus tells us that Anastasius was a man of peace, a man interested in
order in the empire, a man who wanted nothing to do with religious change or
religious strife, whether it was pro or anti-Chalcedon. It was not difficult to
discern that a clash was inevitable between Emperor Anastasius and Patriarch
Euphemius. The latter had been preparing a theological assault on the patarch of
Alexandria. Euphemius wrote to Pope Felix III of Rome vithout the emperor’s
knowledge — he solicited the aid of Pop Felix against Alexandria. The patriarchs
of Alexandria and Jerusalem were also intriguing against Euphemius — they
accused himo the emperor of being a Nestorian. The emperor had reccered a copy
of the letter that Euphemius had sent to Pope Felix. He was obviously concerned
about the signed document viich Patriarch Euphemius had compelled him to sign
before spporting his coronation, a document which was a declaration of
orthodoxy. And, further, the emperor believed or wanted toielieve that Patriarch
Euphemius was intriguing secretly with thlsaurians. In 492 a council took place
in Constantinople whic reaffirmed the Henotikon and deposed Euphemius,
exiling hit to a monastery in Pontus.
The Death of
Pope Felix III and
the Papacy Under Pope Gelasius.
In Rome Pope Felix
III ied in 492 and his successors, Gelasius I (492-496) and Anstasius II
(496-498), had some interesting relations with the Eatern Church. The Liber
pontificate claims that St. Gelasius, a very strong personality with a strong
will, was "an African by birth. As archdeacon under Pope Felix III, it was
Gelasius who wasthe dominant personality in the Roman Church and it was hewho
drafted the letters of Pope Felix. St. Gelasius becomes knwn as the most
significant Roman pope in the Acacian Schism. The eastern patriarchates viewed
the Roman see during the Acacian Schism as overstepping its jurisdictional
authority, as intrudng in the affairs of the eastern patriarchates. From the
Roman perspective it was not reduced to such a simple problem of powe and
authority. Rather, Rome was alarmed with the increasing iirusion of the emperor
in ecclesiastical affairs, alarmed at whait viewed as caeraropapism. Rome had
reason to be alarmedh , for the Henotikon of Emperor Zeno was precisely
the imperial authorit dictating to the Churc— and this time the dictating was
heresy,vas an abrogation in reality of the ecumenicity of the Council of
Chalcedon and a rejection of the accepted Tome of Pope Leo the Great. Rome’s
main concern was not merely with her prestige νithin the Church and not merely a
reaction against the rejection c Pope Leo through the rejection of his
Tome — it was far deeper thii a reaction to an insult. Rome saw the very
life of the Church thnuened by Zeno’s Henotikon. When isolated as it was at the
time an in essence under the control of the Arian Germans, the see of Rore
reacted to heresy by putting forth its self-understanding as the see of primacy.
The development of the legal foundations of papal authority had already been put
forth by Leo the Great — Bolotov has written interestingly on this aspect of the
papacy under Pope Leo. But it was Pope Gelasius who applied these principles —
his letters read as though they are legal documents, legal briefs, which clearly
put forth a position of papal supremacy, especially over secular authority. The
historical significance of the letters of Gelasius were not only contemporary in
their attitude toward the East. Rather, their prime historical significance
resides in the fact of their historical influence on later generations in the
Latin West. Pope Gelasius’ activity sparked what became known as the "Gelasian
Renaissance" — his letters began to be collected in a series of canonical
regulations. The attempts by the patriarchs of Constantinople, Fravitta and
Euphemius, to restore relations with Rome and end the Acacian Schism were
rejected — or rather were conditioned on the impossible request that the name of
Patriarch Acacius be removed from the diptychs. Zeno’s successor, Emperor
Anastasius, was as adamant as Zeno. However, Anastasius, on the occasion of the
reception of a delegation from King Theodoric, used the opportunity to remind
Gelasius that no letter had been received from him recognizing his enthronement.
Gelasius’ response in 494 was firm.
"I implore your Holiness not
to judge obligation to divine truth as arrogance. I trust that it will not be
said of a Roman Emperor that he resented truth when it was brought to him. There
are indeed, most august Emperor, two powers by which this world is mainly
governed: the holy authority of the popes — auctoritas sacrata pontificwn —
and the imperial power — regalis potestas. [Duo quippe sunt, imperator auguste,
quibus principaliter mundus hie regitur: auctoritas sacra pontificum et regalis
potestas] Of these the priestly authority is much more important because it
must render an account at the divine judgment for the kings of men themselves.
For you know, our most merciful son, that although you have the primary place of
dignity over the human race, yet you must submit yourself faithfully to those
who have authority of things divine and that you must look to them for the means
of your salvation. You know that it is necessary for you, in those matters which
concern the reception and sacred administration of the Sacraments, to be
obedient to the authority of the Church rather than to control it. Thus, in such
matters you must depend on ecclesiastical judgment instead of seeking to mold it
to your will. In matters which relate to the administration of public discipline
the bishops of the Church, knowing that the Empire has been entrusted to you by
Divine means, are themselves obedient to your laws in order that in these purely
material concerns opposing opinion may not seem to be voiced. I ask you, then,
should you obey those to whom the administration of divine mysteries has been
appointed? Thus, as there is great danger for the Popes in not saying what is
necessary in matters of divine majesty, so there is no small danger for those
who are recalcitrant in resistance — which God forbid! — at the time when they
should be obedient. And if the hearts of the faithful should be submitted to all
priests in general, who administer holy things in a correct manner, how much
more must assent be given to him who presides over that See which the supreme
Godhead itself willed to be pre-eminent over all priests, and which the pious
judgment of the whole Church has honored ever since?"
The Acacian Schism
differed from the numerous schisms of the past precisely because Rome considered
it a total break, a complete breach of communion with the entire eastern
churches — not just with Constantinople. At a Roman council in 494 or 495 under
Pope Gelasius the depth of this broken communion is revealed. The former bishop
of Cumae, Misenus, had been sent by Pope Felix III to Constantinople. There he
entered into communion with Acacius. The recantation of Misenus reads that he
rejects all heresy
"especially the Eutychian
heresy along with its originator Eutyches and his follower Dioscorus, and those
who succeeded him, and those who held communion with him, namely Timothy the
Cat, Peter Mongus of Alexandria, Acacius of Constantinople, Peter the Fuller of
Antioch, and all their accomplices and all those who communicate with them. All
these he repudiates, condemns, and forever anathematizes, and all these and all
like them he curses with horrible imprecations — horribiliter execrari —
and promises that he will never have any sort of fellowship with such people,
and that for the future he will be utterly separate from all of
them."
After the
recantation of Misenus, Pope Gelasius gave a lengthy speech to the council,
concluding:
"In consideration of the
fact that Misenus has, according to the rule, professed that he detests all
heresies, and especially the Eutychian heresy, together with Eutyches,
Dioscorus, Timothy the Cat, Peter of Alexandria, Acacius of Constantinople, and
Peter of Antioch, and all their successors, and all those who follow and
communicate with them, and that he strikes them with an eternal anathema, let
him again partake of the grace of apostolic communion and of the episcopal
dignity which he originally received by a Catholic
consecration."
What follows is of
historical importance, for it is the reaction of the bishops and priests at the
council. The bishops rose and exclaimed fifteen times "O Christ, hear us! Long
live Gelasius!" Twelve times they exclaimed "Lord Peter, preserve him!" Seven
times they exclaimed "May he hold the see of Peter during the years of Peter!" —
this was a reference to the tradition in Rome that St. Peter was Bishop of Rome
for twenty-five years, a tradition quite unhistorical. And then, for the first
time in recorded documentation, the linking of the bishop of Rome as the "Vicar
of Christ" is mentioned. Seven times they exclaimed "We see you, who are the
Vicar of Christ!"
It should be
mentioned that there is no reference to papal infallibility in this letter and
that notion of the "two authorities" had been raised in the past by Hosius to
Constantius II, by St. Ambrose to both Valentinian II and Theodosius I, and by
St. Augustine in his De civitate dei. But the entire attitude of Pope
Gelasius, an attitude expressed in his many letters, was an irritant to the
emperor. His terse style of writing had a penetrating and blistering effect.
Gelasius did not even bother to announce his election to Constantinople. He
wrote contemptuously to Euphemius, claiming that Euphemius belonged to an
"estranged body." He characterized Acacius as a greater sinner than Eutyches
precisely because Acacius "had known the truth" and yet associated with the
"enemies of truth" — Acacius was a heretic by association. In Gelasius’ letter
to his envoy in Constantinople, Faustus, he wrote "consortium damnatorum est
damnatus Acacius" Some scholars have seen in this notion of "heresy by
association" the African roots of Gelasius, the African influence of Tertullian,
Cyprian, and Donatus. The fact remains, however, that the principle used by
Gelasius is nothing more than a consistent and logical extension of the
theological concept of heresy. Pope Gelasius’ contemptuous attitude to the
patriarchal throne of Constantinople, which he reduced to its pre-Nicene
position as a bishopric under Heraclea, would certainly not be encouraging to
Constantinople — "an sedem apostolicam congruebat paroeciae Heraclensis
ecclesiae, id est Constantinopolitani pontificis vel quorumlibet aliorum"
This was essentially an undiplomatic and counterproductive way for Rome to
express its rejection of the Twenty-Eighth Canon of Chalcedon or the reality
which resulted from that canon. Not only did Gelasius belittle the see of
Constantinople but he also humiliated the East in his letter to the bishops of
Illyricum by disparagingly referring to them as Greeks who abound in heresies —
"apud Graecos, quibus multas haereses abundare non dubium est." He is
considered by many as the one who initiated the notion which would later be
translated into the common Western form of address to the Byzantine Emperor —
Imperator Graecorwn. To his credit it must be admitted that St. Gelasius
acted in the Latin West with the same vigor he used against the East. He
energetically fought against the remains of Pelagianism, especially in Dalmatia,
and he used his authority and energy to extirpate the lingering paganism in Rome
itself. He vigorously protested against the incipient Latin practice of
withholding the cup from the laity in the reception of the Holy Eucharist, a
practice he termed a "sacrilege." In a matter of four and one-half years Pope
Gelasius had managed to deepen the rift between Constantinople and
Rome.
The Death of
Pope Gelasius and the Papacy Under Anastasius II.
Pope Gelasius died
in 496 and was followed by Pope Anastasius II (496-498). With the support of the
Roman senate, Pope Anastasius II began his brief pontificate by attempting to
resolve the Acacian Schism. He dispatched papal legates to Constantinople to
discuss the situation with Emperor Anastasius II. The Pope was ready to offer
concessions — he would recognize all baptisms and ordinations performed by
Acacius. The condition, however, was the removal of Acacius’ name from the
diptychs. Whatever success the mission of the papal delegation might have had
was undercut by a second delegation sent to Constantinople by King Theodoric,
whose emissary Festus led Emperor Anastasius to believe that Rome might be
willing to accept the Henotikon if the reference to the Council of
Chalcedon were removed. In Constantinople negotiations were also opened between
members Sketches in the History of Monophysitism 99 of the Roman delegation and
representatives of the patriarch of Alexandria. The Alexandrians were also
conciliatory. Instead of attacking Pope Leo’s Tome directly, the
Alexandrians emphasized how it was prone to misunderstanding by the Nestorian
heretics. The mutual accusations of heresy were really not justified — it was
more a problem of language and interpretation. The Alexandrians put forth a
confession of their faith, a confession based on the Henotikon. "The
Only-Begotten Son of God was one whether in his miracles or indeed in his
sufferings." The Alexandrians pointed out that the acceptance of St. Cyril’s
Twelve Anathemas meant necessarily accepting Dioscorus, Timothy Aelurus, and
Peter Mongus, for they had been the guardians of St. Cyril’s thought. The Pope
must either prove a case against them or restore their names to the diptychs. In
this way a reestablishment of communion could take place.
The policy of Pope
Anastasius II had the support of the Roman senate and for a very important
reason. The Romans could not feel secure under their Germanic Arian overlords.
Theodoric might presently be conciliatory but the Romans remembered the policy
of Huneric (477-484) and Guntamund (484-496), a policy which was openly hostile
to the Catholics. And in Rome there always existed a pro-Byzantine or
pro-imperial party. The existence of a pro-Byzantine and a pro-Italian faction
in Rome was clearly exhibited after the death of Pope Anastasius II by a schism
between the pro-Anastasian and the pro-Gelasian factions, the former represented
by the archpriest Laurentius while the latter was represented by Pope Symmachus
(498-514). However, the conciliatory plans of Pope Anastasius II ceased with his
sudden death in 498, "struck dead by the divine will" according to the Liber
pontificalis. Indeed, it was this legend in the Liber pontificalis
which was responsible for spreading the notion of Pope Anastasius’ "apostasy," a
legend which reached its acme when Dante placed Pope Anastasius in the sixth
circle of the Inferno. Editorial comments in some of the editions of Dante which
claim that there is confusion between a pope and a Byzantine emperor are
erroneous. Dante writes:
On the edge of high
bank
formed by a circle
of broken rocks
we stood above a
more cruel pack;
and here because of
the horrible stench
which the deep
abyss exhales
we approached
behind the cover of a great tomb
on which I saw an
inscription saying,
"I hold Anastasius,
the pope,
whom Photinus drew
from the straight path."
The Photinus to
whom Dante refers is an historical person. The archbishop of Thessaloniki had
sent the deacon Photinus to Rome where Pope Anastasius received him well.
Photinus had been one of the more determined of the supporters of Acacius and
this caused deep resentment on the part of the pro-Gelasian faction in Rome.
Indeed, more than resentment — they separated from communion with Pope
Anastasius. Dante’s facts are correct. That Dante places Pope Anastasius in the
Inferno reveals how influential the pro-Gelasian faction was in its
influence on future Italian political and religious
thought.
The Papal Schism: Symmachus
and Laurentius.
The sudden death of Pope
Anastasius II brought on a contested papal election which led to bloodshed.
Again the Romans had to deal with the Ostrogothic Theodoric, the master of Italy
until 526. The pro-Gelasian faction elected the Sardinian deacon Symmachus
(498-514) at the Lateran. The pro-Byzantine and pro-Anastasian faction elected
the archpriest Laurentius at Mary Major. Both parties appealed to Theodoric who
decided in favor of Symmachus for basic reasons — Symmachus had received the
majority of votes, had been consecrated first, and was pro-Theodoric. Laurentius
conceded and was appointed bishop of Nocera. But Laurentius1 faction was not to
be easily stopped. They brought charges against Symmachus, charges of adultery
and of squandering church estates. Bloodshed began again — priests were
murdered, monasteries were burned, and nuns were abused. The Roman senate again
called upon Theodoric, who called for a council to settle the dispute. After the
policy of St. Gelasius, this scene in Rome indeed appears odd, for an heretical
and "foreign" king convoked a council to decide a dispute between contenders for
the papacy. Although it may appear odd, what took place was nothing more than
restoration of external order. Theodoric, the German Arian, merely structured
the situation so that a conflict could be resolved — he had nothing to do with
theological decisions of the see of Rome. Theodoric summoned Symmachus to
Ravenna for a second time but Symmachus, while en route to Ravenna, fled when he
thought he detected a trap. Symmachus’ flight infuriated Theodoric, who
immediately appointed Peter, bishop of Altinum to administer the property of the
Roman Church.
Symmachus had
agreed to appear before a council of Italian bishops summoned by Theodoric. The
council was to take place in the Sessorian Palace. On route to the Sessorian
Palace the papal party was attacked in the streets by the Laurentian faction.
Symmachus returned to St. Peter’s and refused to be moved. The scheduled council
finally took place in October of 501 under Symmachus, a council known as
synodus palmaris — named after the building in which it took place. Here
an extraordinary development occurred. Symmachus was acquitted without any
investigation because it was claimed that a council could not pass judgment on a
successor of St. Peter. Theodoric did not accept the results of the council and
permitted the return to Rome of the anti-pope Laurentius. For the next four
years Rome was the battleground of violence. The Laurentian faction managed to
gain control of most of the churches in Rome — but not St. Peter’s. The struggle
for the papacy entered the stage of a propaganda war with both sides writing
pamphlets. In the Libellus apologeticus pro Synodo IV Romana [Mansi 8,
274] the deacon Ennodius, later to be bishop of Pavia until his death in 521,
declared that the bishop of Rome is above every human court and responsible only
to God. This very vindication was adopted by the sixth Roman council under
Symmachus in 503. To justify the position taken at the council in 501 spurious
historical precedents were created which resulted in the famous Symmachan
Forgeries. Peace was finally restored in Rome through the efforts, strangely
enough, of an Alexandrian deacon by the name of Dioscorus. It was he who
efficaciously interceded with Theodoric to have the control of the churches in
Rome returned to Symmachus. Gradually the Laurentian faction began to support
Pope Symmachus. It was not until 506 that Pope Symmachus was able to clear
himself. By that time his attitude towards Constantinople was not conciliatory —
the Acacian Schism could be ended only by Constantinople’s recognition of the
demands made by Rome.
Patriarch Flavian of Antioch
and the Struggle with Philoxenus.
Trouble broke out again in
Antioch in 498. Flavian, formerly the apocrisiarius of the patriarch of Antioch
in Constantinople, became patriarch of Antioch. He is described as a man of
"feeble and vacillating character." At his election he was a declared
Monophysite but he later changed sides and announced his defense of the Council
of Chalcedon. The growing Monophysite party in Antioch was alarmed and quickly
reacted. Philoxenus took charge of the opposition to Flavian, denouncing him as
a Nestorian. Flavian responded by anathematizing Nestorius which led Philoxenus
to demand that he anathematize not only Nestorius but also Theodore, Theodoret,
and Ibas. The very raising of these three names together is interesting.
Philoxenus is reported to have declared: "If you do not condemn these, you may
anathematize Nestorius ten thousand times and still be a Nestorian." Flavian was
forced by imperial pressure to anathematize Theodore, Theodoret, and Ibas.
Philoxenus then demanded that Flavian condemn the Council of Chalcedon. He
flatly refused and Philoxenus and his followers withdrew from communion with
Flavian. Another schism in Antioch.
Patriarch
Macedonius of Constantinople and his
Encounter with
Philoxenus and Emperor Anastasius.
Philoxenus then
demanded the same anathemas from Patriarch Elias of Jerusalem and Patriarch
Macedonius of Constantinople. The new patriarch, Macedonius II (496-511), was
the nephew of the patriarch Gennadius. Though Macedonius was a Chalce-donian, he
signed the Henotikon. He now gave an evasive answer to Philoxenus which
the monks of the East interpreted as a refusal. Elias of Jerusalem’s response is
not known with certainty, for a document was circulated that was claimed to be
his. The document essentially was a condemnation of Chalcedon. But it is not
certain whether the document was authentic. If the document was authentic, there
is a contradiction with Elias’ later behavior. In 512 he was exiled for refusing
to communicate with Severus of Antioch. It is also claimed that among his last
words he declared he would "accuse the emperor before the throne" of God. If the
document was authentic, then Elias obviously had a change of
mind.
Patriarch
Macedonius vacillated initially but then his strength of character forced him to
take a stand and he stood with Chalcedon. Emperor Anastasius came to view
Macedonius as the obstacle to the restoration of peace — Macedonius’ fate became
clear. The emperor had resolved to have him deposed. The new personage among the
Monophysites and their most important theologian, Severus, brought charges
against Macedonius, the most serious theologically was the accusation that
Macedonius interpreted Scripture according to Nestorian exegetical
tradition.
He was also accused
of being responsible for the religious riots in Constantinople. One incident
took place in St. Sophia itself. During the celebration of the Eucharistic
liturgy the two factions within the choir shouted the rivaling versions of the
Trisagion Hymn, the result of which was a physical brawl in the church. None of
these accusations was able to sustain itself. Macedonius was then accused of
immorality, a charge that was quite difficult to prove because Macedonius was a
eunuch! It must be mentioned that the canons of the Church at this time
prevented eunuchs from being ordained. And yet this charge was not brought
against Macedonius. No evidence could be found that would allow for his
deposition. Zealots from the Monophysite faction attempted to murder Macedonius
in the street. Finally Emperor Anastasius simply ordered Macedonius to
anathematize the Council of Chalcedon and the doctrine of "two natures."
Macedonius responded by anathematizing everyone who did not accept Chalcedon and
the doctrine of "two natures." With this bold and courageous act Macedonius
sealed his fate. The emperor had him secretly arrested and exiled. Macedonius
was replaced as patriarch of Constantinople by Timothy of Antioch (511-517), a
Monophysite who introduced the altered version of the Trisagion Hymn into
regular use in the liturgy at Constantinople and placed the names of the
patriarchs of Alexandria in the diptychs.
Philoxenus’
Continued Struggle in Antioch.
With Macedonius
removed from the patriarchate of Constantinople and replaced by Timothy, the
Monophysites in Antioch took a bolder approach against Flavian, who,
incidentally, had voiced criticism over the exile of Macedonius. At Sidon in 512
the Monophysites held a local synod to depose Patriarch Flavian. Philoxenus, the
leader, had drawn up a list of seventy-seven anathemas which he demanded Flavian
sign. One of the anathemas was against the Council of Chalcedon "and all its
works." Philoxenus’ strategy, however, backfired. He frightened away the
moderate element within his group and the council broke up without any
resolution. Riots broke out in Antioch. Many of the rioters were Monophysite
monks. Flavian, caving in to fear, agreed to anathematize Chalcedon and the
"three names." But it was too late. His enemies were resolved now that no
concession should save him. Philoxenus appealed to the emperor for an edict of
deposition against Flavian. Before any response had arrived from the emperor,
the imperial governor of Antioch suggested that Flavian should leave the city
for his own safety and for "the sake of peace and order." No sooner was Flavian
beyond the gates of Antioch than his opponents elected a new patriarch. It was
none other than the most able man within the Monophysite movement, Severus. The
emperor completely approved of the election of Severus.
Severus of
Antioch.
It is not an
exaggeration that Severus of Antioch (patriarch from 512 until 518) is one of
the most important persons and the most important theologian of the
non-Chalcedonians. Severus arrived in Constantinople in 508 with three hundred
Palestinian monks to defend the theological interests of the non-Chalcedonians.
It appears from our sources that Severus’ arrival in Constantinople was directed
specifically against the work of Nephalius, a monk from Egypt who, once a
Monophysite, had become a staunch supporter of the Council of Chalcedon.
Zacharias refers to Nephalius as a "turbator populi" — an agitator of the
populace.
Severus came from a
distinguished Christian family. He was born in Sozopolis in Pisidia in
approximately 465. At the time of the Council of Ephesus in 431 Severus1
grandfather was bishop of Sozopolis and was one of the bishops who had deposed
Nestorius. Sozopolis, indeed, had been one of the central cities of the
Apollinarian Synousiasts in the 370’s, a theological group who held that
Christ’s body was "heavenly" or "from heaven." The Vita Severi by Zacharias
informs us that Severus was in love with philosophy and deeply influenced by
Libanius until he read St. Basil’s refutation of Libanius.
Along with his
older brother, Severus went to Alexandria to study in preparation for a legal
career. About 486 he left Alexandria for Berytus [Beirut] to study law under
Leontius. It was there that Severus fell under the influence of monasticism. He
apparently came into contact with the extremely influential Peter the Iberian —
we know that Peter visited the city in 488. Severus, much later in life while in
exile in Alexandria, mentions the influence that Peter the Iberian had on him.
He claims that he came to understand the "evil" and "the impiety" of Chalcedon
through Peter. "This communion I so hold, I so draw near, as I drew near in it
with the highest assurance and a fixed mind, when our holy father Peter of
Iberia was offering and was performing the rational sacrifice." Severus accepted
baptism, ruled out a profession in law in favor of a life of monasticism, and
went to Jerusalem. Athanasius Scriptor, the author of the Ethiopian Vita Seven,
tells us that Severus stayed at the monastery of Romanus near Eleutheropolis, a
monastery which was strongly anti-Chalcedonian. He thereafter spent time at
Peter’s monastery in Maiuma. Severus was ordained and then established his own
monastery near Maiuma. He now had dedicated all his learning and energy to the
anti-Chalcedonian cause.
Two Lives of
Severus are extant in Syriac, although they were originally written in Greek —
one by Zacharias [Scholasticus] which was written while Severus was patriarch of
Antioch; the other by John, abbot of the monastery of Beith-Aphthonia in Syria.
Zacharias’ Vita conveys a fascinating portrayal of the early and student
years of Severus. The main reason for such concentration on Severus’ student
years was to answer the accusation that Severus was at heart a philosopher,
virtually a pagan, and that Severus’ interest in Christianity was purely
intellectual, that during his life in Alexandria and in Berytus Severus had
shown no serious interest in the Christian faith.
In the 490’s the
Chalcedonians were in the majority in Palestine — this was mainly the result of
the influence of Patriarch Elias (494-516) and Sabas. The latter had been
responsible for the conversion of Saracen tribes living on the eastern borders
of Palestine. Severus refused to be in communion with
them.
In Constantinople
Severus wrote against the Eutychians and the Apollinarians. The Council of
Chalcedon had had one beneficial effect on the non-Chalcedonians — it revealed
to them that Apollinarius and Eutyches, and any theological tendency in that
direction, failed to explain adequately the mystery of salvation. The effect was
to bring serious theologians such as Severus, Philoxenus, and Peter the Iberian
to reject the extremist faction of the Monophysite faction. Severus concentrated
on interpreting the theology of St. Cyril, especially in his important
Philalethes. The most interesting portrayal of the personality of Severus
comes from his letters, and his theology is seen more vividly through his
sermons than through his theological works. For example, in his Sermon on
Epiphany in 516 Severus exclaims:
"Let us not accept the
miracles so as to destroy and suppress the flesh, nor the human actions and
voluntary poverty to deny and diminish the divinity. Let us return this
semi-heritage to those who are man-worshippers or Docetists and who in their
malevolence and impiety cause division. As for us, we move along the middle of
the royal road, turning our face away from the tortuous sins on one side or the
other, and knowing that he who lives on the heights and dwells by nature in
grandeur is worthy of the God who ‘emptied himself to become the author of our
salvation."
The Monophysites
appeared to be triumphant. Yet there was an uneasiness felt by Emperor
Anastasius, for a pro-Chalcedonian sentiment was increasing precisely where it
mattered most politically and militarily — the provinces of Europe, especially
Thrace. The commander of the military forces in Thrace happened to be the godson
of the deposed Flavian — Vitalian the Goth. Not long after Severus had been
consecrated patriarch of Antioch, Vitalian the Goth
revolted.
The Revolt of
Vitalian the Goth.
In addition to his
protest on behalf of his troops who had been allegedly denied provisions by
Hypatius, Vitalian the Goth revolted for religious reasons. He claimed to
represent the pro-Chalcedonians who were infuriated over the new form of the
Trisagion Hymn. Moreover, Vitalian wanted to rectify the deposition of
both Flavian and Macedonius. In his first assault on Constantinople Vitalian
occupied the suburbs. Emperor Anastasius immediately sent out the distinguished
officer, Patricius, to speak with Vitalian who clearly mentioned the two reasons
for his revolt: to rectify the injustice of Hypatius towards his troops and to
obtain a commitment to retain the orthodox creed. Vitalian was invited to enter
the city to discuss the matter with the emperor but he wisely declined. Instead,
he sent his officers to meet with Anastasius, who bribed them with gifts and
promised them everything they wanted, including a settlement of the religious
questions based on the position of the Church of Rome. When his officers
returned, Vitalian had little option but to withdraw his troops. Anastasius
replaced Hypatius with an experienced officer named Cyril, who at once marched
toward the area to which Vitalian had withdrawn. Suspecting that Cyril had been
ordered to kill him, Vitalian was prepared and struck first, killing Cyril.
After achieving many victories over the imperial forces of Anastasius and
seizing approximately two hundred vessels in the ports of Thrace, Vitalian
appeared again in the suburbs of Constantinople. The emperor again sent out
envoys to negotiate with Vitalian. This time Vitalian extracted a serious
commitment — the restoration of peace in the Church was to be established by the
convocation of an ecumenical council which was to be held in Heraclea in the
following year. Vitalian made certain that the Church of Rome would be
represented and it was agreed that both he and the emperor would communicate
with Pope Hormisdas (514-523). The Monophysite or non-Chalcedonian control over
the eastern churches in essence depended on the emperor, who was in 514 in his
late seventies.
Negotiations Between Pope
Hormisdas
and Emperor Anastasius.
Letters with Pope Hormisdas
were actually exchanged. The date for the council was set for the first of July
in 515. It did not take place. Emperor Anastasius met an inflexible negotiator
in Pope Hormisdas. A papal delegation was sent to Constantinople — Ennodius of
Pavia was one of the delegates — with precise instructions from Pope Hormisdas
on how to deal with the emperor’s proposal for a council, so precisely that Pope
Hormisdas wrote the entire script from which they were not to deviate. The
previous experience of sending papal legates, as with the case of Misenus, was
not to be repeated. Although the terms would be unacceptable to the emperor, the
Acacian Schism would be resolved four years later precisely on the grounds laid
down by Pope Hormisdas in 515. The council must recognize unequivocally the
Council of Chalcedon and the Tome of Pope Leo as the norm of orthodoxy; the
emperor’s letter requesting the signatures of the bishops must state this
condition without qualification; all bishops must make a formal profession of
orthodoxy in their churches and must also condemn by name the leaders of
Monophysitism; the bishops must, in the presence of witnesses, sign a formula
containing a definition of faith drawn up by papal notaries; the cases of exiled
bishops must be examined anew by the Roman see; and those bishops accused of
persecuting the orthodox would be judged by the Pope.
Pope Hormisdas was
ready to come to Constantinople if his presence was deemed necessary. But the
emperor began to temporize and attempted to stir up the Roman senate against
Pope Hormisdas. The legates returned with nothing accomplished. Pope Hormisdas
put the matter on hold but, meanwhile, pro-Chalcedonians were contacting the
Roman see — forty Illyrian bishops appealed to Rome for reconciliation. Two
years later another resolution was attempted. This time Pope Hormisdas made his
terms more difficult for Constantinople. In his Letter 11 Pope Hormisdas
wrote that, in addition to the terms previously laid down, the new terms were
that everything ever written by Pope Leo on the faith must be accepted as
authoritative, that not only the name of Acacius but also the names of
Euphemius, Macedonius, and "all those vho had died out of Catholic communion"
must be anathematzed. Emperor Anastasius rejected the proposed solution. During
ths time the Monophysite factions, still having the support of the enperor, were
able to inflict some suffering on the pro-Chalcedonims, especially in the more
eastern areas. At this point, however, Emperor Anastasius died. The next emperor
was to be the orthodo: Prefect of the Praetorian Guard, Justin
I.
The Accession to
the Throne of Justin I and Justinian I.
Emperor Anastasius
died inearly July in 518 with no children. Justin, the Macedonian peasait who
rose to his high military position, was chosen Emperor Justin I (518-527) and
immediately brought his nephew, Justinian (518-565), into the imperial
government — it was Justinian who was responsible for most of the policy even
during he reign of his uncle exclusive of the military policy. An abrupt change
in ecclesiastical policy was about to take place. Only a few weeks after the
accession of Justin and Justinian a scene took place at Hagia Sophia, the
details of which are related in Mansi 8, 1057 ff.
The Chalcedonian
Reaction in Constantinople.
The church was
packed for a Saturday evening service, packed with zealots from the Qalcedonian
party, both monks and laity. The patriarch, John of Cappadocia, was met with
shouts from the congregation. "Recogrize the four councils! Long live the
Emperor! Expel Severus the Nanichee! Long live the Patriarch! Cast out the new
Judas! St. Wary is Theotokos! He who denies this is a Manichee!" The
patriach asked for silence so the service could be performed but the shoits
continued. "You shall not leave until you have anathematized Severus and
recognized the councils!" Patriarch John, who had signed the Henotikon,
was finally forced to proclaim the four councils from the ambo. But this did not
satisfy the congregition. "Anathematize Severus! You shall not come down until
you have anathematized that heretic! Unless we have an answer, we will stay here
all night!" The patriarch, in a state of panic ai the source relates, consulted
with the other bishops who were present at the service. The patriarch finally
proclaimed that "everyone knows that Severus has separated himself from the
Church and, therefore, since he is condemned by the canons, of course he is
anathema."
Those orchestrating
the demonstration were not content to let the matter rest here. The service was
completed but the next day the liturgy was interrupted by similar shouts. "Bring
back those exiled! Destroy the bones of Nestorius and Eutyches! Cast out the
Manichees! Cast out both Stephens! Expel Severus, the Judas! St. Mary is
Theotokos! Anathema to all who deny it!" Once again the patriarch
proclaimed adherence to the Council of Chalcedon but the congregation would not
permit the service to continue until the diptychs were altered, until the name
of Severus was removed. The patriarch finally scratched out the name of Severus
from the diptychs and announced this to the congregation. For more than an hour
commotion continued in the church. Finally, during a pause from the
congregation, ostensibly from exhaustion, one of the clerics began to sing the
Trisagion and the choir joined in. The remainder of the service then
continued in an orderly manner. The patriarch explained the event to the other
patriarchs by writing that the action of the congregation was obviously
"divinely inspired." John of Jerusalem replied that he rejoiced in the anathema
of Severus.
The Chalcedonian
Reaction in Antioch.
The Chalcedonians
in Antioch were also active. They wrote to the patriarch of Constantinople to
petition the emperor to remove Severus. "He is a wolf, not a shepherd, a heretic
and murderer, who turns Jews loose on the faithful and massacres them. Did we
not see their bodies lying on the roads?" Some monks accused Severus of every
imaginable crime and sin. Severus was aware of what was taking place. He was not
overly surprised by the volte-face of John of Jerusalem, for whom he never had
much respect. In one of his letters Severus writes that the only reason John was
made patriarch of Jerusalem was because of his "unstable"
character.
Justinian’s
Negotiations with Pope Hormisdas.
The Chalcedonian
zealots had to wait, for Justinian’s priority was to resolve the schism with
Rome. Justinian had already exchanged letters with Pope Hormisdas, clearly
indicating to the Pope what his intentions were. Pope Hormisdas replied (Letter
28) that Justinian knew what the terms were. "Reconciliation is desired, of
course, but — on terms. What my terms are, you know, for they were written down
a year ago and will not change." In his letter Justinian, who also sought a
reconciliation with the non-Chalcedonians, wrote: "We accept Chalcedon. We honor
the memory of Leo. We read your name in the diptychs. Is that not enough?" Pope
Hormisdas was inflexible. Either Acacius was to be condemned or there would be
no reunion. Justinian was not in a position to negotiate because his goal was
the reconquest of Italy, a goal that would be sorely difficult to realize
without the support of the Bishop of Rome. Hormisdas, on the other hand, had
nothing to lose because Theodoric’s rule was tolerant and his position was
stable as pope. Moreover, there was always the possibility that a reunion with
the emperor could bring at some future date more theological heresy into the
Church, a fact of which Hormisdas was well aware. At this juncture the tolerant
and stable rule under the Germanic Arians seemed preferable to union with the
patriarchal sees under imperial rule precisely because of the theological
turmoil in the East and because of the unpredictability of the orthodoxy of the
emperors. A new emperor could mean a change in theological
perspective.
Justinian wrote
Hormisdas again, assuring him he would do everything in his power to meet the
demands of the pope. He invited Hormisdas to Constantinople. Hormisdas declined
but sent a delegation of five — the bishops Germanus and John; the priest
Blandus; and two deacons, Felix and Dioscorus. The power of the delegation seems
to have rested with the deacon Dioscorus, for it is he who corresponds with
Hormisdas. The instructions given to these five state that they were not to
negotiate. Rather, they were there to present the terms. Hormisdas was only
willing to concede on one issue and that was not to condemn openly Macedonius
and Euphemius if their names were removed from the diptychs. Pope Hormisdas’
letter to John, patriarch of Constantinople, was direct. "Do not attempt to
defend condemned men like Acacius. Rather, remove yourself from all contact with
heresy by anathematizing both him and his successors."
The Roman
delegation arrived in Constantinople in March of 519 to a bountiful reception.
Justinian, his generals, and the senate met the delegates ten miles from the
city and escorted them into the city. The patriarch John accepted the Roman
demands but, only after some discussion, signed the Libellus Hormisdae in
the presence of the emperor, the senate, and the papal legates. It should be
mentioned that Patriarch John was the first bishop of Constantinople to use the
title of "Ecumenical Patriarch," a fact which Rome ignored at this
time.
The Libellus
Hormisdae contained statements that no bishop of the East had ever
previously signed.The words are the words of the Bishop of Rome but he requires
that the bishops of the East sign them. The "formula," as it was signed by
Patriarch John, was as follows in its most significant
sections.
"The first point of
salvation is that we should keep the rule of right faith and in no way deviate
from the tradition of the Fathers. For it is not possible to bypass the
determination of our Lord Jesus Christ who said, ‘Thou art Peter and on this
rock I will build my Church.’ These words are proven by their effects, for in
the apostolic see the Catholic religion is always kept inviolable. Desiring,
therefore, not to fall from this faith, and following in all things the
ordinances of the Fathers, we anathematize all heresies, but especially the
heretic Nestorius … and, together with him, we anathematize Eutyches and
Dioscorus … who were condemned in the holy Council of Chalcedon, which we
venerate and follow and embrace ... we anathematize Timothy the parricide,
surnamed the Cat, and likewise condemning his disciple and follower in all
things, Peter [Mongus] of Alexandria, we likewise anathematize Acacius, formerly
Bishop of Constantinople, who became their accomplice and follower, and those,
moreover, who persevere in their communion and fellowship, for if any one
embraces the communion of these persons, he falls under a similar judgment of
condemnation with them. In like manner we also condemn and anathematize Peter of
Antioch with his followers and with all those who have been mentioned above
[this is the clause modified by the papal legates so John would not have to
anathematize Euphemius and Macedonius]. Wherefore we approve and embrace all the
epistles of blessed Leo, Pope of the city of Rome, which he wrote concerning the
right faith. On which account, as we have said before, following in all things
the apostolic see, we preach all things which have been declared by her
deceased. And consequently I hope that I shall be in one communion with you, the
communion which the apostolic see preaches, in which is the whole and perfect
solidarity of the Christian religion, promising for the future that at the
celebration of the holy mysteries there shall be no mention made of the names of
those who have been separated from the communion of the Catholic Church; that
is, of those who do not agree in all things with the apostolic
see…"
Before signing this
John insisted on prefacing it, after the usual exchange of brotherly greetings,
with: "When I received your letter, I rejoiced at the spiritual love of your
holiness because you are seeking to unite the most holy churches of God
according to the ancient tradition of the Fathers, and in the spirit of Christ
you are hastening to drive away those who have been tearing the rational flock.
Know, then, most holy one, that... I also, loving peace, renounce all the
heretics repudiated by you, for I hold the most holy churches of your elder and
of our new Rome to be one Church, and I define that see of the Apostle Peter and
this of the imperial city to be one see." John then expresses his complete
agreement to everything that was done at the Four Ecumenical Councils and
denounces all those who have disturbed these councils. It is then that he adopts
and makes his own the words of the papal formula. In this preface John managed
to modify somewhat the claims of the Roman see, for by identifying the old and
new Rome he in essence allowed the see of Constantinople to share in the
privileges which in the Libellus Hormisdae were reserved for die see of
Rome.
In the Libellus
Hormisdae there was a condemnation of Acacius and his successors and also of
emperors Zeno and Anastasius. It was, however, difficult for John to persuade
the Pontic and Asian themes to accept all the demands — they were especially
sensitive about condemning those who had died, an issue which will be raised
again at the Fifth Ecumenical Council concerning the posthumous condemnation of
Theodore, Theodoret, and Ibas. Justinian explained this situation to Hormisdas
in a letter. "A considerable part of the Eastern bishops could not be compelled,
even by the use of fire and sword, to condemn the names of the bishops who died
after Acacius." Epiphanius had succeeded John as patriarch of Constantinople and
he also wrote about the same situation. "Very many of the holy bishops of Pontus
and Asia and, above all, those referred to as of the Orient, found it to be
difficult and even impossible to expunge the names of their former bishops …
they were prepared to brave any danger rather than commit such a deed." The
Emperor Justin also wrote on the same subject and mentions "the threats and
persuasions" employed to induce the clergy and laity of these dioceses to agree
to the removal of the names. But they, he writes, "esteem life harder than
death, if they should condemn those, when dead, whose life, when they were
alive, was the glory of their people." Justin then urges the Pope to soften his
demands "in order to unite everywhere the venerable churches, and especially the
Church of Jerusalem, on which church all bestow their good will, as being the
mother of the Christian name, so that no one dares to separate himself from that
church." In his response to the emperor the pope urges the emperor to use force
to compel union and uniformity. The pope also wrote to Patriarch Epiphanius and
empowered him to act on his behalf in the East — whoever was admitted to
communion with the Church of Constantinople was to be considered in communion
with the Church of Rome. The pope inserted a brief declaration of faith in which
there is no mention of the prerogatives of the see of Rome. What in actuality
transpired was that in the end the pope did not press the claims for his see
which he had previously made and left the matter in the hands of
Epiphanius.
The Roman see was,
as it were, incapable of understanding a complexity of the theological
controversy. There were many Chalcedonians in the East who also accepted the
belief that "One of the Holy Trinity suffered in the flesh," a belief that was
in accordance with St. Cyril’s Twelfth Anathema that "God the Logos
suffered in the flesh." This theological position, known as the "Theopaschite
Formula" was completely consistent with the essence of the definition of
faith as given at the Council of Chalcedon. This formula did not contain the
Monophysite "who was crucified for us." This theological position revealed the
incipient doctrine of "enhypostasis" a theological perspective that
seemed to baffle Rome. There was discussion about this in Constantinople even
before the papal legates arrived, a fact we know from Dioscorus’ correspondence
with Pope Hormisdas. The monks took an active role in this theological position,
especially the Scythian monks. The acceptance of the Theopaschite Formula
included a full acceptance of the humanity, of the human nature, of Christ,
without in any way implying that the human nature had its own hypostasis, its
own person. One person, the Divine Logos, who was the possessor of two natures —
of the Divine nature from eternity; of the human nature from conception. This
one Divine Person, the center of union and unity in Jesus Christ, experienced
the life of Divine nature and the life of the human nature. The Eternal Divine
Person who became man experienced man’s suffering. From June of 519 on Pope
Hormisdas had been hearing troublesome things about the Scythian monks who held
this view. In his correspondence with Pope Hormisdas Dioscorus referred to them
as being "enflamed by the devil," as opponents of the "prayers of all
Christians," and as being led by a "false abbot," Maxentius. Dioscorus also
related that they were anti-Roman, which seems to be accurate. Several
discussions took place between these monks and the papal legates, discussions
ordered to take place by Justinian. Nothing was resolved at these discussions.
Finally Maxentius left with a group of his monks for Rome in the summer of 519,
taking with them a letter that outlined the contemporary theological thought in
Constantinople. In July of 519 Justinian warned Pope Hormisdas in a letter that
union and peace would not occur without a quick and favorable response to the
monks. It is significant that Pope Hormisdas at first received Maxentius’
Libellus and approved of it "before the witness of the bishops, laity,
and senate of Rome." He then had second thoughts and finally rejected it and the
Theopaschite Formula — it seems not so much for theological
reasons as for the simple reason that it seemed "new." In Constantinople the
papal legates were revealing their lack of familiarity with theological
doctrine. They were also tactless and became quite unpopular. Moreover, and most
importantly, they were perceived as representatives of a "foreign theology."
Here again one senses the influence of Pope Leo’s Tome and his inability
to set forth a notion and definition of person. Here the tragedy of Chalcedon
and its incompleteness is laid bare.
Pope Hormisdas
received the letter of John and one from Justinian relatively late. By the time
Hormisdas responded in July of 519 he wrote of an "abominable sedition" inspired
by the bishop of Thessaloniki, Dorotheus It was clear to Hormisdas that even
Constantinople’s acceptance of his terms did not mean that other cities within
the empire would follow. He was primarily concerned about Alexandria and
Antioch. Justin suggested that Antioch be handled first and urged the position
of patriarch of Antioch on Dioscorus, the Roman deacon. Hormisdas was opposed to
the idea because he had Dioscorus in mind for the see of Alexandria. "Antioch,"
Hormisdas wrote, "would be a completely new area for you, but Alexandria you
know from the past and you would be exactly the person to bring those people to
order." Nothing came of this situation with Alexandria, for Justin was not
willing to risk an Egyptian rebellion. Antioch presented a different
situation.
The Imperial Edict
Compelling Acceptance
of Chalcedon and the Arrest Order for
Severus.
An imperial edict was drawn
up which specifically omitted Egypt. In this edict to the "orient" it was
decreed that all bishops must accept Chalcedon or give up their sees. The
imperial authorities obviously realized what Severus’ character was like, for it
issued an order for his arrest — he was obviously not the type of person to
change his theological positions at imperial command. The arrest order was
entrusted to Vitalian, the former leader of the revolts against Anastasius and
now the comes orientis. The Chronicon Edessenum speaks of a "purge" in
Antioch in 518-519, a "purge" against the anti-Chalcedonians. Because of
Vitalian’s special relationship with Flavian, Vitalian harbored hatred for
Severus. Vitalian, however, was murdered before he could execute his order.
Severus fled to Egypt along with his friend Julian of Halicarnassus. Philoxenus
was caught and sentenced to exile in Gangra.
The see of Antioch
was considered vacant. All churches were "confiscated" or appropriated for the
use of those who accepted Chalcedon. Paul, a "presbyter" of Constantinople and
known historically as Paul the Jew, was elevated to the patriarchal see of
Antioch. Constantinople attempted to consecrate Paul in the imperial city but
the papal legates opposed it, urging that he should be consecrated in Antioch
itself "in accordance with ancient tradition" and to avoid a repeat of the
result of a former consecration in Constantinople of a bishop for the Antiochene
see. The sources claim that his cruelty to the Monophysites in Edessa made him
infamous — monks were put to death if they refused to conform. Philoxenus in one
of his letters claims that Paul was resisted strongly and that the "people"
cried out for his martyrdom. Accusations of a moral nature were made against
Paul, forcing either his resignation or deposition. He was followed by
Euphrasius, who was, according to Monophysite sources, a "mild" and "generous"
man — pro-Chalcedonian sources refer to him as a "weakling." He held the
bishopric for five years during which peace returned to the area. It is reported
in the sources that he and "the wicked Aesculapius" perished in the earthquake
of 526. Euphrasius’ successor, Ephraem of Amida, had been the comes orientis
previous to his consecration. He distinguished himself in the position of civil
service with relief work after the earthquake. It is claimed that his
consecration was the reward for his diligent work as a civil servant. Justinian
had decided to apply more force against these anti-Chalcedonian monks and the
reliable Ephraem was quite willing to help — he renewed the policy of
Paul.
The claim by
Michael the Syrian in his Chronicle (9, 13) that the entire reign of
Justin was one of persecution is not such an exaggeration. The persecution was
primarily directed against the anti-Chalcedonian monks and their communities —
especially in Syria in the areas where Syriac was the language of the Church.
Philoxenus realized that the final separation had come. Any attempt to
reinterpret the Henotikon in Chalcedonian terms was nothing more than an
attempt to restore the "impure doctrine of Nestorius." Any question of
intercommunion with the Chalcedonians was out of the question. In his
Confession of Faith, written before he died in 523, Philoxenus wrote that
"a curse was upon that council and on all who agreed with it" — an eternal
curse.
At the end of the
reign of Justin I it is claimed that the edict proclaiming adherence to the
Council of Chalcedon was obeyed — exclusive of Egypt, of course, where no
serious attempt was made. Approximately fifty-five bishops refused and these
were either deposed or exiled. The anti-Chalcedonian monks either fled to Egypt
or endured persecution. The laity was a different matter. There is an
interesting revelation in the Vita of John Tella. The majority in his
congregation believed in obedience to imperial law, yet they did not accept
Chalcedon — for the time being Chalcedon must be accepted. Hence, Justin and
Justinian may have been able to have imposed an external order of Chalcedonian
support but it could not truly evaluate the sentiments of the populace, a
populace intimidated by the possibility of persecution if they
acted.
John of
Tella.
Opposition was,
however, still alive in the work of John of Tella, a monk and Monophysite
zealot. He had been a monk from a very early age — to the chagrin of his mother.
He remained in a cell with no interest in accepting any clerical position —
several were offered to him. His biographer relates that John was warned in a
vision that the day would come when the Church would need bishops "who will
suffer and who will not be moved by either threat or bribe." After this vision
John accepted ordination. His biographer also stresses his excessive gift of
tears. When Severus fled to Egypt, he appointed John of Tella as his
representative. John did not disappoint Severus, for he travelled around the
provinces in rags organizing the non-Chalcedonians. At one point he had as many
as eight co-workers. Gradually, however, they were all captured — but not John,
who had gained the sympathy of both the country people and the officials. Those
bishops who had accepted Chalcedon at the order of the imperial edict and who
were not at heart Chalcedonians welcomed the arrival of John of Tella. These
bishops refused to ordain anyone in a non-Chalcedonian faith, but they allowed
John of Tella to ordain whomever he pleased.
From the imperial
perspective the external order revealed that the only Monophysite bishops were
in Egypt, in Persia, or hidden away in some of the far eastern monasteries. It
appeared as though the imperial edict had stopped the proliferation of
Monophysite ordinations. But that was not the true reflection of reality, for
there were Monophysite priests in most places and numerous men who desired that
ordination which had been prohibited by imperial law. An "underground" Church
had come into existence and was to increase surreptitiously. The activity of
John of Tella finally became known to the imperial authorities. John was able to
negotiate a "safe conduct" assurance from the emperor and, under that condition,
he appeared in Constantinople for an audience with the emperor. He was requested
to cease and desist from his activity, to which request John flatly refused —
his obedience, he exclaimed, was to God, not to the
emperor.
Persecution of
non-Chalcedonians in Edessa.
The general
imperial policy was to wait until a bishopric became vacant and then fill that
spot with a pro-Chalcedonian. Edessa was an example. It is claimed that the
bishop died out of shame for accepting Chalcedon. A pro-Chalcedonian,
Aesculapius, was quickly nominated and immediately unleashed a severe
persecution on the anti-Chalcedonians, forcing "stylites" down from their
pillars and expelling monks by calling on the force of the imperial military.
The monks of approximately ten neighboring monasteries refused to commune with
the bishop or to attend his services during the Christmas Lent. By Christmas
only one monastery still had monks — and that one had only ten monks remaining.
The monks, the sources relate, fled into the desert, there supporting themselves
for six years until Theodora returned them to their
monasteries.
In 537 Ephraem, the
bishop of Edessa, was successful in catching John Telia — with the help of the
Persians who were to receive a reward. The Persians were able to track John
down, found him in a hermit’s cave, and brought him to Nisibis. The reward
offered by Ephraem was slow in coming and during the wait John and his Persian
guards became friendly. Indeed, the Persians were surprised that the man they
had expended so much energy to track down was no more than a religious monk. The
Persians could understand John’s lament that he was persecuted only because he
had refused to change his religion at the command of die emperor. Moreover, the
Persians offered to release him for a fee — but for much less than what Ephraem
had offered. John had no access to money. When the reward finally came from
Ephraem, the Persians felt it their duty to surrender John in accordance with
the agreement. John was taken across the border to Dara where John and Ephraem
entered theological discussions which resolved nothing. John was later brought
to Antioch and confined in a monastery there — with four other monks in his
cell, a situation which was not all that ominous. However, two of the monks were
hand picked Chalcedonians, one of whom was a known persecutor. Theologically
John held that "Christ was completely with the Father, as God, and completely
with his mother, as man," that there was a union of the natures, a union that
was neither "confused" nor "changed." He’rejected Eutyches totally. The Lord was
"of one nature which became Incarnate without change" and the Lord was like us
"in all things except sin." When he professed that the there is "an ineffable
and incomprehensible union of two" natures, that the Lord is perfect God and
perfect Man, his opponents thought he had recanted. "He has joined us. He has
renounced his heresy," his opponents declared. On hearing this, the sources
claim that John became indignant, declaring: "God forbid that I should abandon
St. Cyril and … bring shame upon the Church!" Yet the rumor was quickly spread
that John had recanted. Ephraem came in person to receive him back in the faith,
only to be stunned when he encountered John, who declared: "If Severus, my
patriarch, were to confess two natures after the union, I would
anathematize him." This entire episode is a mirrored image of the entire
controversy and imprecision of the language used by both sides. This
tragedy led to nothing but struggle, controversy, and suffering for the next
centuries. John died in 538, "praying for the peace of the Church and for those
who had persecuted him."
Persecution was
real, yet it was limited and sporadic. The very policy of Ephraem gives an
insight into the actual state of affairs. His imperial orders were to bring
about conformity to Chalcedon, and for this purpose the power of the empire was
placed at his disposal. He had the power and authority to break up monasteries,
to depose bishops, to exile recalcitrants, and to replace anti-Chalcedonian
civil servants. But there was, it appears, a certain boundary beyond which he
was not to tread — there was no official policy of a deliberate infliction of
death, despite the aberrations that took place. Moreover, two places of refuge
existed — Egypt and Constantinople itself, even the special monastic arrangement
in the imperial palace itself, an arrangement provided by Theodora. Exile in
Egypt was in a real sense a "coming home," a place where a Monophysite could
live, breathe, and work.
Severus’
Activity in Exile.
In exile in Egypt
Severus was extremely active. Initially Severus’ perspective was depressed,
bleak. But his mood changed. A "Standing Council of Bishops" was established in
Alexandria, a council which kept abreast of all that was taking place elsewhere
in the empire, a council that continued to exhort and encourage the
anti-Chalcedonians to remain firm. Severus continued to give instructions for
his diocese from Alexandria, instructions which concerned not only general
exhortations or general policy but also detailed specifics on individual cases
brought to his attention. His letters are filled with his response to the life
of the Church. He expressed himself quite frankly when he heard that Rome had
rejected the Theopaschite Formula, for Severus’ theological thought was
more sophisticated than that at Rome and Severus knew that Rome would never
understand the difference between Divine essence and the Divine hypostases.
Severus was not anti-Roman. His objection to the Council of Chalcedon was
theological, not ecclesiastical nor political. Indeed, he often quotes Pope
Julius and refers to him as the "spiritual and unshakable tower of the Church of
the Romans." His concern was that the definition of faith at the Council of
Chalcedon nowhere mentioned "the One Incarnate Nature of the Divine Logos,"
nowhere mentioned the "hypostatic union." Rather, Chalcedon, in his view, had
taken its doctrine of "in two natures, perfect, undivided and unconfused"
directly from Nestorius. For Severus, after the Incarnation there was "one
nature out of two" and the very fact that Chalcedon did not include this
doctrine rendered it and Pope Leo’s Tome blasphemous. How could Leo
believe that the Incarnate Logos could die "in two natures?" Which nature had
been nailed to the cross? The doctrine of "two natures" after the
Incarnation was what made Leo a "blasphemer" and a "pillar of heterodoxy."
Severus considered Leo’s Tome "Jewish." One of his most penetrating
attacks on Leo’s Tome is in his Letter to Count Oecumenius. Severus was
no instigator against the empire for the sake of regional ethnicism. His letters
portray him as one who had respect for the emperor and loyalty to the empire. He
was a sophisticated cosmopolitan. He was not antagonistic towards Rome or its
primacy. He was theologically opposed to Pope Leo’s Tome and the Council of
Chalcedon because he believed they were the vehicles of heresy. Severus
nourished himself on the works of St. Athanasius, the Cappadocians, and St.
Cyril of Alexandria.
The Controversy
Between Severus
and Julian of Halicarnassus.
Severus’ friend,
Julian of Halicarnassus, fled with him to Egypt. In Alexandria their speculation
on the the nature of the flesh of the Logos, an argument among the
anti-Chalcedonians from the beginning, brought the two friends into a
controversy, a controversy which was to prove divisive among the Monophysites.
Their theological dispute began in their initial letters in a friendly vein,
only to become increasingly more heated as the controversy became more serious,
the result of which was a breach of friendship between Severus and
Julian.
Julian claimed that
the flesh of Christ was incorruptible from the moment of conception. Julian was
opposed to Eutyches but his line of thought led him in a similar direction —
indeed, similar to Apollinarius Julian viewed the controversy in terms of
Christ’s susceptibility to human sin. In maintaining that Christ’s flesh was
incorruptible — άφθαρτος — Julian became the principal spokesman of
aphthartodocetism — Christ’s passion and death were real but were the
result of a free and completely volition act of his will — κατ ‘ οίκονομίαν or
κατά χάριν, a freedom of action which allowed Christ to confer passivity on his
naturally incorruptible flesh. In addition to his letters to Severus on this
subject, Julian wrote four works against the position of Severus, numerous
fragments of which have survived in Syriac and Greek. Julian’s vision is based
on his doctrine of original sin, a doctrine not completely different in nature
from that of St. Augustine. For Julian the sexual act was the vehicle through
which sin and corruption, the complete corruption of the human body and flesh,
were transmitted from generation to generation. Severus’s view was different. He
argued that the flesh is not the source of sin (Homily123; Homily
75; Homily 68). Although he maintained that virginity was better, Severus
spoke out strongly for the blessed nature of marriage. In Homily 121
Severus writes that there is nothing more loved by God than "the union of flesh
in marriage, from which union likewise comes the love for children." This is in
reference to his comparison of the union of the soul and Christ. He even claims
that if a better analogy had been possible, then the Gospels would have used it.
Severus refuses to equate the original sin with sex (Homily 119), even
claiming that the flesh or body participates in the joy and pleasure of the
soul’s contemplation — theoria — to the extent that even "the bones of
man" are penetrated by it. Even prior to his controversy with Julian Severus had
argued against Eutyches in Homily 63 that the flesh is not defiled by
nature but by sin and sin comes forth from the soul or mind of man, not from die
body. Hence, in his Incarnation God the Logos was in no way defiled, soiled, or
touched by sin. The belief of the indestructibleness and incorruptibility of the
flesh became the central focus of the Julianists, who were given the name of
Aphthartodocetists and Fantasiasts by their opponents. The followers of Julian
applied the word Phthartolartians to the followers of Severus. For Julian
redemption was uncertain if God the Logos assumed a body that was subject to
corruption — φθορά. Harnack saw in the thought of Julian of Halicarnassus the
logical development of the Greek patristic doctrine of redemption, a
conclusion which does not necessarily follow from the thought of the Greek
fathers. "We cannot therefore avoid seeing in Aphthartodoketism," writes
Harnack, "the logical development of the Greek doctrine of salvation, and we are
all the more forced so to regard it that Julian expressly and ex necessitate
fidei acknowledged the homoousia of the body of Christ with our body at the
moment when the Logos assumed it, and rejected everything of the nature of a
heavenly body so far as its origin was concerned." Harnack’s evaluation of
Severus and his followers is more accurate. "In opposition to this view the
Severians laid so much stress on the relation of the sufferings of Christ to the
human side of Christ’s nature in order to rid them of anything doketic, that no
Western could have more effectively attacked doketism than they
did."
From this
controversy between Severus and Julian the divisiveness within the
anti-Chalcedonian movement was laid bare and the foundation of further factions
was established. Severus realized quite well the damage to the cause. The result
was mutual anathemas. The monks and the Eutychians in Alexandria supported
Julian strenuously. In his Chronicle (9, 21) Michael the Syrian relates that
Gaianus, the disciple of Julian, had the support of the wealthy and was in
contention for the position of patriarch of Alexandria.
The Imperial Edict Against
Arians
and the Reaction of Theodoric.
Pope Hormisdas1 successor,
Pope St. John I (523-526), found himself caught up in a political contest
between the imperial rulers in Constantinople and Theodoric. The resolution of
the Acacian Schism was followed a year later by an imperial edict which closed
all Arian churches in Constantinople. Moreover, all Arians were dismissed from
imperial service. Theodoric, the Germanic Arian rex of Italy, retaliated — his
policy towards the Catholics in Italy would no longer be tolerant if this
imperial edict remained in force. Theodoric summoned Pope John I to Ravenna and
ordered him to head an embassy to Constantinople to obtain a cessation of the
new imperial edict against Arians. In addition, those Arians who had been
compelled by force to renounce Arianism were to be allowed to revert to their
former faith. Pope John I agreed to negotiate on behalf of the first request but
rejected the second. He was welcomed in Constantinople with great honor in 525 —
it is claimed that the "entire city" came out to greet him with candles and
crosses. It is also claimed that Emperor Justin I prostrated himself before Pope
John "as though John were Peter in person." What takes place with this visit by
Pope John is historically important. He celebrates the Christmas liturgy and,
moreover, Justin I allowed himself to be crowned for a second time. This
precedent would be remembered. It was as though the coronation performed by the
patriarch was not sufficient. John remained in Constantinople for five months.
He was successful in restoring the Arian churches. He also celebrated Easter in
St. Sophia, occupying a throne above that of the patriarch. Theodoric suspected
that a conspiracy was underway, a conspiracy which would have involved the Roman
aristocracy and the Pope. This is probably one of the reasons why Theodoric had
Boethius and Boethius’ father-in-law, Symmachus, put to death — a warning that
he would not tolerate insurrection. Upon Pope John’s return to Ravenna, he was
imprisoned along with his entire escort. There he died in 526 — from "abuse" or
starvation.
Theodora’s
Monastery of Refuge
for Exiled Monophysites.
While Ephraem was
persecuting the anti-Chalcedonians in the orient, Theodora was welcoming the
exiles in Constantinople. She maintained all exiles at her own imperial expense.
She set aside one of the imperial palaces — it was close to the Hippodrome and
close to the Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus — exclusively for these
Monophysite exiles. Rooms were subdivided so that each room could accommodate
two monks. Liturgical services took place and "numerous small altars" were set
up to accommodate each group represented. This establishment of Theodora was not
a secret — indeed, it was one of the attractions of Constantinople. Justinian
was wont to visit it, not privately, but as an imperial visit in the sight of
everyone. John of Ephesus, once one of the resident exiles, claims that he had
seen as many as one thousand monks attending services there. It must be
mentioned that John of Ephesus, who was an admirer of Theodora, corroborates in
general terms what Procopius had written about the early life of Theodora in his
Secret History — John mentions that her life was not common, not
"regular" before she became empress.
Even an exiled
Monophysite patriarch of Alexandria was present. Theodosius was consecrated
patriarch of Alexandria in 536 and exiled shortly thereafter. The grounds for
the exile remain unknown. He remained in Constantinople for approximately thirty
years, serving essentially as the head of the Monophysite body in the
capital.
Monophysite
Missionary Activity
from Theodora’s Monastery.
From this monastery
established by Theodora in the capital of the empire itself monastic
missionaries went forth. John of Ephesus tells us in his Historiae
ecclesiaticae pars tertia that he himself set out as a missionary. The
official policy was that he was to work only among the pagans in remote Asia.
Within seventeen years he is said to have converted eighty thousand pagans and
to have built ninety-eight churches — moreover, it is claimed that he helped
build twelve synagogues. Historically the presumption has been that John of
Ephesus did more than work among the pagans, that he also used the opportunity
to revitalize the anti-Chalcedonians. In his Vita of John of Telia John
of Ephesus relates that the faithful non-Chalcedonians in "various places"
became concerned over the problem of ordinations. The bishops "were afraid to
open to themselves ever stronger flames of persecution and they, therefore,
refused to ordain overtly, but they had ordained some covertly." John then
continues that the faithful wrote imploring the bishops to ordain "for the sake
of the faithful." Severus had supported the idea of this type of ordination in
his letter to Sergius of Cyrus and Marion of Sura. This was in essence the
establishment of a separate hierarchy.
It is known that
John of Hephaistos, also from Theodora’s monastery, went forth with the open
intent to organize the non-Chalcedonians. In 541 John of Hephaistos ordained
fifty priests in Tralles while the Chalcedonians were conducting their own
service within the same building. At Ephesus he is said to have ordained seventy
clergy in one night. John of Telia had been ordaining. John of Ephesus most
probably did the same. John of Hephaistos did the same. One source claims that
one hundred and seventy thousand non-Chalcedonians were ordained — these
candidates came from Armenia, Phoenicia, Cappadocia, and Arzanene on the Persian
border. The beginning of this movement took place about
530.
The Relaxation
of Justinian’s Policy and the Nika Riots.
In 530 and 531
there was a sudden relaxation of Justinian’s policy. Speculation is that one of
the reasons was this new movement of ordination. It must, however, be evaluated
in the context with the fact of the war with Persia. In any case, Justinian
called for a conference about the differences over Chalcedon. At this time the
controversy between Severus and Julian had put Severus and his followers in the
minority of the anti-Chalcedonians. Justinian’s change of policy towards the
Monophysites was obviously strengthened by the Nika riots which took place in
532 in Constantinople.
As Uspensky has
pointed out, the Hippodrome was the one place for "a free expression of public
opinion." The circus factions ultimately became political parties, the two most
influential in the sixth century being the Blues and the Greens. The Blues
supported the Council of Chalcedon and seem to have been representative of the
upper classes; the Greens were Monophysites or anti-Chalcedonians and seem to
have been representative of the lower classes. The political influence carried
by these factions is expressed not only by their rioting but also by the fact
that the emperor often had to appear before the people to give an account of his
actions. With Justinian as emperor and Theodora as empress there was a split of
allegiance to the throne, the Blues supporting Justinian and the Greens
Theodora. Cassiodorus tells us that even in Rome in the sixth century under
Theodoric there were two contending parties, the Blues and the Greens, the Blues
representative of the upper classes and the Greens representative of the lower
classes.
The famous revolt
in 532 known as the Nika Revolt — for the Greek word Victory — has more than
just a religious base. The nephews of Anastasius strongly resented the accession
of Justin I and Justinian — they had expected to receive the imperial title.
They were supported by the Monophysites of the Greens. There was also public
outrage at and bitterness against higher officials in the imperial government,
especially against Tribonian and John of Cappadocia. It is significant that the
Blues and Greens seem to have momentarily put aside their religious differences
to focus on a united revolt against the government. The emperor attempted to
negotiate with the factions through representatives in the Hippodrome but no
resolution was reached. The rebellion quickly spread through the city in the
form of fire and destruction. The basilica of St. Sophia was set aflame and on
that site there later rose the Hagia Sophia. One of Anastasius’ nephews was
proclaimed emperor. Justinian and his advisors were preparing to flee from the
enflamed city when Theodora intervened. Her words in Procopius’ Secret
History ring true. “It is impossible for a man when he has come into the
world not to die. But for one who has reigned, it is intolerable to be an exile.
If you wish, Ο Emperor, to save yourself, there is no difficulty. We have
sufficient funds. Over there is the sea, and there are ships. Yet consider
whether, when you have once escaped to a place of safety, you will not prefer
death to safety. I agree with an old saying that the purple is a fair winding
sheet." Theodora inspired Justinian to make a stand. He entrusted the crushing
of the revolt to Belisarius who then drove the rioters into the Hippodrome and
killed approximately thirty to forty thousand. The Nika Revolt had ended. The
nephews of Anastasius were executed and Justinian’s imperial throne was once
more secure. But the following year the strength of the Greens, representing the
Monophysites, was revealed again when, after an earthquake in the city, a large
crowd gathered to sing a Monophysite doxology. The crowds were also shouting out
for baptism in the name of the One — the meaning was "one nature" as opposed to
the Chalcedonian "in two natures." Justinian could certainly realize the
enduring strength of the anti-Chalcedonians.
Justinian’s Request for a
Theological Conference
and the Petition of the
Monophysites.
The Monophysites responded to
Justinian’s call for a conference by drawing up a review of their case, known as
the "Petition of the Monophysites to Justinian." Zacharias gives the text in his
Church History (9, 15), as does Michael the Syrian in his
Chronicle (9, 22).
"O Triumphant
Emperor, several other men crown your head of belief with a crown of praises,
men who who use the occasion of others’ cases to write words about your
generosity to them. But we, who have ourselves been deemed worthy to experience
your virtues, render gratitude to you with a crown of praise woven in splendor.
And, while we have been in the desert and, as it were, in the extremities of the
world, we have been this entire time living in quietude and have been praying to
the good and merciful God during all these days for your majesty and for our
sins. And your tranquillity has inclined itself towards our baseness and in your
letters of belief you have summoned us to come to you. And it is a miracle to us
that you did not receive this our petition with scorn, but, with the kindness
that is inbred in you, you have sympathized with us to bring us out of
affliction, giving a pretext that this or that man had interceded for
us."
"Now, since it is
our duty to obey when ordered, we have immediately left the desert and,
travelling quietly along the road in peace without our voice being heard, we
have come before your feet. And we pray God, the bountiful Giver, to reward on
our behalf your serenity and the God-loving Empress with good gifts from above,
and to grant peace and tranquillity upon you, and to place all rebellious people
as a stool under your feet."
"However, now that
we have come, we present a petition to your peacefulness which contains our true
faith. We do not wish to enter argument with any man on any matter that profits
not, as it is written, lest we annoy your ears. For it is very difficult for a
man to convince persons of a contentious nature even if the truth is made clear.
Hence, as we have said, we refuse to enter any dispute with those who are
contentious, with those who will not receive instructors. For it was our master
the apostle who said, ‘We have no such custom, neither the churches of
God."
"Victorious
Emperor, we do now accordingly also declare the freedom of our faith. When we
were in the desert and received your edict at the hands of Theodotus the comes,
we also wrote and declared what we thought. And your majesties gave us a message
of truth which was free from affliction, for you were tenderly moved and you
summoned us to your presence. And, since we have been deemed worthy of the
mercies of God, we do in this petition inform your orthodoxies that by the grace
of God we have from our earliest infancy received the faith of the apostles. We
have been raised in it and with it, and we think and believe even as our three
hundred and eighteen God-inspired holy fathers, who drew up the faith of life
and salvation, which was confirmed by our one hundred and fifty holy fathers who
once met here, and confirmed by the pious bishops who assembled at Ephesus and
rejected the impious Nestorius. And thus in this faith of the apostles we have
been baptized and do baptize. And this saving knowledge is rooted in our hearts,
and this same doctrine alone we recognize as a rule in the faith, and beyond it
we receive no other, for it is perfect in all points and it does not grow old
nor need revision."
"Now we acknowledge
a worshipful and holy Trinity of one nature, power, and honor, which is revealed
in three persons. For we worship the Father and his only Son, God the Logos, who
was begotten of him eternally beyond all times, and is with him always without
change, and the Holy Spirit, who proceeds from the Father, and is of the nature
of the Father and of the Son. One of the persons of this holy Trinity, that is,
God the Logos, we say by the will of the Father in the last days for the
salvation of men took flesh of the Holy Spirit and of the holy Virgin the
Theotokos Mary in a body endowed with a rational and intellectual soul, passible
according to our nature, and became man, and was not changed from that which he
was. And so we confess that, while in the Godhead he was of the nature of the
Father, he was also of our nature in the manhood. Accordingly he who is the
perfect Logos, the unchangeable Son of God, became perfect man, and left nothing
lacking for us in respect of our salvation, as the foolish Apollinarius said,
saying that the Incarnation of God the Logos was not perfect, and deprives us,
according to his opinion, of things that are of prime importance in our
salvation. For, if our intellect was not united with him, as he absurdly says,
then we are not redeemed, and in the matter of salvation have fallen short of
that which is of the highest consequence for us. But these things are not as he
said. For the perfect God for our sake became perfect man without change, and
God the Logos did not leave anything lacking in the Incarnation, as we have
said, nor yet was it a phantom of him, as the impious Mani supposes, and the
mistaken Eutyches."
"And, since Christ
is truth and does not know how to lie and does not deceive, because he is God,
therefore God the Logos truly became incarnate, in truth again, and not in
semblance, with natural and innocent passions, for of his own will he for our
sake among the things which he took upon himself in the passible flesh of our
nature of his own will endured also our death, which he made life for us by a
Resurrection proper to God, for he first restored incorruption and immortality
to human nature."
"And, indeed, as
God the Logos left nothing wanting and was not phantasmal in the Incarnation and
Humanization, so he did not divide it into two persons and two natures according
to the doctrine introduced by Nestorius the man-worshipper and those who
formerly thought like him, and those who in our day so
think."
"And the faith
contained in your confession refutes the doctrine of these men and contends with
it, for in your earnestness you said the following: ‘God appeared, who became
Incarnate. He is in all points like the Father except the individuality of his
Father. He became a sharer of our nature, and was called Son of Man. Being one
the same, God and Man, he showed himself to us, and was born as a babe for our
sake. And, being God, he for men and for the sake of their salvation became
man.’ "
"If those who
dispute with us adhered to these things in truth and were not content to hold
them in appearance only, but rather consented to believe as we do and you do and
as our God-inspired fathers did, they would have abstained from their stirring
of strife. For that Christ was joined by composition and that God the Logos is
joined by composition with a body endowed with a rational and intellectual soul
the all-wise doctors of the Church have plainly stated. Dionysius, who from the
Areopagus and from the darkness and error of heathendom attained to the supreme
light of the knowledge of God through our master Paul, in the treatise which he
composed about the divine names of the Holy Trinity says, ‘Praising it as
kindly, we say, as is right, that it is kindly, because it in truth partook
perfectly of our attributes in one of its persons, drawing to itself and raising
the lowliness of our manhood, out of which the simple Jesus became joined by
composition in a manner that cannot be described. And he who was from eternity
and beyond all times took upon him a temporal existence, and he who was raised
and exalted above all orders and natures became in the likeness of our nature
without change and confusion.’ And Athanasius again in the treatise upon the
faith named the unity of God the Logos with soul-possessing flesh ‘a
composition,’ speaking thus: ‘What sort of resultant unbelief befalls those who
call it an indwelling instead of an Incarnation, and instead of a union and
composition a human energy?"
"If, therefore,
according to our holy fathers, whom your peacefulnesses have followed, God the
Logos, who was before simple and not composite, became incarnate of the Virgin,
the Theotokos Mary, and [here Michael the Syrian adds "hypostatically"]
united soul-possessing and intellectual flesh to himself personally and made it
his own and was joined with it by composition in the oikonomia, it is manifest
that according to our fathers we ought to confess one nature of God the Logos,
who took flesh and became perfectly man. Accordingly God the Logos, who was
before simple, is not recognized to have become composite in a body, if he is
again divided after the union by being called two natures. But, just as an
ordinary man, who is made up of various natures, soul and body and so forth, is
not divided into two natures because a soul has been joined by composition with
a body to make up the one nature and person of a man, so also God the Logos, who
was personally united and joined by composition with soul-possessing flesh,
cannot be ‘two natures’ or ‘in two natures’ because of his union and composition
with a body. For according to the words of our fathers, whom the fear of God
that is in you has followed, God the Logos, who was formerly simple, consented
for our sake to be united by composition with soul-possessing and intellectual
flesh and without change to become man. Accordingly one unique nature and person
[hypostasis] of God the Logos, who took flesh, is to be proclaimed, and there is
one energy of the Logos of God which is made known, which is exalted and
glorious and proper to God, and is also lowly and human. [Michael the Syrian
adds: "How is it that our brethren cannot apply themselves to annul the things
which Leo has written in his Tome?"]
[Then followed
quotations from Nestorius, Theodore, Diodore, Theodoret, Leo, and the Council of
Chalcedon proclaiming two natures after the union and the Incarnation of the
Logos, and two hypostases. These quotations are refuted by quotations from the
Fathers which assert one nature and one person of the Incarnate Logos. Neither
Zacharias nor Michael give these quotations.]
"And for this
reason we do not accept either the Tome or the definition of Chalcedon, Ο
Victorious Emperor, because we keep the canon and law of our fathers who
assembled at Ephesus and anathematized and deprived Nestorius and excommunicated
any who should presume to compose any other definition of faith besides that of
Nicaea, which was correctly and believingly laid down by the Holy Spirit. These
we reject and anathematize. And this definition and canon those who assembled at
Chalcedon deliberately set at naught and transgressed, as they state in the Acts
of that Council. And they are subject to punishment and blame from our holy
fathers in that they have introduced a new definition of faith, which contrary
to the truth of the doctrine of those who from time to time have been after a
pure manner doctors of the Church, who, we believe, are now also entreating
Christ with us, that you may aid the truth of their faith, honoring the contests
undergone by their priesthoods, by which the Church has been exalted and
glorified. For thus shall peace prevail in your reign by the power of the right
hand of God Almighty, to whom we pray on your behalf that without toil or
struggle in arms he will set your enemies as a stool beneath your
feet."
Severus received an
invitation to participate in the conference but declined because "of age." In
the letter he sent to the emperor explaining that he was unable to attend,
Severus took the opportunity to defend himself against accusations that he had
been receiving funds to foment sedition. If indeed this accusation had been
made, Severus was aware that the charge against him was political treason. He
wrote that he lived in poverty and wished to die in the peace and obscurity he
had in Alexandria. He included in this letter a vehement attack against and
denunciation of Julian of Halicarnassus and his doctrine, obviously to
distinguish his teachings from those of Julian.
According to
Zacharias in his Church History (9, 15) the conference in Constantinople
lasted more than a year. However, an account of only one of the conferences
exists, one that lasted for three days and attended by six Syrian bishops and
five supporters of Chalcedonian. Leontius of Byzantium was also in attendance
representing Palestinian monks. One of the Chalcedonian representatives has left
an account of this mini conference — Innocentius of Maronia in a letter to
Thomas, a priest in Thessaloniki. Justinian’s approach was to resolve some of
the issues in order to reveal that if Chalcedon were interpreted correctly, no
doctrinal issue should be cause of division. The "issues" that Justinian wanted
to resolve were not doctrinal — indeed, all he attempted to demonstrate was that
Eutyches’ theology was not orthodox and that Dioscorus had been wrong in
conducting the Robber Council at Ephesus. The Severians admitted that Eutyches
was a heretic and even granted that Dioscorus had agreed with Eutyches. How,
then, could they hold that Dioscorus was orthodox? The Severians finally
acknowledged that Dioscorus had been blind, that his condemnation of Flavian was
unjust, and that there had been sufficient reason for convoking the Council of
Chalcedon. Some of these statements were historically inaccurate. Severus had
previously written that Eutyches had submitted a confession of faith to
Dioscorus in which he condemned Mani, Valentinius, Apollinarius, and any one
claiming that the flesh of our Lord "came down from heaven." But Severus added
that Eutyches, after submitting this profession of faith, had "returned to his
vomit." It must also be mentioned that Dioscorus, during his brief attendance at
the Council of Chalcedon, had condemned Eutyches on certain conditions. The next
day the Severians focused on what they considered to be the real issue — their
central objection to the Council of Chalcedon was that it presented a "new" and
incorrect doctrine of "in two natures" — duarum naturarum novitas. They
paid little attention to the position that not everything that was new was
necessarily incorrect or bad. From the perspective of the Severians, St. Cyril
would not have accepted the Council of Chalcedon. And that was the basic issue.
The Council had not accepted St. Cyril’s Twelve Anathemas and, despite
the fact that St. Cyril had spoken of "out of two natures," he had never spoken
about "two natures after the union." At the meeting on the third day, attended
by Justinian, the Theopaschite Formula was put forward as a compromise
position. It is claimed that one of the Syrian bishops accepted Chalcedon, as
did some of the priests in attendance. But the remaining bishops remained firm.
Justinian promulgated an edict in March of 533 which set out his own profession
of faith. It condemned Eutyches, Apollinarius, and Nestorius and strongly
maintained that there had been no innovation of the faith. It professed that the
Logos, co-eternal with the Father "became incarnate of the Holy Spirit and Mary,
the holy glorious Ever-Virgin and Theotokos, and assumed the nature of
man, and endured the Cross for us in the time of Pontius Pilate, and was buried
and arose on the third day. We recognize one and the same person’s suffering
which he voluntarily endured in the flesh. We know not God the Logos to be one
and Christ to be another, but one and the same person consubstantial with the
Father in his divinity and the same one consubstantial with us in his humanity.
For he is perfect in divinity, and also perfect in his humanity. The Trinity has
remained the Trinity even after one of the Trinity became incarnate as God the
Logos, for the Holy Trinity allows no addition of a fourth person." It is to be
noted that justnian made no reference to Pope Leo’s Tome. Justinian also wrote a
letter to Patriarch Epiphanius, addressing him as "ecumenical patriarch." In
this letter he repeats the same ideas but calls attention to the letter of
Proclus to the Armenians and refers to the position of the Bishop of Rome as
"head of all of God’s most holy priests." St. Proclus, bishop of Constantinople
(434-446), had received a request in 435 from the bishops of the Church of
Armenia concerning the theology of Theodore of Mopsuestia whcse works were then
being translated into Armenian. In his famous response, Tomus ad Armenios de
fide, St. Proclus avoided mentioning Theodore but discussed the teaching of
the Church on the one hypostasis and the two natures in the Incarnate Logos. He
then theorizes on the possible errors that could come from that teaching, errors
which were those of Theodore. In his fourth letter he used the phrase which
would become the rallying cry of the Theopaschite controversy — unum de
Trinitate secundum cartem crucifixum. Justinian’s reference that the Holy
Trinity allots "no addition of a fourth person" most probably reflects the fact
that the Monophysite doxology had already been criticized on that possibility —
such is the view of Marcellinus Comes in his
Chronicon.
Justinian also
wrote to Pope John II, the first pope to change his flame — he had been
Mercurius, a Roman priest. The emperor’s letter, Reddentes honorem,
became part of the Code of Justinian. Justinian included the Theopaschite
Formula in his letter to Pope John II and the pope approved it. The emperor
also requested that the pope condemn a group of monks who had come to Rome to
protest against the formula. That also Pope John II acquiesced to — he
excommunicated the monks when they refused to cease their opposition. In his
letter Justinian used the same language about the position of the Bishop of Rome
that he used in his letter to the "ecumenical patriarch" Epiphanius — "the head
of all the Churches." There was actually nothing new in this attitude towards
the Roman see from the Eastern perspective. It does not knew of any
infallibility in that see and there was seldom any serious question of the Roman
see being the primus.
The imperial
documents essentially formed what would become the new Henotikon, the
final attempt at compromise before the Monophysites officially established their
own hierarchy. Justinian’s argument that the Council of Chalcedon was to be
accepted was based on the fact that it contained the "eastern" tradition
expressed by Patriarch Proclus in his Tomus ad Armenios defidei and not
because of the influence of Pope Leo! And also because it did in fact condemn
Eutyches and Nestorius. St. Cyril’s Twelve Anathemas were omitted but his
language was utilized — Christ was "one" and suffered as "one." But the strong
language used in Zeno’s Henotikon of "one and not two" was not present.
Despite this, Christ is "perfect God and perfect man." It was a compromise
formula and it was to be quickly recognized as such. For a few years it appeared
as though Justinian’s compromise might work. The years from 531 to 536 were the
years of peace, the years when a truce was in effect in the empire. Severus, now
in the later years of his life, had suffered from the separation of the
followers of Julian. There seemed to be no vehement reaction to this new
compromise in the east and, most importantly, the strident Pope Hormisdas had
died and Justinian now could deal with the more conciliatory Pope John I and
then Pope John II, the latter of whom had accepted the edict as "in accordance
with apostolic teaching." The will of the emperor seems to have brought at least
obedience — for a time.
Theodoras
Influence: Severus Visits Constantinople.
An extraordinary
turn of events took place. It seems that Theodora had encouraged the emperor not
to give up with Severus and to continue to extend imperial invitations to him.
He finally accepted and arrived in Constantinople to be welcomed in honor. The
date of Severus’ arrival is disputed. In any case, he arrived between 534 and
535 with Peter of Apamea and a rather large group of monks. In 535 Timothy of
Alexandria died and a few months later Epiphanius of Constantinople passed away.
Two important sees were now vacant. One of the monks who had been "in exile" in
Theodora’s monastery was in Alexandria upon the death of Patriarch Timothy. His
influence was used on the military commander to consecrate Theodosius, a deacon,
immediately. Theodosius was a Severian, and they were in the minority in
Alexandria at the time. He was immediately opposed. Gaianus, a follower of
Julian, was supported by a variety of groups in Alexandria and managed to
survive as the opposing patriarch for a little more than one hundred days — he
was then expelled. Theodosius was, of course, an anti-Chalcedonian. He held a
council which immediately defined his position. Nicaea, Ephesus, and the
Twelve Anathemas of St. Cyril were considered to be divinely inspired. In
addition, the Henotikon was reaffirmed, an action which by its very
nature nullified Pope Leo’s Tome and the Council of Chalcedon. But there was no
mention of Dioscorus or his council. Theodosius received a letter of support
from Severus and quickly began to ordain bishops in an attempt to gain
leadership in Alexandria of the Monophysites.
Theodoras
Influence: Anthimus of Trebizond
Becomes Patriarch of
Constantinople.
The see of
Constantinople also had to be filled. Here, too, Theodora’s candidate won the
position. Anthimus of Trebizond was one of the Chalcedonian supporters at the
conferences. He was, however, impressed by the arguments of the Monophysites.
Once consecrated, Theodora made certain that Severus spoke often with Anthimus.
Severus, it appears, was able to convince Patriarch Anthimus of his own
orthodoxy as well as the flaws in and iniquity of the Council of Chalcedon.
Precisely at the time when Justinian was attempting to take Italy militarily,
Patriarch Anthimus came out strongly as an anti-Chalcedonian, even making the
assertion that the doctrine of "in two natures" makes a "Quarternity" out of the
Trinity. The balance had now changed again. Three patriarchs — Constantinople,
Alexandria, and Severus of Antioch — were anti-Chalcedonian. Turmoil was
unleashed again within the Church. Bishops began to send delegations to Rome to
protest.
Pope Agapetus
Visits Constantinople
on Request of Theodahad, the Gothic
King.
Military events in
Sicily and Dalmatia intervened now with ecclesiastical events. Theodahad, the
Gothic King, prevailed upon none other than Pope Agapetus to journey to
Constantinople to negotiate a military settlement with Justinian. The Roman see
was quite impoverished at the time and, in order to raise the funds to undertake
the trip, Pope Agapetus had to resort to selling some of the consecrated
vessels. The emperor knew that he needed the support of Pope Agapetus if he was
to succeed militarily in Italy. The pope had little difficulty in convincing
Justinian that the West would never accept the new interpretation of Chalcedon.
Severus knew that the situation was lost and wrote to a friend that "the real
problem is that those in power want to please both sides." Anthimus was
presented with an option: either a complete and unequivocal acceptance of
Chalcedon or his resignation. He resigned and entered Theodora’s monastery. Pope
Agapetus requested that Justinian arrest and imprison Severus and Zooras but
Justinian refused to break his commitment of safe-conduct to
Severus.
Pope Agapetus
Consecrates Patriarch
Menas in
Constantinople.
The new choice for
patriarch of Constantinople was Menas (d. 552), an Alexandrian by birth. Pope
Agapetus consecrated the new patriarch of Constantinople. A statement had been
drawn up, signed by both the new patriarch and Justinian, that reasserted the
orthodoxy of the Council of Chalcedon. At the time of triumph Pope Agapetus
suddenly died. Rumors of a fantastic nature coming from the anti-Chalcedonians
concentrated on Pope Agapetus. Michael the Syrian in his Chronicle (9,
23) claims that the reason Pope Agapetus came to Constantinople was out of
jealousy of the former Stylite Zooras, who baptized Theodora in 535. The death
of Pope Agapetus, his opponents claimed, came "while he was engaged in the
practice of black magic."
The Decisions of Justinian’s
Standing Council of Bishops In 536.
Justinian, having been buoyed
by the presence of Pope Agapetus, was to remain committed to the Council of
Chalcedon -however he may have interpreted it. The Standing Council of Bishops
in Constantinople was called into session by Justinian and met in session from
about May until June or even as late as August of 536. Fifty-three bishops were
present, including the papal legates who apparently had accompanied the now
deceased Pope Agapetus. Menas presided as "ecumenical patriarch." The
monasteries in Palestine and further east sent delegations with accusations
against Severus, Zooras, and Peter of Apamea. The charges ranged from the
practice of magic, to profaning altars, to profaning baptism by giving
pseudo-baptisms and rebaptizing the orthodox. The charge of rebaptism was not
true in the case of Severus but was accurate in the case of some of his
followers, a fact we know from one of Severus’ own letters. They accused Severus
of fantastic things — he was a magician, he was a worshipper of the devil, he
was a heathen, he was an idolater who reproduced the abominations of Daphne, he
was selling the sacred vessels and even sold the gold dove over the altar, he
was reducing the treasury of the church and saddling it with debt. But for some
reason they failed to accuse Severus of immorality, a charge they levelled
against the others! Peter of Apamea was accused of resorting to a devilish trick
to regain a monastery from the Chalcedonians. He allegedly hired some women who
entered the gates of the monastery, at the sight of which the monks fled,
leaving the monastery vacant so that Peter could take possession of it! Anathema
was pronounced on all three men. Severus, odd as it may sound, was
simultaneously accused of being both a Nestorian and a
Eutychian.
The Standing
Council of Bishops condemned the former patriarch Anthimus as a heretic and
placed Severus under ban again. This decision created an interesting sidelight,
for Patriarch Menas revealed how controlled the Church was by the emperor,
stating that nothing could take place in ecclesiastical affairs without the
emperor’s "will and command." Justinian did concur. He issued an edict banning
Anthimus, Severus, and their followers from Constantinople and from all the
major cities of the empire. In addition, Justinian ordered the burning of all
copies of the writings of Severus. Anyone sheltering those under ban were to
receive harsh penalties. In his Novel 42/56 Justinian charged Severus with
carrying on an "underground war" by setting churches against each
other.
"We prohibit all persons
from possessing the books of Severus. For in the same manner that it was not
permitted to copy and to possess the books of Nestorius because our previous
emperors ordered in their edicts to consider those as similar to the writings of
Porphyry against the Christians, so in like manner no Christian shall possess
also the speeches of Severus. These are from this time forth determined to be
profane and counter to the Catholic Church."
Severus, Zooras,
and others were prohibited from preaching, from having assemblies, and from
celebrating the Eucharist. Severus left Constantinople for Egypt where he died
eighteen months later (538).
Any hope of a
reconciliation with the non-Chalcedonians vanished. The Roman deacon, Pelagius,
became the permanent representative of the Roman see in Constantinople — indeed,
he seems to have been the first of the permanent representatives of the Roman
see in Constantinople. Pelagius, who was respected by both Justinian and
Theodora, had influence in Constantinople. His primary goal seemed to be the
restoration of Chalcedonianism in Egypt, a goal difficult to achieve. But
already the power of the empire had begun to enforce the new policy and the
Monophysites in Syria became the targets of the imperial police and military
forces. It is reported that some Monophysites were burned alive. In Egypt also
the imperial forces began to attempt to extirpate Monophysitism. Justinian
summoned Patriarch Theodosius of Alexandria to Constantinople for a conference.
Since Theodosius’ personal safety was in the control of the imperial military,
he had no choice but to comply. In Constantinople he was deposed and exiled to
Thrace. But Theodora arranged for his return to the capital to be housed in her
monastery. The papal representative recommended Paul the Tabennesiot. Soon after
Paul’s conse -cration in Constantinople by Patriarch Menas, he was accused of
complicity in murder. His successor was Zoilus, a Palestinian monk, who was
recommended by Ephraem of Antioch. Now it was Antioch which was controlling the
patriarchal elections of Alexandria. The Egyptian Church, under the control of
imperial forces, accepted the foreign patriarch — as a temporary measure.
Patriarch Zoilus had to live under military escort until he, too, was deposed.
Indeed, Paul and the four Chalcedonian patriarchs who succeeded him in
Alexandria were nothing more than imperial placements — the vox populi in
this vital ecclesiastical matter was beyond the reach of the
emperor.
Theodora’s
Agreement with the Roman Deacon Vigilius.
Upon the sudden
death of Pope Agapetus, Theodora seized an opportunity. A Roman deacon,
Vigilius, had accompanied Agapetus. The very day after the conference ruled
against the Monophysites Theodora negotiated with Vigilius. He could have the
episcopal throne of Rome if he agreed to modify the Roman position against the
Monophysites. Liberatus of Carthage in his Breviarum (22) tells us that
Vigilius’ agreement with Theodora was that he would abolish the Council of
Chalcedon and enter into communion with the Monophysites. The same account is
given by Victor of Tunnuna in his Chronicle (Patrologia Latino. 68,
956-958) and by Procopius in his Secret History (1,2) and in his De bello
gothico (1, 25). The Vita Silverii in the Liber pontificalis gives
a lengthy description of the intrigue that surrounded the deposition of Pope
Silverius and places Vigilius in Constantinople at the time as apocrisiarius. In
its Vita Vigilii the Liber pontificalis accuses Vigilius of "ambition" in
securing the papal election, but it also claims that once Vigilius became pope
he acted with "courage and intransigence" in resisting imperial pressure. It
attributes to Vigilius the words "I am receiving justice for what I did" —
digna enim factis recipio.
Vigilius agreed and
left for Rome with the body of Pope Agapetus. But a new pope with the aid of the
Gothic king Theodatus had already been consecrated, Pope Silverius. Antonina,
the wife of the commander of the imperial forces in Italy, Belisarius, was a
close friend of Theodora. Through Antonina Theodora had Belisarius arrest Pope
Silverius on the false charge of treason, of communicating with the Goths who at
that time were being driven out of Rome by Belisarius. Pope Silverius was handed
over to accomplices of Vigilius — against the orders of Justinian. Vigilius
(537-555) was enthroned as pope in April or May of 537. Silverius had appealed
to Justinian who requested a trial for Silverius. The latter, however, was
confirmed in his deposition and exiled in November of 537. As pope, Vigilius
wrote a letter to Severus, Anthimus, and Theodosius establishing communion with
them. Vigilius requests that the letter he is writing be kept strictly secret —
mea earn fidem quam tenetis, Deo adjuvante et tenuisse et tenere significo.
Non duas Christum confitemur naturas, sed ex duabus compositum unum
filium.
The Prospect of
Monophysitism
after its Defeat at the Conference of
536.
The Monophysite
cause had seemed lost. Despite having an emperor who was well-disposed to them,
they had been defeated at the conference of 536. Severus and John of Telia were
now dead. Theodosius of Alexandria was now imprisoned. And their avowed enemy,
Ephraem of Antioch, had unleashed another persecution. Moreover, their own
internal problems were beginning to manifest themselves in an alarming way. The
dispute begun between Severus and Julian had now become a division. And
Chalcedonian patriarchs temporarily occupied the five thrones. Moreover, the new
defense of the Council of Chalcedon seemed to be carrying a momentum, especially
through the writings of Leontius of Byzantium, Leontius of Jerusalem, and Cyril
Scythopolis (d. 557). This "Neo-Chalcedonian" defense was the reconciling of the
doctrine of Chalcedon with the thought of St. Cyril.
Justinian’s Contra
Monophysitas
and his Interest in Theology.
Justinian had personally
become more and more interested in theological issues. He had a personal as well
as an imperial interest, an uncommon trait for most emperors. In his Contra
Monophysitas Justinian wrote that the holy Church "accepts all the writings
of the blessed Cyril. And in these writings the Church accepts also the unique
Incarnate nature of God the Logos, that the nature of the divinity is one thing
and that the nature of the flesh is another, out of which the one and
unique Christ was formed." Justinian had learned of the doctrine of
"enhypostasis" from his discussion with Leontius of Byzantium (d. 543),
although the term had begun to come into the theological life of the Church
during the general speculative controversies. No nature existed without an
hypostasis or person but the same hypostasis could indeed be the center of the
life of two natures. Precisely at the Incarnation the human nature of Christ was
enhypostasized by the Divine Logos. The unity or oneness in Christ was to
be found in the hypostasis, the Divine hypostasis of the Logos. Was this not the
key to the solution of the controversy? Was this not the resolution of the "in
two natures" of Chalcedon with the One Incarnate Lord of St. Cyril? The
Monophysites were not convinced so readily, for they sensed in this type of
thinking the thought of Origen and not St. Cyril. With the rejection of the
thought of Severus the Church still had to find a means of reconciling Chalcedon
with St. Cyril, while avoiding any tendency of considering the hypostasis in
Christ as an eternal Mind, a Mind united to God throughout eternity and then
taking a body to complete redemption. With Severus condemned, the Origenists
gained an influential role in the theological life of the controversy,
especially during 532 to 542 and especially among the Palestinian monks who
vehemently opposed Antiochene theology. Indeed, the Origenists demanded that
Peter, the patriarch of Jerusalem from 524 until 544, anathematize Ephraem of
Antioch and Antiochene theological interpretations. In the very time of the
defeat of the anti-Chalcedonians Theodora had been influential in bringing
Theodore Askidas, a Palestinian monk, out of the monastery to become archbishop
of Caesarea in Cappadocia. Theodore and his followers had strong Origenist
sympathies. Quarrels erupted in Jerusalem which caused one additional
theological controversy within the Church. Fights between the monks became
increasingly more common — indeed, street fighting took place. The Vita
Sabae relates that "those Origenist monks made such a habit of beating the
orthodox in the streets that we had to bring in pious hermits as a means of
self-protection," Both sides appealed to the emperor.
One thing imperial
policy wanted to avoid was to become entangled in controversies with monks.
Nothing seemed more dangerous, for to stop a zealous monk was near impossible
shon of death. And death simply intensified controversies in which monks were
involved and created martyrs. The Chalcedonians in Constantinople, however,
realized that this was an opportunity to seize. If Origen could be condemned,
one would be discrediting a thinker whose thought system was reflective in
general of Alexandrian thinking. Indirectly it would be enlisting the emperor in
a condemnation of an aspect of Alexandrian theological tradition. At a council
held in 543 Justinian had Origenism and Origen condemned. A vivid account of
this controversy is related by Cyril of Scythopolis in his Vita Sabae.
Justinian had written a letter to Patriarch Menas condemning Origen as one of
the most pernicious of heretics. The edict drawn up as a result of the council
held in 543 gave a long list of Origenist errors along with their refutation. It
was signed by Pope Vigilius and the patriarchs of the east. Origen was referred
to as a "son of the devil," as an "enemy of the faith," as one whose goal had
been to "sow tares and to confirm pagan errors." Origen had been condemned along
with Severus, Peter the Fuller, and others.
The Origenist
leaders, Theodore Askidas and his colleague Domitian of Ancyra, were in
Constantinople. To the disappointment of their followers, they accepted the
condemnation of Origen. But Theodore of Askidas was ready for a counter move.
Evagrius Scholasticus tells us in his Church History (4, 38) that
Theodore Askidas was "constantly in the presence of Justinian" and that
Theodore’s influence was so great that he managed to replace the influence of
the Roman deacon Pelagius — indeed, Pelagius was removed from a favorable
position in the imperial palace. Theodore Askidas was a Chalcedonian. His motive
was not to enhance the position of Severus. Rather, it was a policy which could
both provide a compromise for the Monophysites and maintain Chalcedon by
rejecting and condemning the works of Theodore of Mopsuestia, the works of
Theodoret against St. Cyril, and the letter of Ibas to the priest Maris. By
condemning these three theologians who were opposed to Origen Theodore Askidas
thought it would be an acknowledgment of Alexandrian theology, something which
might please the moderate Monophysites It would give a clear signal to the
Monophysites that, although the Council of Chalcedon had vindicated Theodoret
and Ibas, the Council had not endorsed all their writings. Indeed, the
Mnnoohysites had been imploring for half a century to have these three
theologians condemned — at the conference of 532/533 the Μonophysites had
pointedly declared that one of the walls preventing a union had been Chalcedon’s
approval of the writings of Ibas and Theodoret against St. Cyril. Liberatus of
Carthage in his Breviarum (24) and Facundus in his Pro defensione
trium capitulorum (4, 3) were certain that the condemnation of these three
theologians, the condemnation of the Three Chapters, by Justinian in 544
was the result of the work of Theodora and Theodore of
Askidas.
The Military
Attacks by the Bulgars and the
Persians and the
Outbreak of the Plague.
The theological
controversies were not, of course, taking place in a vacuum. The empire had
other problems: one was military; another was the outbreak of bubonic plague.
While his general Belisarius was engaged in a long war with the Goths in Italy,
Justinian had to contend with a military attack from the north by the Bulgars,
and a resurgence of war in 542 with Chosroes of Persia. In the spring of 541 the
Bulgars crossed the Danube and invaded the Balkans, bringing with them burning,
ravaging, and destruction everywhere. One group of Bulgars penetrated into
central Greece, reaching as far as the Isthmus of Corinth. Another group of
Bulgars devastated the Gallipoli peninsula and raided the Asian shore across the
Dardanelles. A third military force of Bulgars reached the suburbs of
Constantinople. Fear struck the inhabitants of Constantinople and many fled to
Asia Minor. Justinian was in no position to deal with this new enemy from the
north. He had to wait. The Bulgars finally withdrew but not before they had
captured one hundred and twenty thousand prisoners whom they took with them back
to their homeland. Justinian responded by beginning the construction of a
fortification of the northern frontier in the Balkans. The outbreak of war in
the spring of 542 with Chosroes of Persia caused further alarm. Justinian sent
Belisarius to take command of the military in the east against the Persians. But
this war was cut short by a new menace, by the outbreak of a plague of
devastating proportions.
It was claimed that
the plague began in Ethiopia and broke out Egypt in 541. With the commencement
of navigation in the spring the plague spread to Syria and Asia Minor. In May of
542 it broke out in Constantinople, shortly thereafter to spread to the Balkans,
Italy, Africa, Spain, and Gaul. The sources claim that initially five thousand
persons were dying daily, and later ten thousand daily. It is claimed that on
one day as many as sixteen thousand persons had died. When the plague had run
its course, it is claimed that it had taken three hundred thousand persons in
Constantinople alone. Famine accompanied the plague, for the food supply to
Constantinople was cut off. Justinian himself was a victim but he managed to
survive. During the time Justinian was fighting and then recuperating from the
plague, the decision making fell to Theodora.
Jacob
Baradaeus.
The Chalcedonians,
the party now in power, still did not feel comfortable with the state of affairs
in the Church. Still, the number of non-Chalcedonian bishops had dwindled
drastically and much of the credit for this ambiguously valued work is due to
Ephraem of Antioch, despised with reason by the non-Chalcedonians. When he died
in 542, the non-Chalcedonians were determined to do something to regain Antioch.
The non-Chalcedonians had no lack of laity or clergy — it was bishops they
lacked. There were, it appears, only three non-Chalcedonian bishops remaining:
one in Alexandria, one in Persia, and one in the woods of Tur Abdin, an old and
feeble man. Theodora’s policy had helped to both protect and to facilitate
suppression.
In 542 or 543 King
Aretas (Harith Ibn Gabala), the Emir of the Ghassanid Arabs, visited
Constantinople. He was a zealous Monophysite and anti-Greek. His zeal for
Monophysitism was enflamed because of a quarrel he had had with Ephraem of
Antioch. The patriarch had visited King Aretas in his camp to discuss the
acceptance of the Council of Chalcedon — it was Pope Leo’s Tome that bothered
King Aretas. The king offered the patriarch what was a grand delicacy in his
land — camel meat. The patriarch, completely ignorant of the customs and not
aware that the meal was a compliment, was insulted and refused to bless the food
or to eat. "Well, if you will not eat camel with me, how can you expect me to
take Holy Communion with you?" King Aretas was quite willing to do anything that
might disgrace the memory of Ephraem. He had come to Constantinople to urge
Theodora to take action. The person to fill the patriarchal throne of Antioch
must combine the prestige of Severus with the physical stamina of John of
Tella.
Theodora had just
such a person in her special monastery — Jacob Baradaeus. He was born about 490
in the same town as the now deceased John of Tela. From an early age he had been
an ascetic, and he was fluent in Greek, Syriac, and Arabic. Jacob was physically
strong, could fast for long periods of time, and usually lived only on dry
bread. Jacob had no doubt that he was equal to the task. King Aretas pointed out
that he must be able to live among his people and get along with them. He was
then consecrated bishop by Theodosius as not only bishop of Syria but as a
"peregrinating bishop" who was empowered to ordain "overall" — he was
"commissioned" to organize and to ordain in Armenia, in all Asia Minor, in
Egypt, in all the islands, and right up to the gates of Constantinople itself.
Jacob was given some colleagues to assist him. Since canonically three bishops
were needed to consecrate another bishop, Theodosius consecrated a certain
Theodore, Conon of Cilicia, and Eugenius of Isauria. As it turned out, these
assistants were unnecessary — Theodore disappeared among the tents of his
nomadic flock and the other two soon wearied of the job and ultimately returned
to the established Church. Jacob, however, was much tougher and would not weary.
He was smuggled out of Constantinople by King Aretas and taken to the Orient in
Aretas’ caravan. He at once set himself to work. His method was similar to that
of John of Telia — he travelled on foot, in ragged clothing, without pack or
money. Since he looked like any other travelling monk, it was extremely
difficult for the authorities to recognize him. His stamina was such that he
could walk forty miles per day, sleep anywhere, and live either by total
abstention for long periods or on bits of dry bread. He was constantly pursued.
It is related that he would often double back and approach his pursuers from
behind. When asked about that "deceiver Jacob," he would reply that he had seen
him in the area the previous day. A reward was placed on his head, and the
reward increased with time.
His peregrinating
episcopate lasted for thirty-five years, from 542 until 577. It is claimed that
in that time he consecrated two patriarchs, eighty-nine bishops, and
approximately one hundred thousand priests. It is even claimed that Jacob
entered Constantinople and there ordained twelve bishops. Whether these figures
reflect reality is another question. What is a fact is that Jacob resuscitated
an ecclesiastical division in very bad shape, that he strengthened the hierarchy
immensely. There are numerous stories related of his miracles. For example, how
he healed and even restored a dead youth to life by invoking the name of Jesus
Christ and the Monophysite formula. "In the name of Jesus Christ, one
indivisible nature that was crucified for us upon the cross, rise and walk!"
Many of the miracles, typical of the time and the hagio — graphical tradition,
stretch the imagination. One incident is worth relating. The people of Amida had
relapsed to Chalcedonianism and had become lunatics. In despair, they sent for
Jacob who told them that "if you are so mad as to say ‘two natures,’ naturally
you go mad." Allegedly he was able to restore their
sanity.
The name "Jacobite"
was soon applied to the group of churches organized by Jacob. The name, in fact,
was not entirely new, for Monophysites had previously described themselves as
"Jacobites" but it was then a reference to their apostolic claim to the church
of "Holy Jacob," James, the "brother of our Lord." Now, however, their opponents
used the term in reference to them derisively, just as the group of Monophysites
in Egypt were derisively referred to as "Theodosians." But it was also accepted
by the faithful themselves and hence is used in both a positive and negative
way.
About 547 Jacob had
consecrated his syncellus Sergius as patriarch of Antioch. Sergius lived for
only three years but during those years experienced no persecution. It appears
that the emperor was not in a position to continue to fight every
non-Chalcedonian consecration. When Sergius died, a new candidate was suggested
by Theodosius at Theodora’s monastery. His candidate Paul, an Alexandrian by
birth, had been a monk in Syria and then an abbot at a monastery on the
Euphrates. Jacob approved of the choice and consecrated Paul with six other
bishops assisting. As patriarch of Antioch Paul was Jacob’s superior but the
formal and official relationship between the two remained undefined. Jacob still
had his itinerant, peregrinating commission and had no intention of surrendering
it. The monks still considered him their head, their leader — indeed, they
referred to him as "our holy Patriarch Jacob." Jacob continued with his work and
the Monophysites were being transformed from a dissenting group into a separate
hierarchy, indeed a separate church.
John of
Ephesus.
While Justinian was
busy with the problem of the condemnation of the Three Chapters and with
the Fifth Ecumenical Council, missionary work by the Monophysites continued, and
not just by Jacob himself. John of Ephesus was extremely busy. In one area he
destroyed a heathen temple and built, at the expense of the imperial treasury,
twenty-four churches and four monasteries. At the consecration of each new
church John of Ephesus had no qualms about reading — pro forma — a
Chalcedonian proclamation to ensure the funding. Interestingly, John of Ephesus
came upon a Montanist community in the deeps of Anatolia. One of the Montanist
churches contained the bones of Montanus and John of Ephesus had them burned. He
reports that some of these "schismatics" were so perverse that they threw
themselves into the flames also.
Missionary Work
in Nubia.
In the land of
Nubia, now Sudan, there was missionary activity at the expense of the imperial
treasury. At that time Nubia was outside the borders of the empire. Here there
were two competing missionary activities, one of which was sponsored by
Theodora, who took measures to be certain that her mission had the first and
most secure possibility of success. Theodora’s mission set out before that of
Justinian with a certain Julian as its head. Justinian’s delegation was
constantly delayed by officials who were under Theodora’s influence. When they
finally arrived at the court of the Nubian king, they found the Monophysite
bishop securely installed there. The king politely told Justinian’s delegation
that he had already received the true faith, thanked them, and dismissed them.
These missionary activities took place before, during, and after the Fifth
Ecumenical Council.
Justinian and the Fifth
Ecumenical Council.
Pope Vigilius
Forcibly Taken to Constantinople.
Justinian ordered
Pope Vigilius to Constantinople, and then had the pope forcibly brought there.
In the Latin West this was considered an intrigue by the Monophysites. Victor of
Tunnuna in his Chronicle writes: "Justinianus imperator acephalorum
subreptionibus instigatus, Vigilium Romanorum episcopum subtiliter compellit, ut
ad urbem regiam properaret et sub specie congregationis eorum qui ab ecclesiae
sunt societate divisi, tria capitula condemnaret" Vigilius seems to have
arrived in Constantinople in late January of 547. He and Patriarch Menas could
not agree and the result was mutual excommunication. Theophanes tells us in his
Chronographia that one of the last official acts of Theodora was to
reconcile Pope Vigilius and Patriarch Menas in June of 547. She died one year
later. But before her death Pope Vigilius had signed the condemnation of the
Three Chapters — his Judicatum, which he sent to Patriarch Menas
in April of 548.
The Fifth
Ecumenical Council.
Justinian
considered an ecumenical council necessary to sanction his edicts against Origen
and against Theodore, Theodoret, and Ibas. Pope Vigilius vigorously protested
the opening of a council and refused to participate, although he was present in
Constantinople. The Fifth Ecumenical Council opened about May in 553. The Acts
have not come down to us in their original form. The work of the council was
simplified since it in essence was convoked to sanction edicts already
promulgated. The council condemned Origen, condemned the Three Chapters,
and sanctioned the Theopaschite Formula. The Council lasted less than a
month, for Justinian was extremely concerned that the decisions be
expedited.
Theologically the
council based its perspective on the doctrine of enhypostasis that had
been developing in the sixth century, especially in the thought of John the
Grammarian, Leontius of Jerusalem, and Leontius of Byzantium. In general,
however, it would indeed be a mistake to limit the theological and doctrinal
work of the first half of the sixth century to a restricted number of
individuals. The Council of Chalcedon had caused such turmoil and disturbance
that theological solutions were being sought in a variety of circles. The
problem was to reconcile the definition of Chalcedon with the theology of St.
Cyril — the two natures after the union and the oneness of Christ. The central
point in the doctrine of enhypostasis is precisely that an essence —
ουσία — is not without a person, not without a center of existence, not without
an hypostasis — ανυπόστατος — and that Christ, of one essence with the Father
and of one essence with humanity, had as his hypostasis, as his center of
existence, his Divine, Eternal Hypostasis which provided the human nature the
possibility of being enhypostasized — ένυπόστατος. The Antiochene school of
theology had great difficulty in making a distinction between hypostasis and
nature or essence. The doctrine of enhypostasis precisely
meant that the center, the subject, of both the Divine nature and the human
nature was the Eternal Logos of the Father — it is the Eternal Logos of the
Father who as person experiences the life of the human nature, even to the point
of being the subject who experiences the death of human nature. The central idea
was that the Divine Logos hypostasized in his own hypostasis — τη ιδία
υποστάσει ένυπέστησεν. It is this thinking which dominates the theological
thought of the Fifth Ecumenical Council and stands behind its
anathemas.
The Anathemas of
the Fifth Ecumenical Council.
1. If anyone shall
not confess that the nature or essence — ουσία — of the Father, of the Son, and
of the Holy Spirit is one, as also the force and the power; if anyone does not
confess a consubstantial Trinity, one Godhead to be worshipped in three
hypostases — υπόστασεις — or persons — πρόσωπα, 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.
2. If anyone shall
not confess that the Logos of God has two births, one from all eternity from 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, Theotokos
and always a virgin, and born of her, let him be anathema.
3. If anyone shall
say that there was one God the Logos who performed miracles and another Christ
who suffered, or that God the Logos was with Christ when he was born of a woman,
or was in him, as one person in another, and not that there was one and the same
Lord Jesus Christ, incarnate and become man, and that the miracles and the
sufferings which he endured voluntarily in the flesh pertained to the same
person, let him be anathema.
4. If anyone shall
say that the union of the Logos of God to man was only according to grace or
energy, or dignity, or equality of honor, or authority, or relation, or effect,
or power, or according to good pleasure in this sense that God the Logos was
pleased with a man, that is to say, that he loved him for his own sake, as says
the senseless Theodore, 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 Logos of God Jesus and Christ, and even accord to the man the names of
Christ and Son, speaking thus clearly of two persons, and only designating
disingenuously one Person and one Christ when the reference is to his honor, or
his dignity, or his worship. If anyone shall not acknowledge as the Holy Fathers
teach, that the union of God the Logos 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, namely: our Lord
Jesus Christ, one of the Holy Trinity, let him be anathema. As a point of fact
the word "union" — της ενώσεως — has many meanings and the followers of
Apollinarius 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 Theodore 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,
recognizes the union of God the Logos with the flesh according to synthesis;
that is, according to hypostasis. For in the mystery of Christ the union of
synthesis not only preserves unconfusedly the natures which are united but also
allows no separation.
5. 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 therefore 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, honor
or worship, as both Theodore 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 Logos 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 become
man, that is, God the Logos, the Holy Trinity has not been increased by the
addition of another person or hypostasis.
6. If anyone shall
say that the holy, glorious, and ever-virgin Mary is called Theotokos by
misuse of language and not truly, or by analogy, believing that only a mere man
was born of her and that God the Logos was not incarnate of her, but that the
Incarnation of God the Logos resulted only from the fact that he united himself
to that man who was born [of her]; if anyone slanders the Holy Council of
Chalcedon as though it had asserted the Virgin to be Theotokos according to the
impious sense of Theodore; or if anyone shall call her anthropotokos —
άνθρωποτόκον — or Christotokos — Χριστοτόκον, as if Christ were not God,
and shall not confess that she is truly Theotokos because God the Logos
who before all time was begotten of the Father was in these last days incarnate
of her, and if anyone shall not confess that in this pious sense the Holy
Council of Chalcedon confessed her to be Theotokos, let him be
anathema.
7. 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 in order to indicate 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 Logos was changed
into that of the flesh, nor that of the flesh into that of the Logos, for each
remained what it was by nature, since the union was hypostatic; but shall take
the expression with regard to the mystery of Christ in a sense so as to divide
the parties, or recognizing the two natures in the only Lord Jesus, God the
Logos become man, does not content himself with taking in a theoretical manner —
τη θεωρία μόνη — the difference of the natures which compose him, which
differentiation 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.
8. If anyone uses
the expression "out of two natures," confessing that a union was made of the
Godhead and of the humanity, or the expression "the one nature become flesh of
God the Logos," and shall not so understand those expressions as the Holy
Fathers have taught, that is: that of the divine and human nature there was made
an hypostatic union, of which is one Christ; but from these expressions shall
try to introduce one nature or essence of the Godhead and the manhood of Christ,
let him be anathema. For in teaching that the Only-Begotten Logos 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 Logos was united to the flesh. Therefore there is one
Christ, both God and Man, consubstantial with the Father in his Godhead and
consubstantial with us in his manhood. Therefore they are equally condemned and
anathematized by the Church of God, who divide or split the mystery of the
divine oikonomia of Christ, or who introduce confusion into that
mystery.
9. If anyone shall
take the expression, Christ should be worshipped in his two natures, in the
sense that he wishes to introduce therefore two adorations, the one in special
relation to God the Logos and the other as pertaining to the man; or if anyone
by destroying the flesh or by mixing together the divinity and the humanity,
shall speak monstrously of one only nature or essence — φυσιν ήγουν ουσίαν — of
the united natures, and so worship Christ, and does not venerate by one
adoration God the Logos become man, together with his flesh, as the Holy Church
has taught from the beginning, let him be anathema.
10. 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.
11. If anyone does
not anathematize Arms, Eunomius, Macedonius, Apollinarius, 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 Councils and 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.
12. If anyone
defends the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia, who has said that the Logos 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 his manner of life, as a mere man was baptized in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, 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 Logos (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 Logos with Christ is like to that which,
according to the doctrine of the Apostle, exists between a man and his wife,
‘they shall be 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 Spirit,’ 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; that is, ‘My Lord and My God,’ was
not said in reference to Christ, but that Thomas, filled with wonder at the
miracle of the resurrection, in this manner 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, Mani,
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,
Manichaeans, Epicureans, and Marcionites, just so Christ, having discovered his
doctrine, had given the name of 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 Savior Jesus Christ, and if anyone does not anathematize him or
his impious writings, as well as all those who protect or defend him, or assert
that his exegesis is orthodox, or who write in favor of him and of his impious
works, or those who share the same opinions, or those who have shared them and
still continue until the end in this heresy, let him be
anathema.
13. If anyone shall
defend the impious writings of Theodoret, directed against the true faith and
against the first holy council of Ephesus and against St. Cyril and his Twelve
Anathemas, and [defends] that which he has written in defense 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 Logos; 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 Twelve
Anathemas, and who die in their impiety, let him be
anathema.
14. If anyone shall
defend that letter which Ibas is said to have written to Maris the Persian, in
which he denies that the Logos of God incarnate of Mary the Holy
Theotokos and ever-virgin, became man, but says that a mere man was born
of her, whom he styles a Temple, as though the Logos 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 Apollinarius. 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
letter styles the Twelve 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
letter 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 favor, or in defense 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 die name of the Holy Fathers or of the Holy
Council of Chalcedon, and shall remain in these offenses until the end, let him
be anathema.
Anathemas
Against Origen and Origenism.
1. If anyone
asserts the incredible pre-existence of souls, and shall assert the monstrous
restoration which follows from it, let him be anathema.
2 If any shall say
that the creation — την παραγωγήν — of all reasonable things includes only
intelligences — νοας — 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
Logos; 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 Dominions, and Thrones, and Angels, and as many
other heavenly orders as there may be, let him be
anathema.
3. 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, lei: him
be anathema.
4. 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 have become and are called demons and evil spirits, let him be
anathema.
5. If anyone shall
say that a psychic — ψυχίκήν — 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.
6. If anyone shall
say that there is a two-fold 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 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 exist by
themselves; that is, dryness, damp, heat and cold, and the image — ιδέαν — 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 — νους δημιουργός — which is more ancient than the world, and which
communicates to it its being, let him be anathema.
7. If anyone shall
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 Logos, and humbled himself in
these last days even to humanity, had (according to their expression) pity upon
the various 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 various
classes, had different bodies and different names, became all to all, an Angel
among Angels, a Power among Powers, has clothed 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 Logos humbled himself and became man,
let him be anathema.
8. If anyone shall
not acknowledge that God the Logos, of the same essence with the Father and the
Holy Spirit, and who became 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 — κενώσαντα, as they call it, of the
intelligence — νους, if anyone shall affirm that this intelligence united —
συνημμένον — to God the Logos, 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 in reverse, that the intelligence is only called God because
of the Logos, let him be anathema.
9. If anyone shall
say that it was not the Divine Logos become man by taking an animated body with
a ψυχή λογική and νοερα, that he descended into hell and ascended into heaven,
but shall pretend that it is the νους which has done this, that νους of which
they say — in an impious manner — he is Christ properly so called, and that he
is become so by the knowledge of the monad, let him be
anathema.
10. 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.
11. 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 φύσις, and that therefore there will no
longer be any matter but only spirit — νους, let him be
anathema.
12. If anyone shall
say that the heavenly Powers and all men and the devil and evil spirits are
united with the Logos of God in all respects, as the νους 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.
13. If anyone shall
say that Christ [as νους] 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 [as νους], as also they were in the feigned pre-existence
of all things, let him be anathema.
14. 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 names, and that
there shall be finally an identity of the χνωσις of the hypostasis; moreover,
that in this pretended apokatastasis, spirits only will continue to exist, as it
was in the feigned pre-existence, let him be anathema.
15. If anyone shall
say that the life of the spirits — 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.
Pope Vigilius
and the Fifth Ecumenical Council.
The Fifth
Ecumenical Council attempted to restore a sorely needed unity in the external
structure of the Church. By condemning the Three Chapters, an attempt was
made to bring Alexandria back to the external structure of the Church — there
was also the recognition of St. Cyril. By condemning Origen and Origenist
notions, an attempt was made to placate both Rome and the Antiochene tradition.
But now the major obstacle was the adamant stand of Pope Vigilius, who, though
he was in Constantinople, refused to attend the council. While all this is
taking place the non-Chalcedonians are continuing their missionary work and new
divisions begin to appear among the non-Chalcedonians.
At first when Pope
Vigilius had been forcibly brought to Constantinople, he refused to agree to
condemn the Three Chapters, especially because of the question of
posthumous condemnation. When he did consent, it is important to point out that
he did so by stipulating that it was to be without any injury to the Council of
Chalcedon. This equivocation satisfied neither the opponents of Chalcedon nor
the defenders of Chalcedon in Africa, Illyrium, and Dalmatia. The bishops of
Africa excommunicated Pope Vigilius in 551. The sources indicate that the idea
of the ecumenical council was not only that of Justinian but also that of Pope
Vigilius. Indeed, it may well be that it was Pope Vigilius was asked for the
council to which Justinian quickly consented. Vigilius was distressed by the
condemnations against him. He withdrew his signature to the Three
Chapters and it was decided that the council would deliberate on the matter.
The adamant stance of Pope Vigilius is often misunderstood by both the Latin
West and the East. He refused to attend the council primarily because he
objected to the fact that the West was not adequately represented. What is
historically significant is that Vigilius was told that there ere more
representatives of the Latin West now than at any of the previous councils. Why
Pope Vigilius did not take the extreme Roman view, already in existence at that
time, that he by himself could represent not only the entire Latin West but the
entire Church remains unclear. He did, however, send his opinion on the Three
Chapters to the council, an opinion which opposed their condemnation. The
council brushed aside his opinion, examined the writings of the three persons to
be condemned — Theodore, Theodoret, and Ibas — and ultimately pronounced
condemnation on the Three Chapters as doctrine which was opposed to
previous councils, especially that of the Council of Chalcedon, now solemnly
recognized as ecumenical and of the same solemn and sacred character as Nicaea,
Constantinople, and Ephesus. Extracts from the council provide some
background.
"The effort of my
predecessors, the orthodox emperors, always aimed at the settling of
controversies which had arisen respecting the faith by the calling of councils.
For this reason Constantine assembled three hundred and eighteen Fathers at
Nicaea, and was himself present at the Council and assisted those who confessed
the Son to be of one essence with the Father. Theodosius [assembled] one hundred
and fifty [bishops] at Constantinople; Theodosius the Younger1 [convoked] the
Council of Ephesus, and Emperor Marcian [assembled] the bishops at Chalcedon.
As, however, after Marcian’s death controversies respecting the Council of
Chalcedon had broken out in several places, 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, the adherents of
Nestorius and Eutyches had again arisen 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 main goal to unite the churches
again, and to bring the Council of Chalcedon, together with the three previous
councils, to ecumenical acceptance. We have won many who previously opposed that
Council. Others, who persevered in their opposition, we banished, and in that
way restored the unity of the Church again. But the Nestorians wanted 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, for example, that God the Logos was one and Christ
another. For the same purpose they made use of those impious writings of
Theodoret which were directed against the first Council 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 Council
of Chalcedon, and so would free from condemnation Nestorius and Theodore who
were commended in that letter. If they were to succeed, the Logos could no
longer be said to have "become man" nor Mary called the Theotokos. 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 joyftilly confessed the true faith. Because, however, after the
condemnation coming 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 here, he, in response to our
questions, repeatedly anathematized 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 anathematized the
Three Chapters with the words, Et quoniam … You know that he not
only deposed Rusticus and Sebastian because they defended die 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 here at my invitation, letters were exchanged between
you and Vigilius in order to have a common assembly. But now he had changed his
view and would no longer have a council but rather 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 council. 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 Council 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 council 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. You will therefore 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. Moreover, we exhort you to examine the writing of
Theodoret and the supposed letter of Ibas in which the Incarnation of the Logos
is denied, the expression Theotokos and the Holy Council of Ephesus
rejected, Cyril called a heretic, and Theodore and Nestorius defended and
praised. And since they say that the Council of Chalcedon has accepted 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."
Extracts from
the seventh session of the council shed more light on the inner
workings.
"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 the most religious Vigilius to
assemble with you and draw up a decree on this matter in accordance with the
orthodox faith. Although 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
council, 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 he sei forth against the orthodox faith and against
the Twelve Chapters of the holy Cyril, yet he has refused to do this in
communion with you and your council."
"Yesterday Vigilius
sent Servus Dei, a most reverend subdeacon of the Roman church, and invited [a
list of consuls and bishops follows] to come to him as he wished to give through
them an answer to the emperor. They went but quickly 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 [the Constitutum], 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 request. ‘But you
have deacons for carrying messages and can send it by them.’ He, however, said
to us: ‘You now know that I have made the document.’ But we bishops answered
him: ‘If your
Sketches in the
History of Monophysitism 161 Blessedness is willing to meet together with us and
the most holy patriarchs, and the most religious bishops, and to treat 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 you as our head, as a father and primate. But if your
Holiness has drawn up a document for the emperor, you have message carriers, 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 abovementioned subdeacon
to carry back this message to the most religious Vigilius: ‘We invited you to
meet together with the most blessed patriarchs and the 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?’
"
"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 to your holy council
concerning the name of Vigilius, that this name be no more inserted in the holy
diptychs of the Church because of the impiety which he defended. Neither let his
name be recited by you nor retained, either in the church of the imperial city
or in other churches which are entrusted to you and to the other bishops in the
empire committed by God to his rule. And when you hear this minute, again you
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 Deposing of Pope
Vigilius by the Fifth Ecumenical Council.
The Constitutum by
Pope Vigilius referred to above is his Constitutum of May 14, 553 which was
rejected by Justinian because it was not explicit enough in its condemnation of
the Three Chapters. Vigilius finally satisfied the imperial will by a new
Constitutum in February of 554. It is clear that from the date of
Justinian’s "minute" [formam] Pope Vigilius was considered deposed by the
council. That his name was removed from the diptychs certainly constitutes
deposition and may well be interpreted as excommunication. Whether the Fifth
Ecumenical Council considered this deposition only and not excommunication is
subject to controversy. It is, in any event, highly unlikely that the removal of
Pope Vigilius’ name from the diptychs constituted a break of communion from the
Roman church. There was still a distinction made between the person of the
bishop of Rome and the Roman see — non sedem sed sedentem. Ultimately,
however, approval was given to the Fifth Ecumenical Council by Pope Vigilius —
whether this approval was forced or insincere is not the
issue.
The Earlier
Years of Pope Pelagius and His Ultimate
Recognition of
the Fifth Ecumenical Council.
The Fifth
Ecumenical Council was also affirmed by Pope Vigilius’ successor Pope Pelagius I
(556-561), who had also accompanied Pope Agapetus to Constantinople and who, of
course, had strong ties with Constantinople, for he had participated in the
council of 536 and had served in the capital as Pope Vigilius’
apocrisiarius.
Pelagius had also
been sent to Constantinople by Totila to negotiate a peace with Justinian, a
mission in which he was unsuccessful. But he stayed in Constantinople with Pope
Vigilius. When Vigilius attempted his second escape — from the papal residence
to the church of St. Euphemia in Chalcedon — Pelagius was with him (December,
551). He returned to Constantinople from Chalcedon with Vigilius in February of
552 and was strongly influential in supporting Vigilius’ firm stand. He
contributed to the composition of Vigilius’ first Constitutum and
strongly advised Pope Vigilius not to attend the Fifth Ecumenical Council. After
the council condemned and deposed Pope Vigilius, Pelagius left Vigilius’ company
when it became apparent that Vigilius was going to succumb to the imperial will.
Pelagius — and the deacon Sarpatus — were excommunicated by Vigilius which
rnnted Pelagius to write a Refutatorium against Vigilius. Pelagius sent a
copy to Justinian, who did not react favorably to a that condemned the emperor
and the council. Justinian arrested and imprisoned in different monasteries. It
was here in confinement that Pelagius wrote his In defensione rium
capitulorum, patterned after a similar work by Facundus of Ηermiane. The
In defensione trium capitulorum was also a futation of Pope Vigilius’
second Constitutum, the work by Vigilius which finally condemned the
Three Chapters. Pelagius accused Vigilius of succumbing to the imperial
will, of betraying Pope Leo I, of betraying the Council of Chalcedon, and of
condemning unjustly Theodore, Theodoret, and Ibas. When the news of Vigilius’
death reached Constantinople, Justinian released Pelagius and reached an
understanding with him which resulted in Pelagius’ return to Rome as the
successor to Vigilius, an act which caused further scandal in the Latin Church —
described by Facundus in his De fide (Patrologia Latina 67, 867-868). A
schism was created in the Latin Church which lasted until 698 with Aquileia.
Pope Pelagius I had schismatic problems with the northern Italian bishops of
Tuscany, Liguria, and Venetia, as well as with Istria. The exchange of letters
between Pope Pelagius I and Sapaudus, the papal vicar and bishop of Aries, give
a vivid account of Pelagius’ views. In one of his letters to Sapaudus he
explains the difficulties he had in Constantinople in keeping the true faith.
Now that an ecumenical council had spoken there was no further resistance, he
writes. He explains his own change of view as the recognition of one’s mistakes
which is the correct attitude according to both Scripture and the tradition of
the fathers — he mentions specifically St. Augustine. In a letter to the bishops
of Istria Pope Pelagius I maintained that no local council could judge an
ecumenical council — he claimed, somewhat exaggeratedly, that four thousand
bishops had accepted the Fifth Ecumenical Council.
The Result of
the Fifth Ecumenical Council and a Glimpse at Its
Sessions.
In a little less
than one month the Fifth Ecumenical Council reached its decisions. It is not
wholly accurate to see in this council simply an attempt to paciiy the
Monophysites. Indeed, the [jasic problem was that the definition of the Council
of Chalcedon α been crying out for clarification — what many regarded as a
self-contradictory council had to be resolved.
It is clear that
most of the time of the first two sessions was consumed by attempts to bring
Pope Vigilius to the council. At the third session a confession of faith was
made which was based on the introductory speech by Justinian. To this there was
added an anathema against anyone who separated himself from the Church — it is
obviously Vigilius to whom they refer. The fourth session examined seventy
excerpts from the writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia and condemned them. In the
fifth session the problem of condemning someone posthumously was discussed and
it was decided to condemn both the writings and the person of Theodore of
Mopsuestia. At this same session the writings of Theodoret against St. Cyril
were examined and the council expresses surprise that the Council of Chalcedon
had exonerated Theodoret — he was "rehabilitated" only after his explicit
repudiation of Nestorius. At the sixth session the reputation of Ibas of Edessa
was discussed, along with the infamous Letter to Maris. The decision was
that Ibas was not the author of the letter and that his exoneration by the
Council of Chalcedon was valid. The seventh session is the one which contains
Justinian’s description of his dealings with Pope Vigilius. At the eighth
session a doctrinal statement and fourteen anathemas were accepted. The Fifth
Ecumenical Council was not acceptable to the Monophysites — especially the
eighth anathema which clearly delineated the boundary between Monophysitism and
a Cyrillian interpretation of the Council of Chalcedon.
The Firm
Resistance to Justinian’s Stunning Edict
of 564 Proclaiming
Aphthartodocetism Orthodox.
Whatever his own
personal interpretation of Christology might have become, Justinian did nothing
overtly to foster his own developing position — nothing, that is, until 564.
Suddenly he stunned the Church with an issuance of an edict which was an
expression of the extremist position within Monophysitism, a position that had
been condemned by Monophysite theologians such as Philoxenus — Justinian decreed
Aphthartodocetism to be orthodox, the belief that the humanity our Lord assumed
was incorruptible and hence unlike our humanity, the doctrine of Julian of
Halicarnassus. Justinian’s advisor on theological matters had been Theodore
Askidas but when the latter died in January of 558 an unnamed bishop from Joppa
in Palestine succeeded Theodore, referred to in the sources as a "stupid" man.
Immediately Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople refused to sign the edict.
Justinian had Eutychius arrested and deposed a week later by a
council.
Eutychius was
celebrating the liturgy when Justinian’s police A Aetherius came to arrest him —
he was permitted to complete the liturgy before being led away. After his quick
condemnation by a council, Eutychius was sent to the island of Prinkipo.
Eutychius spend the next twelve years in exile — though he was later permitted
to serve his exile on his own estate and in his own monastery at Amasea. The
other patriarchs of the East resisted also — Apolinarius of Alexandria,
Anastasius of Antioch, and Macarius of Jerusalem. Indeed, Anastasius of Antioch
had the imperial edict condemned by a council in Antioch. It is true that at
first Anastasius did not reject the edict outright, declaring that he would
accept it if "incorruptible" were to be the equivalent of "impeccable." When
Anastasius’ requested interpretation was rejected, Anastasius responded by
declaring that if the humanity of Christ was not consubstantial with our
humanity, then the Incarnation was devoid of all meaning. He was ready for his
deposition when news arrived that Emperor Justinian had died. His successor,
Emperor Justin II (565-578), revoked the edict at once.
The Twilight of
Justinian’s Reign.
The last twelve
years of Justinian’s reign saw a reversal of his achievements in the
"miraculous" year of 553. In that year the long war with the Goths was finally
won by the general Narses, Vigilius had finally given in, and the empire had
succeeded in regaining much territory in Visigothic Spain. All was to be lost in
the remaining years of Justinian’s reign. Illyricum would also be lost — the
Avars, Lombards, and Slavs would penetrate the imperial borders. Still, at the
time of the death of Justinian few would have imagined that the Monophysite
Christians would later become so disenchanted with "Chalcedonian" imperial rule
that they would somehow prefer the Arab invasions.
Justinian had lived
long enough to put another patriarch on the throne of Constantinople, John of
Sirmium, known as John ocholasticus. For the duration of Justin II’s reign and
through the reign of his successor, Tiberius II (578-582) the Chalcedonians and
the non-Chalcedonians were still on speaking terms and therewas still the hope
of the possibility of some type of reconciliation. The head of non-Chalcedonian
Egypt was still Theodosius, still residing in Theodora’s monastery for exiles in
Constantinople. Letters to Theodosius were addressed to him as "ecumenical
patriarch." Justin II did nothing to alter this — indeed, Justin II would
receive him with all the honor that belonged to a patriarch, and Justin II’s
wife, Sophia, the niece of Theodora, was thought to be a follower of
Theodosius.
The Actions of
the Exiled Monophysite
"Patriarch" Theodosius in His Last
Days.
About 567
Theodosius, knowing that his death was approaching, began to initiate new steps
to regulate the affairs of his church. He had also begun to distrust Jacob —
something had happened in Egypt, the precise nature of which is not reported
something apparently caused by Jacob. Theodosius, the very person who had
previously commissioned Jacob with the authority to act as his representative
even in Egypt, now in essence began to rescind this authority. Theodosius began
to give authority to Paul "the Black" of Antioch to ordain priests and deacons
for Alexandria and to ordain Longinus as bishop for Nubia. Egypt, which during
the times of St. Athanasius and St. Cyril had’ approximately more than one
hundred bishops, now had only a handful. In his final episcopal letter
Theodosius underscored the desperate need for bishops, something he had
postponed because of his continued hope that he would return to Alexandria where
he himself could ordain bishops. Now, however, all must obey Paul as they had
obeyed him, and Paul would supply them with bishops. It is reported that he died
just as he had finished dictating the letter and before he could affix his seal
— he died in June of 566. Athanasius, a monk, delivered the funeral oration, an
oration which Michael the Syrian in his Chronicle (10, 1) describes as
condemning Chalcedon.
Justin II’s
Convocation of the Monophysite Conference of 566.
The
non-Chalcedonian movement had now become a separate church within the empire. In
566 Justin II made an attempt to reconcile the Monophysites with the
Chalcedonians. He convoked a conference at which even Jacob was present —
indeed, it appears that the initiative for the convocation of this conference
had come from Sophia. In Constantinople, under the oversight of Patriarch John
Scholasticus, the Chalcedonians met with two groups of non-Chalcedonians.
Similar meetings took place between monks and clergy. It appears as though a
temporary reconciliation took place between two Monophysite factions. Michael
the Syrian relates that the Monophysites proposed a compromise which, it
accepted, would have restored a unity between them and the Chalcedonians. Yet,
if one takes this compromise seriously, then lear that it was in reality no
compromise. Rather, it proposed that the Chalcedonians capitulate. The proposed
compromise isted of the following: the expression "out of two natures" would
have to be accepted; "not of two natures" would have to be added to "not two
sons, not two persons, not two hypostases;" St. Cyril’s Twelve Anathemas
must be declared canonical; the Henotikon, interpreted in Severian terms,
would suffice as ondemnatory of Chalcedon; and Severus’ name would have to be
restored to the diptychs. This was more akin to unconditional surrender than to
compromise. What is surprising, however, is that the Monophysites claimed that
they were willing, provided these terms were accepted, to be in communion with
Anastasius of Antioch — indeed, this would have meant that they were ready to
circumvent the recently ordained bishop and patriarch, Paul "the Black." What
may account for this willingness is the fact that Paul "the Black" was not on
good terms with Justin II, whereas Anastasius, although a Chalcedonian, remained
on good terms personally with most of the non-Chalcedonians and in his work
against John Philoponus he was already using the term of "one energy" in
Christ.
The Monophysite
Conference at Callinicum.
Justin II empowered
the comes orientales and Patrician John to continue with the dialogue in
Callinicum on the Euphrates. The meeting, which probably took place in 568, was
attended by numerous monks and clergy. What John brought with him was an edict
that based the faith on the Council of Nicaea, claimed that Christ was "out of
two natures, one hypostasis," contained an anathema against the Three
Chapters, abolished the edict against Severus, and all anathemas starting
from the time of St. Cyril. The text of this edict is contained only in the
source by Michael the Syrian — his Chronicle (10, 2). Again this was not
compromise but capitulation. Although the bishops present seemed optimistic, the
monks began to clamor. They allegedly ripped up the edict, created a riot and
walked out of the talks. The events, as related by Michael the Syrian, give an
interesting glimpse at Jacob. Michael, a Monophysite Patriarch, was not opposed
to Jacob. If the source were written by a Chalcedonian, one would have to be
more sceptical. The bishops were infuriated with the unruly monks. John wanted
to continue the dialogue despite "the anger of a few ignorant monks." Michael
the Syrian relates that Jacob offered to attempt to persuade the monks to
return.
But, once in the
company of the monks, that element of his personality and character which had
distressed Theodosius in his later years, revealed itself again. Jacob joined
the monks and anathematized the meeting and all those participating. John is
said to have reported to Constantinople that "it is useless to attempt to
reconcile men like this" and broke off the negotiations. He was cursed by the
monks as a deceiver and, when he died shortly thereafter, the monks interpreted
it as a sign of divine judgment on him.
The Imperial
Summons for Another Conference
Among the Monophysites at
Constantinople.
Justin, though
distressed at the chaotic and unsuccessful meeting, made another attempt to
achieve union with the Monophysites. He summoned the bishops to Constantinople
for another conference. Jacob, of course, excused himself from attending. The
bishops who attended condemned Paul "the Black" of Antioch — for what reason is
not specifically known, though it appears to be connected with his work in
Egypt. Paul "the Black" had returned to Syria from Egypt in about 566. That next
year he was back in Constantinople to participate in the negotiations. Michael
the Syrian relates that he and other non-Chalcedonian bishops entered communion
with the Chalcedonians in 571 under the belief that the Council of Chalcedon was
to be annulled. Now the divisions among the non-Chalcedonians become more
apparent, divisions which began much earlier — indeed, they actually begin with
the definition of faith by the Council of Chalcedon.
The Varieties of
Monophysite Thought.
During the time of
Proterius John the Rhetorician combined ideas from both Nestorius and Eutyches
to produce the idea that "God the Logos was wrapped in the body as if a seed"
and that "if he suffered, then he suffered in his divine nature." Shortly
thereafter Timothy Aelurus wrote from exile to condemn the thought of Isaiah of
Hermopolis and a Theophilus of Alexandria -they had taught that "our Lord and
God Jesus Christ was by nature different from us in the flesh, that he was not
consubstantial with mankind, and was not truly man."
Then there arose
the controversy between Severus and Julian of Halicarnassus and Julian’s
followers proclaimed the doctrine of the incorruptibility of the humanity of our
Lord and the faction of the Aphthartodocetists came into existence. Often one
could find among the former fathers some who taught a similar view. In the case
of Julian it must be mentioned that St. Hilary of Poitiers wrote in his De
Trinitate (10, 22) that the human soul of Christ could only have come
directly from God and therefore could not have been in reality human — "but as
he by his own act assumed a body from the Virgin, so he assumed from himself a
soul; though even in ordinary human birth the soul is never derived from the
parents. If, then, the Virgin received from God alone the flesh which she
conceived, far more certain is it that the soul of that body can have come from
God alone." St. Hilary also anticipates to some extent the position of Julian in
the same work (10, 23) — "when in this humanity he was struck with blows or
smitten with wounds or bound with ropes or lifted on high, he felt the force of
the suffering but without its pain ... So our Lord Jesus Christ suffered blows,
hanging, crucifixion, and death — but the suffering which attacked the body of
the Lord, without ceasing to be suffering, had not the natural effect of
suffering. It exercised its function of punishment with all its violence, but
the body of Christ by its virtue suffered the violence of the punishment without
its consciousness... He had a body to suffer and he suffered, but he had not a
nature which could feel pain, for his body possessed a unique nature of its own;
it was transformed into heavenly glory on the Mount, it put fevers to flight by
its touch, it gave new eyesight by its spittle." Indeed, Julian was convinced
that he was basing his view on the thought of the "fathers." Writing to Severus,
Julian makes his position clear: "Some say that the body of Christ was
corruptible. I am certain that you will agree with my rebuttle to them, and I
attach what I have written to correct their error. My position is merely that of
the Fathers, those holy men who could neither contradict themselves nor each
other. And St. Cyril says of the humanity of Christ, ‘corruption could never
take hold of it.’" It should be mentioned that there is a distinction between
"corruption" never being able to take hold of the humanity of Christ and the
doctrine that the humanity of our Lord was always "incorruptible," a distinction
which is precisely ontological. As related previously, the controversy between
Severus and Julian, although starting in a friendly vein, became a tumultuous
battle, one that broke their friendship and split the Monophysites into two
factions. Indeed, Severus wrote to Justinian that Julian was a danger to the
"public," that he had become a Manichee, that he held "the Passion itself as
unreal." The ultimate result of this controversy was that the followers of
Julian, with the assistance of Julian, established their own hierarchy which
continued to exist separately until approximately 800 with its own patriarchs of
Alexandria and Antioch.
During the period
when the Monophysites were left somewhat undisturbed by the imperial arm, from
540 until about 570, personal disputes caused further factions. One faction was
the Agnoetae — from αγνοέω. They were also known as Themistians, from the
founder of their Monophysite faction, Themistius, a sixth century deacon of
Alexandria and a student of Severus. Their basic position was in maintaining
that the humanity of Christ was "ignorant." Another group, the Niobites,
professed a belief in a distinction of natures after the union but refused to
accept the expression "two natures" — the Niobites anathematized the entire
Severian party.
A more serious
schism was that of the Tritheists, also known as the Cononites from their leader
Conon, one of the early associates of Jacob — they were also known as the
Philoponists from John Philoponus (d.c. 565). According to the extant sources
the origin of Tritheism occurred in a most casual way. In a meeting with the
Chalcedonians John Philoponus allegedly asked: "If you speak about two natures,
why do you not also speak of two hypostases since nature and hypostasis are
identical?" The Chalcedonian response was that they would indeed do so "if we
considered nature and hypostasis identical, but as a point of fact we
distinguish between the two." The Chalcedonian reportedly continued by proposing
that John Philoponus, if he held nature and hypostasis to be identical, should
therefore speak of three natures in the Godhead. His reply allegedly was: "Then,
we will do so." When the astonished Chalcedonian exclaimed that to do so would
be to teach Tritheism, John reportedly replied that "in the Trinity I count as
many natures, essences, and Godheads as I do hypostases."
Such a position may
appear somewhat flippant and casual but it was a quite serious point by John
Philoponus, who was not an ignorant monk but a sophisticated philosopher, a
disciple of Ammonius of Hermias. He wrote works on Aristotle, works on
Nichomachus of Gerosa, and at least two works on grammar. His works reflect an
eclectic philosophical perspective which combines Aristotle, Plato, Stoic
principles, and elements of Christian thought. Underlying his thought is a Stoic
principle of considering fundamental matter as three dimensional. Pluralism was
a cornerstone of his philosophical perspective. In transferring his basic
philosophical vision to the Trinity John Philoponus could easily affirm a
Tritheism. It is interesting that in his philosophy he viewed created existence
as a mere instrumentality of divine causation, a position which would make
Monophysitism somewhat natural for him. In none of his works does he, however,
explicitly affirm that there are three gods. John Philoponus was also extremely
hostile toward the Roman see, attacking directly the primacy of Rome and
explicitly calling Pope Leo the Great a Nestorian.
Underlying the
thought of the Tritheists was the distinction between hypostasis and nature.
Christ was one hypostasis, an indivisible hypostasis, which, though united with
God the Father, must be distinguished from the hypostasis of the Father and the
hypostasis of the Holy Spirit. But because of the interaction between hypostasis
and nature and because of a certain "assimilation" between the two, the
individual "natures" had also to be distinguished. The Cappadocian balance
between the hypostasis and nature was compromised and the compromise implied a
Tritheism. When this thought pattern was presented by a philosopher and ascetic
such as John Philoponus, it attracted the attention of some leaders within the
Monophysite movement. Sergius, a Syrian from Telia who was ordained patriarch of
Antioch in 557 by Theodosius, became enamored by the teaching. The early
associates of Jacob, Conon and Eugenius, now working in Cilicia and Isauria fell
under the influence of Tritheism. In Constantinople John Asconaghes — his name
referred to his slippery type of shoes which in turn referred to his "slippery"
character; that is, he was constantly slipping from one faction to another —
accepted this interpretation of hypostasis and nature and, through him, an
important convert was won from the imperial court: Anastasius, the grandson of
Theodora.
For the next twenty
years Anastasius was to be a personality to contend with. Michael the Syrian
relates that Justinian had hoped to place Anastasius on the patriarchal throne
of Alexandria (Chronicle 9, 30). Anastasius brought both money and a
certain social prestige to the new faction. Very quickly this new faction had
attracted to its cause another bishop, a significant event because this new
bishop happened to be the third bishop in the new movement which now allowed
them to ordain their own bishops. One of the sources claims that "all their
disciples and followers — whoever joined them — they consecrated as bishops."
They established new communities throughout the empire — in Africa, in Rome, in
Greece, in Asia Minor, as well as in the traditionally non-Chalcedonian areas of
Egypt and Syria. In Constantinople they also established themselves. Indeed,
John of Ephesus relates how surprised he was at the number of persons from the
court who attended the services of the new faction.
During all this
Theodosius used persuasion and then excommunication with the new faction.
Theodosius rejected any notion of separate natures. He excommunicated John
Asconaghes and Patriarch Sergius. He had more difficulty with Conon and
Eugenius, both of whom continued to reject and then accept again the position of
the Tritheists throughout their lives. Anastasius had created a will that left
an endowment to the new faction. He had a falling out with this new faction
before his death but had not altered his will, the result of which was a
financial source to perpetuate the new faction.
Attempts were made
to reunite but nothing came of them ultimately. After mutual excommunication
both parties appealed to the emperor. The task of judging two Monophysite groups
was delegated to Patriarch John Scholasticus. He was to use the works of
Severus, Theodosius, and Anthimus as the guide, the authoritative works from
which to judge. The "trial" lasted for four days. Conon and Eugenius represented
the Tritheists; Paul "the Black" and Jacob the "conservative" wing of the
Monophysites. As could have been anticipated, the decision favored the
"conservative" wing. Exile under escort was the decision for Conon and Eugenius.
John of Ephesus relates that the head of the escort was the defrocked monk,
Photius, the stepson of Belisarius, who was well-known for his cruelty. Indeed,
it is related that he liked nothing more than to torture
clergy.
This inner quarrel
actually played into the hands of the Chalcedonians. The Tritheists had pushed
the Monophysite position to an extremity and, in order to answer the Tritheists,
the conservative Monophysites were forced to fall back to strictly Severian
positions or to positions that pointed in the direction of Chalcedon. Michael
the Syrian claims that thousands returned to the Chalcedonian hierarchy, for
they believed it far more theologically sound to confess "two natures" rather
than have anything to do with a theology that could fall into "three natures in
the Trinity."
The Reign of
Terror Unleashed by Patriarch John
Scholasticus Against the Monophysites of
Constantinople in 571.
Patriarch John
Scholasticus decided to take action against the Monophysites, at least those in
and around Constantinople. Justin II was already decomposing in insanity and the
patriarch had little difficulty obtaining permission from the emperor to deal
with the Monophysites as he deemed best. John of Ephesus relates that the
stunning reversal took place on the Saturday prior to Palm Sunday of 571.
Suddenly all places of Monophysite worship were forbidden and the few
Monophysite bishops in Constantinople were arrested and imprisoned in the firmly
Chalcedonian Acoe-metae Monastery. Later they were transferred to cells in the
patriarchal residence. A reign of terror was unleashed on all the Monophysite
monastic communities in Constantinople, communities which had come into
existence as a result of the vibrant life existing in Theodora’s monastery for
exiled Monophysites. The non-Chalcedonian sources relate that the imperial
police and security forces entered the monastic communities to compel the people
to accept the Holy Eucharist from Chalcedonian priests. When they refused, they
were dragged to Chalcedonian altars, their mouths forced open, and forced to
consume the Holy Eucharist. The more recalcitrant met with severe punishment.
The patriarch, the sources relate, went from place to place to proclaim the holy
council of Chalcedon — indeed, it is related that the now insane emperor
accompanied him, giving out gifts to those who submitted. As many measures as
possible were implemented to extirpate Monophysitism in Constantinople — their
places of assembly were destroyed, their hospitals were confiscated, and the
staff of clerics was dismissed. This was, however, restricted to Constantinople
and its immediate surroundings. What caused the most hostile bitterness was the
fact that Patriarch John reordained all non-Chalcedonian clergy. Indeed, many of
the Chalcedonians were dismayed by the action of the
patriarch.
Patriarch John,
realizing the importance of Paul "the Black" as a patriarch and the esteem held
by John of Ephesus, summoned the two from their imprisonment and proposed as the
document of union the very document signed by St. Cyril and John of Antioch —
"Let the heavens rejoice." Paul and Jacob agreed on the condition that the
Council of Chalcedon first be anathematized. As John of Ephesus relates, they
exclaimed that "before Cyril made peace he had cast Nestorius out of the Church
and we must do the same." Patriarch John refused. It appears that Emperor Jus
tin II had a brief period of lucidity, an interlude in his insanity. It was at
this time that he proposed union based on both formulae — "one nature incarnate"
and "two natures." The condition laid down by the Monophysites was the
anathematization of Chalcedon.
Paul and John were
confined in "filthy dungeons" and deprived of any visitation. They were brought
out only when the patriarch wanted to engage in a theological conversation. A
rumor was deliberately leaked to them that the faithful were blaming their
obstinacy for the persecution. John of Ephesus relates that at this time
Patriarch John offered a duplicious proposal: "Participate in communion with me
just once in order ‘to save my reputation’ and when that is accomplished and the
schism is healed, I swear that Chalcedon will be dropped." Paul and John, worn
thin by de -privation and suffering, anathematized Chalcedon while receiving
communion twice from Patriarch John. When they asked Patriarch John to keep his
word, John replied that he would keep his word if Rome agreed. "Be reasonable.
You cannot expect us to offend Rome to please you." Paul and John swore they
would never again communicate with Patriarch John and they appealed to the
insane emperor. The imperial reply was that the emperor would investigate the
matter at the end of a month, after he had completed his baths. Patriarch John
then offered them any see they wanted if they would submit. They continued to
refuse.
The imperial court
was tired of the entire controversy. It is related that Emperor Justin II, if
indeed he was speaking for himself in a moment of lucidity, was angered by the
recalcitrant position of the Monophysites and angered by the policy of Patriarch
John, a policy accused of having exacerbated the situation rather than to have
brought the expected reconciliation. The matter was then referred to the senate,
which rendered a decision in favor of the patriarch — John of Ephesus and Paul
"the Black" were either to remain in communion with Patriarch John or to be
confined.
John of Ephesus was
kept for one year in a dungeon, an account of which he has left to us. He was
later sent to the island of Prinkipo for another year and one-half. At that time
Tiberius, ruling in the place of the insane Justin II, allowed John of Ephesus
to return to Constantinople under supervision. Upon the death of Patriarch John,
Tiberius gave John of Ephesus his freedom.
Paul "the Black"
was confined in the Acoemetae Monastery where he wrote an account of the recent
events. His writing was confiscated and shown to Patriarch John who was
infuriated. Paul expected to be executed. Finally, as a result of the
intervention of friends, an option was given to Paul — to receive communion
again from the patriarch. He succumbed. Patriarch John used the occasion for a
victory celebration — he invited as many selected persons as possible to attend
the celebration. After Paul had communicated with the patriarch, he was allowed
certain freedom under surveillance. Paul’s brother was an admiral in the
Byzantine navy, a fact which indicates that Paul’s family obviously came from a
relatively high social class. The emperor began to solicit Paul’s advice on
ecclesiastical matters, a step which angered the patriarch. Patriarch John
suggested that Paul should be the bishop of some see of rank. Paul was offered
Jerusalem and Thessaloniki but refused both. The patriarch arranged for Paul to
escape. Paul seized the opportunity and left Constantinople to seek out Jacob to
confess, to repent, and to submit to any disciplinary action as Jacob
decreed.
Tiberius refused to
permit persecution. John of Ephesus relates that Tiberius responded to Patriarch
John’s request by saying "By your own statements they are not heretics. Let them
alone." A few years later Patriarch John died after suffering from a painful
illness. When it became clear that Patriarch John would not recover, the
Monophysites began to worship in public again.
The Death of
Patriarch John and
the Recall of the Exiled Patriarch
Eutychius.
With the passing of
Patriarch John, his predecessor Patriarch Eutychius was brought out of
retirement and again assumed the position of patriarch of Constantinople.
Eutychius was welcomed as a confessor and a worker of miracles. He immediately
excommunicated the recently departed Patriarch John and removed his name from
the diptychs. The apocrisiarius of the Roman see protested — he was deacon
Gregory, the future Pope Gregory I (590-604). Patriarch Eutychius let the
conservative Monophysites in peace, permitting them to worship freely and
allowing those who had been compelled to "convert" to the Chalcedonian faith to
"reconvert" to Monophysitism. John of Ephesus relates that those who remained in
Chalcedonian places were permitted to receive the Holy Eucharist from their own
clergy after the Chalcedonians completed their liturgy. They were not considered
heretics but rather dissenters. But Eutychius did persecute the Tritheist
faction.
The cessation of
persecution did not last long. The cause, however, came this time from a
completely different direction. A petition had come to Tiberius while he was
still regent, a petition from the Gothic Arian women in Constantinople — their
husbands were soldiers in the imperial army and the women petitioned for the use
of a church for their Arian services. An outburst of protest came from the
Chalcedonians. This was too much! Tiberius, not wanting to offend the
ecclesiastical authorities before he had taken the imperial throne, proclaimed
an order of arrest for all Arians and Manichees. John of Ephesus claims that the
anti-Monophysites used this as a pretext and set about to plunder the places of
worship of the Monophysites and to arrest some of them, himself
included.
In general,
however, Eutychius’ attack on Monophysitism restricted itself to the writing of
books against them. John of Ephesus refers to these writings contemptuously,
claiming in essence that Eutychius made a fool of himself, that Eutychius
revealed his lack of knowledge in these books and could never prove his point.
Patriarch Eutychius found himself accused of heresy because of his teaching on
the resurrection. His overly spiritualized interpretation of the resurrection
smacked of Origenism and he was denounced by both the Monophysites and by the
Roman deacon Gregory.
Internal
Dissenion Among the Monophysites:
Problems Caused by the Reconciliation of
Paul the Black with Jacob.
Internally
Monophysitism would carry within it a schism resulting from supporters of Paul
"the Black" and those of Jacob. Paul "the Black" submitted to three years of
suspension as a form of penance. Jacob was quite under the control of the monks
who for some reason detested Paul. The monks threatened to separate from Jacob’s
communion unless Jacob denounced his reconciliation with Paul "the Black." Jacob
did not deny the reconciliation, although John of Ephesus tells us that Jacob
refers to it as "accidental," as "informal." When Theodosius died in
Constantinople the Egyptian Church was without a patriarch. Indeed, exclusive of
the Chalcedonian and Julianist bishops, there were only three Monophysite
bishops in Egypt — Longinus, who was in distant Nubia; Theodore of Philae, now
old and ill; and John of the Cells, who, though in Alexandria, was under
discipline for some type of irregularity. The clergy in Alexandria wrote to
Longinus of Nubia and to Theodore of Philae to urge them to come to consecrate a
patriarch. Longinus responded quickly and undertook the trip. Along the way he
met with Theodore of Philae who, too ill to travel, gave Longinus the authority
to act in his name. Still underway Longinus met with two bishops in Mareotis and
implored them to assist in the matter. They would assist only on the condition
that the matter of the reconciliation with Paul "the Black" be clarified.
Longinus’ choice for patriarch of Alexandria was Theodore, the abbot of Rhamnis
in Nitria. The three bishops — Longinus and the two whom he met at Mareotis —
consecrated Theodore of Rhamnis as patriarch of Alexandria. Paul "the Black" was
present but did not participate precisely because he did not want the
consecration to be challenged. He approved the consecration and exchanged the
customary letter of enthronement as patriarch of Antioch. A letter of approval
also came from Theodore of Philae.
The Election of
Two Monophysite Patriarchs of
Alexandria:
Theodore of Rhamnis and Peter.
But the
consecration was challenged by some of the leaders of the Monophysite body in
Alexandria, especially by a Theodosius and a deacon named Theodore. These men
were indignant because, as they claimed, Paul "the Black" had been involved.
They denounced and repudiated the consecration of Theodore of Rhamnis and sought
to find another candidate. Their choice was a monk named Peter whom they
consecrated — two visiting bishops from the orient and John of the Cells
performed the consecration. Peter, now patriarch of Alexandria, acted quickly,
according to Michael the Syrian, by consecrating seventy bishops. Immediately
Peter convoked a council which deposed Paul "the Black." Theodore of Rhamnis
graciously wrote from his monastery that he had no interest in high position and
implored the new body not to create a schism, although he complained to the end
of his life about the conduct of Longinus and Paul who had "elevated him and
then dropped him."
The attitude of
Jacob would now become crucial for the new body in Alexandria. Initially Jacob
refused to recognize the consecration of Peter, referring to him as a "new
Gaianus." But Jacob was under the control of the monks who detested Paul "the
Black." Jacob left for Alexandria and, once there, fell under the influence of
others who hated Paul. At this point Jacob supported the deposition of Paul "the
Black." Paul wrote, Michael the Syrian tells us, to Jacob to request an audience
with him. Paul was, of course, Jacob’s superior. Jacob had been given an unusual
commission in specific conditions but he was still only a bishop, whereas Paul
was "Patriarch of Antioch." Paul desired to restore unity among the Monophysite
body. According to John of Ephesus Paul wrote to Jacob offering to accept any
outcome as long as "this terrible schism ceases." Longinus’ very life was at
stake but he managed to return to Nubia where it was impossible to harm him. He
was deposed and excommunicated. John of Ephesus writes that "actions took place
by both sides in which only Satan could have rejoiced."
The Death of
Jacob Baradaeus.
When Peter, the
recently consecrated patriarch of Alexandria, died in 577 Damianus was selected
to succeed him. Damianus had just been consecrated when Jacob decided to go to
Alexandria to meet him, accompanied by a group of eight bishops and priests.
Jacob’s intention was not known. Some speculated that his purpose was to make
peace; some that he intended to consecrate a new patriarch for Antioch. His
motives had to remain clouded in mystery, for underway he and the others with
him contracted an illness and died eight days later. The cause of Jacob’s death
was subjected to rumor.
Damianus of
Alexandria and the Conference on unity
Among the Monophysites Requested by
Almoundir.
For two years the
controversy continued. The Arab prince Al-Moundir, when on a visit to
Constantinople on state business, requested that Tiberius issue an edict of
toleration for the Mono -physites and to summon a conference of the disputing
groups. Damianus of Alexandria decided to consecrate a patriarch for Antioch and
summoned Syrian bishops who elected a monk named Sergius. Gregory, the
Chalcedonian patriarch of Antioch, discovered what was taking place and
attempted to arrest the "conspirators." Damianus and three others escaped.
Damianus then went to Constantinople while the conference was taking place but
did not participate. He did, however, meet privately with Al-Moundir and agreed
to the decision of the conference, a decision which was that of reconciliation
between the disputing parties. The monks, however, refused to accept the
decision of union, claiming they had not been consulted.
When Damianus
realized that the conference was unpopular with the monks, he denounced it. John
of Ephesus relates that a substantial number of the Monophysites fled this
schism by rejoining the Chalcedonians. A new patriarch for Antioch was finally
consecrated — Peter of Callinicum, the original choice of Jacob. Paul "the
Black" had essentially resigned to retire to a monastery. Few knew where Paul
"the Black" was. Even his death in 585 was known to only a few and his followers
continued to commemorate him as the living patriarch of Antioch. The schism
continued and John of Ephesus ends his history with words of gloom: "Satan has
realized his goal and now rejoices in dancing … rejoicing in the actions of both
parties in the controversy."
The Theological
Quarrel Between Damianus
of Alexandria and Peter Callinicum of
Antioch.
Peter Callinicum
was now Monophysite patriarch in Antioch and Damianus was Monophysite patriarch
of Alexandria. The Monophysite patriarchs usually ruled not from a centralized
patriarchal residence but rather from a monastery beyond the reach of the city
officials. Damianus held that the individual charac -teristics or properties of
the Trinity were identical with the persons, a view which came close to
Tritheism. And yet each hypostasis somehow merged — without any distinction —
into the oneness of the Godhead. Peter reacted by accusing Damianus of
Sabellianism. As a result, communion was broken between the two Monophysite
patriarchates for approximately twenty years.
The source from the
Egyptian perspective claims that Damianus attempted to end the schism but was
unsuccessful "because of the quarrelsome nature of those in Antioch." Michael
the Syrian claims that Peter tried to heal the schism but failed "because of the
complete malice of the Alexandrians." A con -ference was finally arranged and
Michael the Syrian relates that Damianus’ behavior was intolerable. Initially,
he arrogantly refused to attend the conference at Paralus. Changing his mind,
Damianus finally attended and, in the view of Michael the Syrian, caused the
schism to escalate into an unbecoming battle of personal insults which resulted
in physical fights — indeed, it is claimed that one deacon had his head broken.
The civil authorities, relates Michael the Syrian, were disgusted with the
behavior of both sides. The sources further relate that Peter Callinicum, so
desirous to bring this schism to an end, travelled to Egypt and offered to give
up his see. But his well-intentioned trip only exacerbated the schism, the
precise details of which are not related.
The Monophysite
Conference at the
Gubba Barraya Monastery.
In Alexandria the
usual theological discussions were taking place. An Alexandrian named Stephen
maintained that one could not be an "orthodox" — orthodox Monophysite — if one
held that the distinctions in the "two natures" continued after the
union. Two of the followers of Peter Callinicum, a John and a certain Probus,
disagreed. A council was convoked about 588 at the monastery of Gubba Βarraya,
the residence of the Monophysite patriarchs of Antioch since 580. John and
Probus, declaring that if one held that distinctions in the two natures remained
after the union, then it was essentially the same teaching as the Chalcedonians.
Indeed, it is related that both John and Probus became Chalcedonians, although
Probus is said to have reconverted with approaching death. Anastasius, the
Chalcedonian patriarch of Antioch, deposed by Justin II and then later restored
to his throne, tried to use this new schism among the Monophysites to reunite
them with the Chalcedonians, a project that failed in general but resulted in
numerous individuals returning to the Chalcedonian Church.
Pope Gregory I
and the Chalcedonian Patriarch of Alexandria Eulogius.
The death of both
Peter and Damianus did not end the quarrel, a quarrel which continually makes
reference to the dispute over Paul "the Black." The Alexandrian patriarch of the
Chalcedonians, Eulogius, was respected by the Monophysites and apparently was
responsible for bringing many back to the Chalcedonian Church. Patriarch
Eulogius wrote to Pope Gregory the Great about the "glad news of the increase in
the number of "true" orthodox. Pope Gregory's letter to Eulogius — Letter
8 — is historically interesting. Pope Gregory, in whom many have found the
beginnings of the evolution of the modern papacy, appears in a much different
perspective when one considers his correspondence with the eastern patriarchs.
Pope Gregory, the first pope to take the title of Servus servorum Dei,
writes to Eulogius: "My brother, do not convey on me high titles . . . you are
my brother in rank and in character my superior. Do away with words that only
harm character and increase vanity." It is the same tone one finds in the
astonishing and historically important correspondence of Pope St. Gregory with
John the Faster, the first patriarch of Constantinople to adopt officially the
title of "ecumenical patriarch" — the title had been used previously during the
Acacian Schism and during the reign of Justinian I, although not with the
consistency and frequency with which John the Faster used
it.
The Election of
the Monk Athanasius as Patriarch of Antioch.
An end to the
schism between the Monophysite patriarchates of Alexandria and Antioch came
after the death of Peter Callinicum's successor, Julian, in approximately 595.
The council that met at the Gubba Barraya monastery could not decide on an
acceptable candidate. The sources relate that the council finally decided to
leave the decision to God — they would elect the first monk who appeared outside
the monastery gates the next day. A monk who was in charge of the monastery
camels, a certain Athanasius, was the first to appear. He was instantly grabbed
and consecrated patriarch. Astonished, he declared that he had another year's
obligation with the monastery to care for the camels. The council agreed to let
him keep his oath for another year. A year later a delegation came to fetch him.
Athanasius became a highly respected patriarch and his service lasted many
years, from 597 until approximately 630.
Maurice Accuses
Al-Moundir of Treason and the Consequent Splitting of the Ghassanid
Kingdom.
During this period
the wars with Persia were to take their toll in terms of reshaping the life of
Christianity in the future generations, for they prepared in a sense the
opportunity for a new religion to expand at the expense of the empire. From
approximately 572 the empire had been engaged in serious if sporadic conflict
with Persia. The military assistance of al-Moundir's Ghassanid kingdom helped
the empire immensely — indeed, it is not an exaggeration to state that
al-Moundir was one of the most important persons in the empire from a
perspective of military logistics. Tiberius had appointed Maurice to head the
imperial military forces in the east. Maurice was determined to strike a
decisive a blow against the Persians, a blow designed to destroy the Persian
capital, Ctesiphon. In 580 Maurice set out to secure the pivotal point, the
bridge over the river at Circesium. John of Ephesus relates that when Maurice's
forces arrived at Circesium, they found the bridge demolished by the Persians.
Maurice immediately accused al-Moundir of sabotage and treason, placing this
charge directly before Tiberius. Imperial orders went out to arrest al-Moundir.
He was condemned for treason and exiled to Sicily, an action which proved
controversial and ultimately devastating for the imperial military forces in the
east.
The sources differ
on the question of the guilt of al-Moundir. In his Church History
Evagrius Scholasticus claims that al-Moundir, whom he calls a rogue, was
fortunate to be sentenced only to exile — he was deserving of the death penalty.
Writing during the reign of Emperor Heraclius (610-641), Theophylact Simocattes,
in his lengthy study of eight books on the reign of Maurice, considers
al-Moundir a "traitor." John of Ephesus, on the other hand, claims there was no
truth to the charge, a position which Michael the Syrian appears to support
without committing himself explicitly on the subject.
In 582 Maurice
became emperor (582-602). In 584 al-Moundir’s Ghassanid kingdom split into
fifteen different tribes, a historical reality which now meant that the empire
had lost the solidity of support which the united kingdom under the Ghassanids
had provided. Indeed, the Arabs formerly united under al-Moundir came to regard
all Christianity with suspicion — moreover, many Arabs joined forces with the
Persians. Michael the Syrian relates that this was the end of Christian Arab
cooperation with the empire, the cause of which was "the treachery" of imperial
officials. Lost now was that important conversion of the Ghassanids during the
reign of Anastasius, a conversion which at that time saw the Ghassanids switch
their loyalty from the Persians to the empire. Now the reversal occurred. The
infuriated Ghassanids now pillaged Palestine. The imperial forces had
opportunity to see the swiftness of the Arab cavalry, a swiftness that the
Byzantine military could not match. Yet the Byzantines remained focused on
Persia, neglecting the seriousness of the possibility of a future military force
of Arabs — the rise of Islam.
The Policy of
Emperor Maurice (582-602):
Persecution of the Monophysites in
Constantinople.
In his
Chronicle John of Nikiou writes that Emperor Maurice, a staunch
Chalcedonian, made no attempt to negotiate a union with the Monophysites.
Maurice, the son-in-law of Tiberius, was a very effective emperor — indeed, his
reign is often overlooked because it is overshadowed by the reigns of Justinian
and Heraclius. He was respected by most segments of Byzantine society, from the
ascetical monks to the Monophysite John of Ephesus who refers to Maurice as
"God-inspired." Yet, in Constantinople Maurice persecuted and imprisoned
Monophysites, including John of Ephesus — over the protests of Patriarch John
the Faster. Indeed, John of Ephesus puts the following words in the mouth of
John the Faster: "What have the ‘dissenters’ done that permits us to persecute
them?" The policy towards the Monophysites did not remain restricted to
Constantinople — it spread to Syria, to Egypt, and then to
Armenia.
Emperor Maurices
Extension of Imperial
Rule in Armenia and the Ecclesiastical
Result.
In 591 Emperor
Maurice, through diplomacy, was able to extend the imperial influence in Armenia
up to Lake Van, a substantial increase from imperial control in Armenia when
Maurice ascended the throne. The Armenian Catholicus John had accepted the
Henotikon in about 571. Now Maurice was determined to restore the
Chalcedonian faith in Armenia. He summoned the Armenian bishops within the
imperial territory to Constantinople where they accepted Chalcedon. A new
Chalcedonian patriarch was elected. This was not received well by the then
Catholicus Moses whose residence was at Dvin. This action by Emperor Maurice
did, however, have one lasting result, for it brought the kingdom of Georgia,
then in a subservient relationship to Armenia, into the Chalcedonian faith. The
Armenian Church was split.
The Persecution
of Monophysites in Melitene and
Mesopotamia Unleashed by Domitian, Bishop of
Melitene.
The Monophysites,
however, were gaining ground throughout the area of the border with Persia
and also in eastern Cappadocia. In 599 a new persecution broke out in Syria,
a persecution caused by the emperor’s nephew, Domitian, Bishop of Melitene. The
zeal with which Domitian undertook his project is vividly described by
Theophylact Simocattes in his Historiae (5, 4). Evagrius Scholasticus in
his Church History (4, 18) and Michael the Syrian in his Chronicle
(10, 23) also give an account of the zealous persecuting activity of Domitian,
who confiscated the monasteries of the Monophysites in Melitene and in the
province of Mesopotamia. It is not difficult to discern from the writing of
Michael the Syrian that at this time Syrians came to be known as Monophysites,
just as Coptic Christians in Egypt became identified with Monophysitism — in
contradistinction, Chalcedon became identified as Greek. Michael the Syrian
relates that the monks in Edessa who refused to obey imperial orders to leave
their monasteries were killed by the military (Chronicle 10, 23). The
reputation of Emperor Maurice suffered sorely in the eastern areas as a result,
far worse than it had ever been. John of Nikiou, the Coptic bishop, in his
Chronicle (101, 5) sees the cause of the earthquake in Antioch as a
direct result of "the heresy of Emperor Maurice," as God’s judgment on the
emperor. The Coptic and Syrian Mono physites will view the conquests by the
Persians and then by the Arabs as also God’s judgment on the heresy of Chalcedon
and on Ar ‘nfliction of persecution. Domitian died in 602, an important ίη the
history of the eastern Church, for the break between the non-Chalcedonians and
“empire" had been consummated.
Emperor Maurice
and Chosroes II of Persia.
Persia had been
ruled for almost a century by Chosroes I and his grandson Chosroes II, from 531
until 638. In 592 Chosroes II had to flee from a revolt in Persia. It was
Emperor Maurice who had responsible for restoring him to the Persian throne,
where Chosroes II would rule in peace with the empire for the next ten years —
surrounded by an imperial bodyguard provided by yCa rice The emperor had
received a reputation for being extremely parsimonious, a reputation which was
unfair since the empire he inherited had been financially depleted. Yet the
reality in the minds of the imperial subjects was one of dislike for Maurice. In
602, having run out of finances necessary to continue the military compaign in
the Balkans, Maurice ordered the imperial army to winter in Avar territory and
"to live off the land." The amy mutinied and elected their military officer
Phocas as exarch. Phocas immediately marched on Constantinople. Maurice,
abandoned by the army, by the guards, and by the population — both the Greens
and Blues revolted — fled with his family to Calcedon where he and four sons
were murdered. His four sons were butchered before his eyes! Phocas was crowned
by the army and entered Constantinople triumphantly.
The Bloody Reign
of Emperor Phocas
(602-610).
The rule of Phocas
(602-610), known as the "tyrant," is in j considered one of the lowest points in
the history of the Bizantine empire. His reign is remembered as one of bloodshed
both abroad and at home. He was wholly concentrated on mantaining the throne
against inner treason and conspiracy and against the military advances of
Chosroes II, who used the murder again benefactor and father-in-law Maurice as
justification for resuming the war. The advances of the Persian army were almost
unopposed and it proved to be a death blow thirty years later to the eastern
provinces. The Persian forces overran Mesopotamia, Siria, Cappadocia,
Paphlagonia, and finally reached and besieged Chalcedon at the very walls of
Constantinople. The supply of corn from Egypt to Constantinople was suspended
and famine broke out. The late Roman empire was in its death
throes.
The Edict of
Emperor Phocas to Pope Boniface III.
During the wars and
the internal mutiny that characterized his reign, Phocas managed to carry out a
conciliatory policy with Rome. The controversy between Pope Gregory I and
Patriarch John the Faster had been essentially ignored by Emperor Maurice.
Phocas issued an edict addressed to Pope Boniface III, an edict which
acknowledged the Roman see, the "Apostolic Church of St. Peter," as the head of
all churches. While Phocas became more and more hated in Byzantium, his
reputation in Rome culminated with an inscription of praise in a column erected
in the Roman forum. In general, Phocas responded to the chaotic situation by
retaliating against the Monophysites in the eastern districts and against the
Jews.
The Advance of
the Persian Army
and the Religious Policy of Chosroes
II.
There is no
incontrovertible evidence that the Monophysites assisted the advances of the
Persian army. Although an anonymous Nestorian chronicler asserts that Chosroes
II merely feigned to favor Christians, there is reason to believe that he was
certainly not directly opposed to Christianity. Chosroes’ wife was the daughter
of Maurice — indeed, she was permitted to establish a church and a monastery in
the proximity of the Persian imperial palace. We are also told that Chosroes’
mistress, Shirin, whom he later married, was a convert to Jacobite
Monophysitism. In general, however, Chosroes’ marriages remain difficult to
place in chronology. Three sources testify to Chosroes’ giving of gifts to the
church of St. Sergius at Circesium. Michael the Syrian relates that Nestorian
and Monophysite bishops accompanied the Persian armies and, on the conquest of
any Christian city, they expelled the Chalcedonian bishops. When Jerusalem fell
in 604, Patriarch Zacharias and thirty-five thousand Chalcedonians, together
with holy relics of the Cross, were taken to Ctesiphon. Chosroes’ policy was to
leave the Monophysites in place when he conquered one of their cities. Michael
the Syrian relates that the memory of Chalcedon was soon eradicated from the
Euphrates to Syria.
In either 612 or
614 a conference of the bishops from the east took place at Seleucia under the
sponsorship of Chosroes II. Whether the result was the acceptance of the
Armenian "confession of faith" is not the issue. It is evident that Chosroes II
allowed in general — for this would not be the case in Edessa — the
Nestorians to control their congregations and the Monophysites theirs. As the
former monk and the now Monophysite Patriarch of Antioch, Athanasius, wrote to
the Patriarch of Alexandria, all that really mattered was that the dark night of
Chalcedon had been lifted, an accomplishment which was met with
rejoicing.
Despite the initial
elation all was not well, for the Persian occupation was not popular — indeed,
ultimately not even popular among the Monophysites. The Monophysites were deeply
concerned with the insensitivity of Chosroes II, an insensitivity he revealed by
appointing a Persian Nestorian bishop for Edessa. Michael the Syrian alludes to
this as the creation of a "new Ibas." In addition, Persian taxation was
exacting. And the threat of deportation to Persia was not a comforting
thought.
The Accession of
Emperor Heraclius (610-641).
The situation of
the empire under Phocas looked hopeless. There seemed to be no one and no place
to turn to. But in Africa the exarchate of Carthage was prospering under
Heraclius the Elder, a valiant officer in the wars against the Persians during
the reign of Emperor Maurice. He realized that if the empire could be saved, he
would have to act. He sent his son Heraclius in a fleet and his nephew Nicetas
with an army by land. Whoever reached Constantinople first would rule. In the
early fall of 610 Heraclius’ fleet reached its destination and he was received
as a deliverer, received with open arms. Phocas, despised by all, was seized,
cut to pieces, and burned. Emperor Heraclius was one of the greatest rulers in
Byzantine history. He appears to have come from Armenian stock. He was a pious
Chalcedonian and an inspired leader who was capable of inspiring others with a
sense of mission. He found the empire in shambles and left it restored, at least
restored sufficiently to ensure its survival for another eight
centuries.
The tragedy of
Heraclius is that he worked energetically for thirty years and yet at the end of
those thirty years it appeared as though he had accomplished nothing. Persia had
been defeated. In 630 the Cross was brought back solemnly and triumphantly to
Jerusalem by Emperor Heraclius himself and the territory of the empire existing
at the end of the reign of Emperor Maurice had been restored. But a new military
and religious force had come into existence and it was to capture the precious
cities of the east Islam.
Heraclius, after
the victory against Persia in 630, turned his attention to the unity of the
Church. As with other emperors, his task was to attempt to devise a formula
which would restore the Monophysites to the Chalcedonian Church. In the
territories which Heraclius had reconquered the Monophysites were now in
virtually complete control. Armenia, as a result of the Persian religious policy
carried out with the advancing Persian victories, was Monophysite. The
patriarchal sees of Alexandria and Antioch now had only Monophysite patriarchs
and these patriarchs controlled not only the surrounding areas and the
monasteries but also the cities. The influence and authority of the Monophysites
had spread far beyond the border of the empire. The Monophysite patriarch of
Antioch, Athanasius, had conveyed upon the monastery of Mar Matthai in Nineveh a
primacy over all Christian converts in Persia.
Patriarch Segius and the
Beginning of Monothelitism.
The patriarch of
Constantinople, Patriarch Sergius (610-638) worked for a formula of union. The
doctrine of one energy in Christ, a doctrine which arose in the eastern
provinces, seemed to provide some hope as a formula of compromise. Emperor
Heraclius supported this position. Indeed, already during his counteroffensive
against Persia Heraclius had been discussing the possibility of union,
especially with the Church of Armenia. In 634 the monk Sophronius had become the
new patriarch of Jerusalem — he had begun his strenuous opposition to the new
doctrine of one energy before his consecration as patriarch, claiming
that it was nothing more than a form of Monophysitism.
Pope Honorius
(625-638) played an important role in this development. In 634 Patriarch Sergius
I sent a letter to Pope Honorius outlining the developments in the East, the
goal of which was to win back the Monophysites to Chalcedonian unity by means of
a formula that emphasized the oneness of operation in Christ. A year earlier
Patriarch Cyrus of Alexandria had won back the "dissenters" by the formula of "
one theandric operation" in the Lord — μία θεανδρική ένέργεία Sophronius had
already challenged the position while still a monk. He had brought forth
patristic texts to demonstrate that there were two operations in Christ and
requested that Patriarch Cyrus vow that he would not in the future speak of
either one or two operations in Christ. Patriarch Sergius in his letter to Pope
Honorius confessed that he held the faith as expounded by Pope Leo I and that he
too had asked Patriarch Cyrus to refrain from speaking of operations, although
he personally could accept a theology of a single operation — Sergius feared
that two operations would imply that Christ possessed two conflicting wills.
Sergius awaited the reaction of Pope Honorius.
The Role of Pope Honorius in
the Rise of Monothelitism.
The reply of Pope Honorius is
preserved in the Greek trans -lation read at the Sixth Ecumenical Council, the
Third Council of Constantinople in 681 (Mansi 11, 537-544). Honorius supported
the decision to refrain from discussion on the subject — he considered that to
be the work of grammarians, not theologians. He preferred to focus on the one
Christ who "operates" in both his human and divine natures. In quoting from the
Council of Chalcedon that the two natures are unconfusedly and immutably united,
Honorius saw in this unity the existence of a single will in Christ. The best
defense on the part of the defenders of the Roman doctrine of papal
infallibility is that this letter to Sergius was no more than a private letter,
a letter in which both he and Patriarch Sergius were striving to arrive at an
acceptable and orthodox formula, a letter which cannot be construed as coming
under the category of public papal definitions of faith. Patriarch Sergius also
wrote to Pope Honorius but Honorius’ response is no longer
extant.
The "question of
Honorius" has long been debated. He was subjected to much criticism in his own
time. It must be mentioned that St. Maximus the Confessor maintained in his
response to the deposed Patriarch Pyrrhus that Honorius restricted himself to
the confines of the problem as it was proposed to (Patrologia Graeca 91,
329). But further developments took place, complicating "the question him of
Honorius." In 649 the Lateran Council summoned under Pope Martin I condemned
Monothelitism and its eighteenth canon named Patriarch Sergius as a heretic. The
Sixth Ecumenical Council (681) mentions Honorius several times and two of his
letters to Patriarch Sergius read at the twelfth and thirteenth sessions. The
latter session condemned the Monothelites and "expelled" them from the Church, a
condemnation and expulsion that included Honorius (Mansi 11, 556). The final
session also lists Honorius among the heretics (Mansi 11, 636; 656; 665). These
condemnations, it should be mentioned, precisely define the guilt of Honorius —
he followed Sergius and Cyrus. The acts of the council were sent to Pope
Agatho for his confirmation. Agatho had died and the new pope, Leo II, evaluated
the acts and wrote to Emperor Constantine IV that he had approved the acts, Leo
II also condemns Honorius in this letter: [Hononus] qui hanc apostolicam
ecclesiam non apostolice traditionis doctrina lustravit sed prophana pro
traditione immaculatam fidem dari permittendo conatus est (Patrologia
Latina 96, 408).
Although Patriarch
Cyrus could claim that his formula had brought many of the Monophysites, "the
dissenters," to the Chalcedonian faith, all was not well in Alexandria. Cyrus
became known for his cruelty towards his opponents. The sources describe his
rule as a reign of terror — indeed, he is accused of seizing and butchering
opponents with no trial. He managed to instill hatred in the masses and in his
opponents and this hatred was transferred to a hatred for the
empire.
The Islamic
Conquests.
Seemingly exhausted from the
war against Persia, Emperor Heraclius received bitter news in 634. The Arab
advance in Palestine and Syria had become a serious threat. The Arab strategy
was no longer that of sporadic attacks. Rather, under the enthusiasm and
vitality of its new Islamic leaders, the military conquest of territory had
begun with systematic attacks. One Arab force advanced along the coast of
Palestine. Another moved north to the Sea of Galilee, stopped only by the Roman
fortification at the Yarmuk river. Simultaneously, Arab forces under Khalid,
fighting in Iraq, quickly moved across the desert and appeared before the walls
of Damascus. The Islamic Arab forces then learned that the Byzantine military
was to attempt to cut off the Arabs, that a Byzantine force was on the move from
the north to cut off the Arab force along the Palestinian coast. Khalid swiftly
moved to reinforce the Arab army already in position. In the summer of 634 the
Byzantines confronted the two Arab forces between Gaza and Jerusalem. The
Byzantine force wasdestroyed. Under the inspiration of Patriarch Sophronius
Jerusalem held out for a while but was finally forced to surrender. But
Patriarch Sophronius refused to make any agreement except with the Caliph Omar
himself. Indeed, we are told that Omar conceded to the wish of Sophronius and
left Medina to meet personally with Patriarch Sophronius. Theophanes relates
that when Patriarch Sophronius saw Caliph Omar in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, he exclaimed: "Lo, the Abomination of Desolation, spoken of by the
prophet Daniel, stands in the Holy Place." Meanwhile, the Persian empire was
conquered, Mesopotamia was taken (639-640), and Armenia subdued (640). The Arabs
then began their conquest of Egypt.
The tragedy of the
imprecision of language at the Council of Chalcedon had resulted in the rise of
Monophysitism. The desire to restore a unity to the Church had led Monophysitism
to Monothelitism. The most significant opponent to Monothelitism is St. Maximus
the Confessor.
Chapter Four.
Leontius
of Byzantium.
Life.
Leontius of Byzantium, born
probably in Constantinople about 500, probably died also in Constantinople about
543. About 520 Leontius entered the New Lavra [Laura] monastery in Palestine
with his spiritual father, Nonnus, who was a disciple of the Origenist monk
Evagrius Ponticus (d. 399). About 531 Leontius came back to Constantinople and
apparently remained there until at least 536. While in Constantinople, Leontius
defended the Council of Chalcedon against the Monophysites. In 532 he was an
observer at the meeting between the Chalcedonians and the Monophysites. In 536
he was present at the council in Constantinople which banished the Monophysites.
He became one of the leaders of an Origenistic pro-Chalcedonian party, led after
537 by his friend Theodore Askidas. Apparently Leontius was back in Palestine in
537 where he defended Origenism against the attacks by the orthodox. When this
controversy was referred to the emperor, Leontius returned again to
Constantinople about 540. The Origenistic pro-Chalcedonians were defeated and in
543 Emperor Justinian condemned Origenism. Shortly before his death in 543,
Leontius’ work against Theodore of Mopsuestia became a catalyst in the movement
which led to the condemnation of the Three Chapters at the Fifth
Ecumenical Council in Constantinople in 553.
The
Controversial Corpus of "Leontius."
A number of
important dogmatic and polemical compositions under Leontius’ name have been
preserved in many manuscripts. However, it is by no means a simple and easy
matter to establish who this Leontius, whose name is attached to all these
manuscripts, is. Writers of the sixth century do not mention Leontius of
Byzantium at all — neither historians nor theologians. St. Maximus the Confessor
(c. 580-662) does not say anything about him either. In the seventh century
Patriarch Sophronius of Jerusalem (c. 560-638) mentions Leontius in a list of
men and fathers who "piously teach about Christ." Anastasius of Sinai
[Anastasius Sinaita; d. c. 700], abbot of the famous monastery of St. Catherine
on Mount Sinai and a strong supporter of orthodoxy against all forms of heresy,
quotes many passages from works attributed to a Leontius. In these quotations
there is no mention of the Fifth Ecumenical Council in 553, no mention of the
condemnation of the Three Chapters, and no mention of the censure of the
Ori genists. There is, however, a persistent defense of the Council of
Chalcedon, and the ardor of the objections to the Monophysites and the
Nestorians is present.
The "of Byzantium"
could refer not only to his birth place but also to the place of his original
activity — Byzantium was the former name of Constantinople. In a work
traditionally ascribed to Leontius but definitely not his, the De sectis
(perhaps the work of Theodore of Raithu), we find under the heading of the
composition that "Leontius" is called a "Byzantine Scholastic," that is, a
lawyer, although this title was also used figuratively to mean a learned man in
general.
The paucity of
biographical information prompted more recent historians to try to find Leontius
the writer among others named Leontius, others who were well-known in the sixth
century. Most such attempts have not produced conclusive results. Possible
references to the person of Leontius include his own comment about having been
influenced by "Nestorians" (see Patrologia Graeca 86, 1357-1360);
Innocentius of Maronia’s Letter to Thomas, edited by E. Schwartz in
Acta conciliorum oecumenicorum, volume IV, 2 (Berlin, 1914), pages
169-184; Cyril of Scytho polis’ Life of Sabas, edited by E. Schwartz in
Kyrillos νon Skythopolis (Leipzig, 1939), pages 176 and 179; and the acts
of the Council of Constantinople in 536 (see Acta conciliorum
oecumenicorum), III, pages 130, 145, 158, 165, and
174.
Some critical
studies of importance on the subject of Leontius of Byzantium are: E.Schwartz,
Kyrillos von Skythopolis (Leipzig, 1939); M. Richard, "Leonce de
Jerusalem et Leonce de Byzance," in Melanges de Science religieuse, i
(1944), pages 35-88; M. Richard, "Leonce de Byzance etait-il origeniste?" in
Revue des etudes byzantines, 5 (1947), pages 31-66; S. Rees, "The
Literary Activity of Leontius of Byzantium," in Journal of Theological
Studies, xix (1968), pages 229-242; S. Otto, Person und Subsistenz.
Die philosophische Anthropologie des Leontios von Byzanz (Munich, 1968);
David Evans’ doctoral dissertation in 1966 at Harvard Divinity School, titled
Leontius of Byzantium and his published work, Leontius of Byzantium: An
Origenist Christology (Washington, D.C., 1970); and J. H. I. Watts, "The
Authenticity of the Writings Ascribed to Leontius of Byzantium. A New Approach
by Means of Statistics," in Studia Patristica (Berlin,
1966).
The corpus
attributed to Leontius of Byzantium by Migne in Patrologia Graeca (volume
86) consists of the following: De sectis (1193A-1268A); Contra
Nestorianos et Eutychianos (1268B-1357A); Adversus Nestorianos
(1400A-1768B); ContraMonophysitas (1769-1901A); Adversus Severum
(1901A-1916B); and the Epilysis (1916C-1945D). Contemporary scholarship,
though still tentative, makes it possible to consider only the following as
being from Leontius of Byzantium: Contra Nestorianos et Eutychianos; the
"Thirty Chapters" in Adversus Severum; and the Epilysis. Obviously
there were reasons that the life of Leontius of Byzantium remained in the
shadows, even though his works — and those ascribed to him incorrectly — became
quite famous and widely read. But the actual reason still eludes
us.
Contra
Nestorianos et Eutychianos records the oral debates
with the heretics. It was probably written sometime after 527-528, perhaps even
after 535 (he refers to Antioch as Theupolis, its name being changed after the
earthquake of 527-528). In this book Leontius investigates the basic
Christological terms and tries to establish their precise meaning. He then gives
a positive presentation of orthodox doctrine, particularly on the question of
Christ’s sufferings and death. In the last part of the book, which is devoted to
Nestorianism, the author dwells on a critique of the views of Diodore of Tarsus
and Theodore of Mopsuestia and quotes many excerpts from their works and
Nestorius’ compositions. In the conclusion of his discussion, Leontius cites a
collection of patristic evidence. The "Thirty Chapters" in Adversus
Severum are attached to this work. This is a short collection, a schematic
enumeration of those questions, Severus’ answers to which separated him from the
Church. Questions of terminology occupy an important place here as well. The
Epilysis is a dialogue between an orthodox and an acephalos, which
is a critique of Severus’ conclusions.
One work ascribed
to Leontius which may actually belong to him and which modern scholarship should
consider carefully is Against the Frauds of the Apollinarians. In the
history of Monophysitism the so-called "forgeries of the Apollinarians" played a
major and fateful role. Many of Apollinarius’ compositions were concealed and
"armored" under the forged inscription of respected and honored names. Faith in
such pseudo-patristic writings very much hindered Alexandrian theologians in
their dogmatic confession — it is sufficient to recall St. Cyril of Alexandria.
Even if the work titled Against the Frauds of the Apollinarians is
someday conclusively proven to be not that of Leontius of Byzantium, it is
discussed here. Regardless of the authorship of this work — and it is very
possible that it was Leontius of Byzantium — it was a significant work which
deserves attention.
It is difficult to
reconstruct the history of these "forgeries" but they became especially
wide-spread in the Monophysite milieu. Even Eutyches in his appeal to Pope Leo
at the Council of Constantinople in 448 refers to the forged testimony of Pope
Julius, Athanasius, and Gregory the Miracle-Worker. He referred to them in good
conscience, not suspecting any "forgery." In his document to the monks of
Palestine, Emperor Marcian observed that among the people books by Apollinarius
were circulating which were being passed off as dicta of the holy fathers.
Justinian also mentions some forgeries. The historian Evragius discusses the
influence of these forgeries — the inscription of honorable names (Athanasius,
Gregory, Julius) on Apollinarius1 books kept many people from condemning the
impious opinions contained in them. At the famous "conference" with the
Severians, which took place about 532 (between 531 and 533, in any case),
Hypatius of Ephesus challenged a whole series of patristic references by
pointing out their spuriousness, their the false
inscriptions.
Under such
circumstances the uncovering and demonstration of forgeries became a pointed and
recurrent task of theological polemics. In performing this task, it is the
author of Against the Frauds of the Apollinarians who occupies the most
prominent place. The author gathered much material in this work. He adduces the
false testimonies, and compares them with the original opinions of those persons
to whom they are ascribed. (It is noteworthy that this same procedure is
followed in the work Against the Monophysites, a work modern scholarship
does not regard as that of Leontius of Byzantium). The author then collates
these testimonies with the undisputed texts of Apollinarius and his followers
and shows the points of correspondence between them. In this connection the
author has to enter into a detailed critique of Apollinarianism. The
author’s critical conclusions are distinguished by great precision and
cogency.
The work Against
the Nestorians, once ascribed to Leontius of Byzantium but no longer considered
his, has come down to us in very revised form. Whoever is the author of this
work, the text that has come down to us is quite probably not the original text.
This work is rich in historical material. But the text is constantly being
interrupted, the plan is muddled, and the styles of the individual parts differ
substantially from one another. The same must be said for the work Against the
Monophysites, once ascribed to Leontius of Byzantium, as previously mentioned.
In addition, there appear in this work later interpolations which indicate
events and circumstances of another time.
The work De
sectis, once ascribed to Leontius of Byzantium and then to Leontius of
Jerusalem, is no longer believed to be by either. In this work a certain
"Theodore" is dictating through "his voice." It is difficult to say who this
Theodore was, this "most God-loving abba and most wise philosopher." The context
seems to indicate that the conversations were actually taken down from a living
voice — traces of a lively conversational tone show through the text that has
come down to us. It is possible, however, that we are dealing with a very
creative author. Subsequently the book was subjected to revision — there are
manifestly late interpolations in it. As far as its content is concerned, the
book presents a systematic collection of heresiological material organized in
historical order. The Christological sections are especially
detailed.
The marred nature
of the books by Leontius and the ones ascribed to him testifies to the fact that
they were in constant use. They were abridged and excerpts were taken from them.
Such is the origin of the so-called fragments or scholia extracted from the
various collections. It is possible, however, that they are individual notes by
Leontius or other authors. It has been conjectured that these "fragments" have
come from a large polemical work by Leontius or another author, a work not
preserved but similar to the collection known under the title The Ancient
Fathers’ Teaching about the Incarnation of the Logos or to the Guide —
όδηγός — of Anastasius Sinaita. It was furthermore conjectured that, in general,
all of the preserved works by Leontius or under his name are also a revision of
this basic work. Such a supposition does not warrant further detailed
investigation. The question of the ancient collections of patristic testimonies
and notes does deserve new and deeper study, however.
The Theological Thought in
the Corpus of "Leontius."
The Quest for
Precise Definitions.
As a polemicist and
theologian, Leontius is primarily a scholastic and dialectician. To begin with,
he is striving for firm and precise definitions of the basic concepts — the very
status of theological questions in his time demanded this. It was necessary to
coin a uniform and complete Christological terminology and to substantiate it
philosophically. But Leontius does not stop at this. He tries to substantiate
his theological confession not so much by "natural reasoning" as by "the
testimony of the Scriptures," from the "Holy Scriptures and the Holy Fathers."
He makes especially wide use of the Fathers. He sees them as the wonderful
councillors of the Holy Spirit. They did not speak for themselves — the Spirit
of the Father spoke in them. Therefore, not accepting the Fathers, glorious and
renowned in the Church, means opposing the will of God. Leontius attaches
decisive significance to "agreement with the Fathers." However, Leontius does
not regard patristic testimonies entirely uncritically. One has to be concerned
not about words, but about ideas. And if there is some new word, he claims, we
must respect and honor it as suitable if it answers its designation and agrees
with originally and authentically professed orthodoxy. On the other hand, if
some phrase or word used in Holy Scriptures and by the Holy Fathers is shifted
away from its true meaning by someone through some impious innovation, then it
must be cast away and we must keep away from them as if from crafty swindlers
who forge not only the image but also the inscription on
coins.
In his theological
work Leontius was guided first of all by polemical requirements and problems of
time. He was not a systematic thinker. If he did construct a system, then this
was in order to eliminate through a coherent plan of theological ideas any
ambiguity in incompletely expressed patristic texts which could prove favorable
for heretical misinterpretation. He writes that a "general war" has arisen over
theological terminology. It is, therefore, necessary to philosophize in order to
recognize what we agree with and what we do not agree
with.
Relying on the
Fathers, Leontius subjects the old and undisputed definitions to a strict
analysis, bringing them into an orderly and complete system. He relies on St.
Cyril more than anyone else and wants to be the interpreter of St. Cyril’s
Christology. In their struggle with the adherents of the Council of Chalcedon,
the Monophysites stressed the divergence between St. Cyril’s formulae and
die Chalcedonian oros, its definition of faith. Leontius primarily tries
to show that despite an apparent discrepancy and lack of coordination among the
literary formulae, St. Cyril and the Fathers of the Council of Chalcedon
were saying one and the same thing. On the other hand, he tries to draw a clear
dividing line between orthodox doctrine and the Christology of the
Severians.
The Concepts of
Nature, Essence, and Hypostasis.
Dogmatic polemics
demanded first of all the precision and firmness of one’s ideas. In his
Christological word usage Leontius repeats the teachers of the fourth century,
the Cappadocians most of all. With him, the concept of nature — φύσίς — is
identical with the concept of essence — ουσία. “Nature” primarily points at the
communality of origin, at the unity of kind. Together with that, something
“natural” is something inborn or innate. “Nature" is a general concept, a
generalizing concept which indicates the general in things. But
only individual things actually exist — "nature" is real only in them, in the
multitude of individuals. The concept of "essence" has the same meaning. In it
Leontius is a consistent Aristotelian. Following the Cappadocians, Leontius
defines the hypostasis as something particular, special, concrete. "Nature" (or
"essence") and "hypostasis" are treated as the general and the
particular (more accurately, the individual). Leontius knows about
the former fluctuations in the definition of these concepts and he explains them
as being an inconsistency.
However, what
proves to be characteristic in the concept of the hypostasis for Leontius is not
its greater concreteness. To begin with, hypostasis signifies an "independent
existence" — το καθ’ εαυτόν είναι: only hypostases exist, and there is not
"hypostasis-less nature;" that is, it does not exist. "Nature" is real only in
"hypostases," in what is "indivisible" (in "atoms" or "individuals"). Everything
that exists is hypostatic; that is, individual. But in the spiritual world
hypostasis is person, a person which exists in and of itself (see
the Chalcedon oros).
Leontius then makes
a very essential proviso and introduces a new concept. If there is no
"hypostasis-less" nature, this still does not mean that nature is real only in
its own individualizations or hypostases. Nature can be "realized" in a
different hypostasis as well, in a hypostasis (or "something indivisible) of
another type (another nature). In other words, not only "single nature"
individuals or hypostases exist, but also complex ones: in them, along
with the unity (or singleness) of the hypostasis, we observe the reality of two
or more natures in all the fullness of their natural properties. Thus "man" is a
single hypostasis consisting of two different natures, a soul and a body, which
are defined by different "natural" concepts. "Hypostasis-ness" is not an
individualizing feature. What is more, it is not a feature at all.
"Hypostasis-ness" is the beginning of division and differentiation
— not so much "distinguishing" (the "natures" are distinguished from one another
by their essential features), as precisely "division." The hypostasis is
"separate," a "separate existence" — a "limit."
The Reality of
Enhypostasis.
In complex
hypostases one nature exists in the hypostasis of another. It is real "in an
hypostasis," but not necessarily in its own. Thus Leontius establishes the
concept of "en-hypostasis-ness” — το έωυπόστατον. The term ύπόστασις and
ένυπόστατον are not one and the same thing, just as ουσία and ένονσιον are not
the same, for every hypostasis signifies an essence (nature). An hypostasis
signifies a person which is defined by properties, while "enhypostasisness"
indicates something which does not occur by itself, something which has its
existence within another, and is not contemplated by itself. It is reality in
another hypostasis. From this it is evident that the reality of some nature in a
certain individual still does not mean recognition of the hypostasis of the
given nature. It is easy to foresee the Christological application of this
principle.
Leontius logically
drops from the general to the specific. The capacity narrows and the content is
enriched with features. This order of thought is directed right to the order of
reality where the individual comes before the general, for the general is given
only in the individual. But it is important that in this logical descent we
still do not reach the hypostasis. The hypostasis is described by using dividing
features, but it is not they which form the hypostasis. One can say that the
hypostasis is the image of existence but this is not an individualizing feature.
Leontius, following Aristotle, calls the properties which describe or determine
every hypostasis "accidental” — τα σνμβεβηκότα. Here he distinguishes these
constitutive (or “essential”) accidents as “inseparable." They are different
from customary "accidental" features which are always "separable." And they do
not violate the indivisible wholeness.
"Enhypostasisness"
is one of the possible cases of unification or interaction of natures: such, for
example, is the unity of body and soul in a man, which are joined by "mutual
life," but are not essentially altered. In Leontius’ opinion such a unification
is also a proper and completed unity, a unity "within the hypostasis," a
hypostatic unity, ενωσι? υποστατική. With Leontius this concept receives
terminological clarity and firmness.
The Mystery of
the Incarnation and Union
as a Presupposition of the Existence of
Duality.
The Incarnation of
the Logos is a mystery and a secret. Of all mysteries, it was this mystery which
appeared in natural visibility, in the historical image of the God-man. In
Christ a duality is indivisibly revealed and observed. He is God and Man, a
"complete" God and a "complete" man, "One of the Holy Trinity" and "one of us."
Thus a duality of natures is revealed which is not removed by union or
unification. Union, Leontius insists, presupposes the existence of duality —
only two things can combine, and if what is being united disappears, then
unification or union ceases. Once again Leontius illustrates his idea with the
example of human hypostasis. Preserving duality or the abiding of natures in
unification without changes in the "natural properties," in no way weakens the
unity. Counting natures does not mean "dividing" them — the number does not
divide but distinguishes. The natures are distinguished from one another, not
divided. Unity is presupposed by unification. In union Christ is one — one
hypostasis, or one person, or one individual subject. This unity of person or
subject is also signified by Christ’s name. This is the name of the hypostasis,
a sort of personal name, “the name of personhood” — του προσώπου ονομα. One may
say that Christ is the name of the Logos in his Incarnation, the name of the
Incarnate Logos, for the single hypostasis of the God-Man is precisely the
Hypostasis of the Logos. Union takes place in the Logos, and in it the human
nature is embraced and somehow "personalized” — ένπροσωποποίησε. In this process
the Divine Hypostasis remains simple and invariable, as it was before the union.
After all, fullness cannot be filled in.
However, by virtue
of the union one can talk about "complexity" (or "composition"), understanding
by this the very fact of the Incarnation; that is, the reality of two natures.
In the Incarnation the Logos receives not human nature in general but an
individualized human nature. In other words, Christ in his humanity differs from
other people, from his fellow men, through individual and special features or
characteristics, just like human individualities are distinguished from one
another. Therefore, it is possible to say: “One of us.” However, human nature is
“individualized” in the “hypostasis of the Logos” — εν τω Λόγω υποστήναι. The
Logos receives human nature not in its "communality" but in its "wholeness" of a
complete man — ολον ανθρωπον. The union begins when the Logos’ human nature
begins; that is, with conception. However, Leontius seems to allow the
possibility — only a logical possibility — of some "pre-existence" of human
nature. He is put out by too close a parallel with the human composition: body
and soul separate in death and exist separately until the resurrection; that is,
every nature is in its own hypostasis and again combines into a unified
hypostasis only in the resurrection.
Not infrequently he
discusses the "complex" hypostasis of Christ as if it "is composed," not as if
human nature is received into the very hypostasis of the Logos. Here Leontius is
vague and too cursory. He gets too carried away by logical symmetry and does not
always note the "non-independence" of the enhypostasized existence of
Christ’s human nature clearly enough. Sometimes he expresses the following
simple and indisputable idea very inconsistently: in his humanity Christ differs
from his "fellow man," being "different from others;" that is, as an
"hypostasis" (as an individual), for inside a single nature separateness of
existence is determined precisely by the "hypostasis."
In no way does
Leontius want to say that Christ’s manhood is "self-hypostatic;" that is, exists
in and of itself. In that case there would be a genuine unity of hypostasis or
subject, and Leontius decisively rejects such a "relative union" — ενωσις
σχετική. He merely wants to say that Christ is individual in his manhood, that
when compared with human hypostases he is "different" or special among humanity.
However, he expresses this idea too abruptly and incomprehensibly. This is
especially so because he compares how Christ in his manhood differs from people
with how Christ in his Divinity differs from the other hypostases of the Trinity
— and in the latter case the Hypostasis really does differ from the Hypostases.
However, with Leontius, this is merely imprecision of language, a case of
being carried away by the parallelism of natures. He never forgets the
distinction he has set up between "hypostasis-ness" and "enhypostasis-ness," and
he speaks directly about a second birth of the Logos — from the Virgin
Mary, about the second birth of the Logos, not only that of human nature (of
course, the "Incarnate Logos"). After all, manhood exists "in the Logos" —
Leontius does not say "in Christ."
Hypostasis and
the Communicatio Idiomatum.
The union and unity
of the Hypostasis of the Logos Incarnate justifies the "transfer of names" or
the "communicatio idiomatum" as a method for expressing the "reciprocity"
of properties. One can call the Logos the Son of Man. One can say that the "Lord
of Glory" was crucified. This is possible in view of the unity of hvoostasis,
which is properly being referred to when it is said bout each’nature that
"different things are proclaimed about One a j ^ Same Thing," and the difference
between the natures is fully maintained. "Reciprocity" never turns into
"mixing." It is nossible precisely in "hypostatic union" and impossible either
with the "conjunctive unity " ("through good-will") of Nestorian thought or with
the "mixing unity" of the Mo no phy sites, for, given the "unity of nature," the
existence of "opposite" properties is impossible. This is a presupposition of
the very reality of "reciprocity."
Leontius’
Criticism of St. Cyril’s Formula.
Leontius considers
St. Cyril’s formula unsuccessful and incautious, one which aims at a false
understanding even with the proviso of "a single complex nature" (in Severus’
thought), which moreover is logically absurd. Leontius resolutely insists on the
"hypostatic" nature of the union of the God-Man. It is the Hypostasis which
causes the union of the two natures. The concept of "hypostasis" best of all
expresses the unity of individuality — όλότης υποστατική, the unity of subject,
the unity of Christ. The concept of “enhypostasis-ness” clearly defines the
completeness of the reality of the human nature without hinting at all at its
"independence." Leontius was not the first to make use of this term — it was
used in the pseudo-Athanasian Against Apollinarius, by Didymus, and by
the monk Eustathius. But with Leontius the terminology receives for the first
time its expressiveness and power. Leontius’ historical significance and
influence reside in the fact that he made an experiment of synthetically
revealing all of Christology from the concept of a "single hypostasis." This
eliminated all the ambiguity of earlier "Eastern" dyophysitism and it avoided
the forced constructions of the doctrine of Severus. Leontius adheres to the
Aristotelian tradition of the Cappadocians. But it was an eclectic
Aristotelianism: in his anthropology Leontius was sooner a Platonist (through
Nemesius of Emesa’s influential work On the Nature of
Man.
Leontius’
Dispute with the Aphthartodocetists.
In his dispute with
the Aphthartodocetists Leontius meticulously discloses the doctrine on the
humanity of the Logos. The Aphthartodocetists, one of the divisions of the
Monophysites, were founded by Julian, bishop of Halicarnassus, and hence were
also called " Julianists.” They taught that from the first moment of the
Incarnation the earthly body of Christ was in its nature incorruptible —
άφθαρτος impassible, and immortal, although this did not stop Julian from
accepting suffering and death as a free act of the will. Leontius proceeds from
soteriological premises. In opposition to Julian of Halicarnassus, Leontius
thinks that the primordial Adam was created in a form capable of "decay" — that
is, mortal — that the flesh was "mortal." Immortality was available only through
participation in the "Tree of Life" — that is, for Leontius it was a dynamic
task, an opportunity, not a "natural" condition. This means that in the Fall
human flesh did not become mortal for the first time but started to die — the
possibility of "decay" appeared. Consequently, from the fact that Christ has the
nature of the primordial Adam, it does not follow that his flesh is "incapable
of decay" from the very Incarnation. For all of its chastity and purity, die
possibility of death or "decay" remains and is removed only through actual
death, in the resurrection. By nature — κατά φύσίν — Christ’s flesh is open to
suffering and is not withdrawn from "irreproachable passions" or "suffering"
states — and not through a special calamity or weakness of the Logos, as Julian
thought, but precisely by nature (although there are no actual bases for death
in it).
The hypostatic
union does not demand changes in the natural properties of manhood and does not
damage the flesh’s ability to suffer. True, by virtue of the hypostatic union,
the measure of nature is exceeded — υπέρ φύσιν — but the laws of nature are not
annulled, not παρά φύσίν. For the Savior, imperishability is higher than
nature. Before the resurrection the measure of nature is only sometimes
exceeded. It is the miracles which are the exception in the Gospel story of the
Logos Incarnate, and not the weakness, as Julian depicted it. For Julian,
salvation has already been completed somehow in the Incarnation, while the
Gospel life was presented as some series of acts which went beyond what was
necessary. For Leontius, on the contrary, the Incarnation is only the beginning,
and he sees in the Savior’s whole life an inner unity and growth. Leontius
reminds us that "imperishability" is not some exclusive gift, for it is promised
to all. Innate imperishability of the flesh, on the contrary, would not increase
the Savior’s glory. The Savior’s whole life would be incomprehensible in that
case. Why did he suffer and die on the Cross, if apotheosis and deification of
human nature was already completed in the Incarnation? If the Savior’s human
nature has actual "impassivity and "imperishability" by virtue of the hypostatic
union, then ould not its fullness be lessened with every calamity of suffering W
d debilitation? The whole meaning of Leontius’ observations is fΠ emphasize the
perfect reality of the Savior’s corporeal life, °hich was fulfilled through
volitional death in the resurrection, when for the first time the Savior’s body
is actually invested with imperishability.
Leontius makes a
sharp distinction between deification of the soul and of the body. The human in
Christ is free of sin and therefore from the beginning the Savior’s soul is
privy to all the blessings of the Logos, to bliss and omniscience. Leontius
insists on this against Theodore of Mopsuestia and his doctrine of the process
of Christ’s moral perfection and his original ignorance. This original
deification of the soul is connected with its purity and innocence. But from
this it is impossible to come to a conclusion about the imperishability of the
flesh. Chastity does not exclude growth, and the Savior was born as a child.
Death triumphs actually only through a death which is volitional (for it is "for
our sake"), but natural. The resurrection actualizes imperishability for the
first time; it is the resurrection which becomes the source of life and
imperishability for the whole human race, as something "consubstantial" with
Christ in human nature, by virtue of a certain mysterious "servility" or
"homeopathy."
This
imperishability and impassivity will be revealed in the last days. Sinners will
fall under new sufferings. However, these future sufferings differ substantially
from those of today, which are connected with the natural capacity for suffering
of mortal flesh. Thus, in his objections to Julian, Leontius successfully argues
against the latter’s anthropological premises and his doctrine about primordial
nature and original sin.
Chapter Five.
The Spirit
of Monenergism
and
Monothelitism.
The belated epilogue to the
Monophysite movement was the Monothelite dispute. This was a dispute over
formulas and more over the formulas of Church diplomacy than over those of
theology. However, these formulas proclaim not only an alluring tactical
ambiguity — one senses in them a dangerous vagueness of theological vision or
perception. That is why this dispute over words heated up with unprecedented
bitterness and was sprinkled with the blood of orthodox believers. The
Monothelites were supported and even inspired by a state power preoccupied with
the restoration of religious unity in the disintegrating
empire.
An agreement with
the Monophysites was the age-old dream of the emperors — Basiliscus’
Encyclical of 472; Zeno’s Henotikon of 482; and Justinian’s
attempts at union. It was now becoming an obsession. But the hierarchy too
sought a covenant with the Monophysites, and not only out of an insincere
meekness. To many adherents of the Council of Chalcedon the disagreement with
the moderate followers of Severus seemed negligible and unimportant, almost an
historical misunderstanding. Consequently, it seemed possible and necessary to
dispel it with wise tractability. A hope such as this was evidence of the
inconstancy of Christological ideas and the haziness of theological experience.
In any case, the hope proved delusive. This inconsistency was also the danger of
Monothelitism.
One can discern two
periods in the history of the Monothelite dispute. The agreement between Cyrus
of Alexandria and the local followers of Severus, the "Theodosians," in 632 and
633 goes back to the first period. It was also accepted in Constantinople by
Patriarch Sergius, the chief inspiration of the whole enterprise of union, and
it was consolidated by imperial decree. It was also approved by Pope Honorius.
The anathemas of union were composed very evasively but in Monophysite
terminology. This was an obvious compromise. The orthodox saw as the main
untruth of this covenant the declaration that Christ performed the Divine and
the human "through a single God-Man operation” — μία θεανδρική ενεργεια. The
defenders of the Formula of Reunion insisted that they were not diverging from
Pope Leo’s Tome, that they were reiterating his beliefs. And in actual fact, in
no way did they understand "unity of operation" as "fusion." They made a lear
distinction between the Divine and the human, applied the ° ord "unity" not to
"nature" but to "hypostasis," and never called the "single operation" "natural"
but always "hypostatic." The very definition of "single operation" as "God-Man"
sets off its "comlexity." All the same, "single operation" signifies much more
than merely "single, unified person." The Monothelites did not begin to notice
this. The mistake of "monenergism" was not, of course, that they professed that
the human in Christ was "animated by God" — such a conclusion necessarily
follows from the doctrine of the unity of the God-Man person or subject, and no
orthodox person would ever question this. The mistake was that the Monothelites,
following Severus, took this "divine animation" as the passivity of the human.
They compared the workings of the Divine within Christ’s humanity with the
worship of the soul within the human body. This customary analogy became
dangerous in the given situation, for it did not set off the most important
thing — the fact that the human is free in this very state of Divine animation
while the body is not free in its subordination to the soul. It was
this difference which the Monothelites did not feel. They conceived the
human too naturalistically. In any case, they refused to speak of "two natural
operations" because they were afraid that this would reduplicate the hypostasis.
The originality of the human is not set off forcefully enough — precisely
because they did not feel it. We must add that "energy" means more than just
operation — it rather means "viability" and "vital activity." The Monothelites
were afraid to acknowledge the "natural" viability of the human in Christ
because they confused it with "independence." Therefore it was inevitable that
the human would seem passive to them.
The second period
in the Monothelite debate begins with the publication of Emperor Heraclius’
Ekthesis — "An Exposition of the True Faith" in 638. Here, instead
of "single operation," he asserts the "unity of will" or "desire" — εν θέλημα —
and in so doing, prohibits discussion of “one” or “two operations.” The new term
was supported by Pope Honorius. There was patent ambiguity in the very way the
question was posed. "Unity of will" can be understood in two ways: either as a
complete and total coincidence of, or accord between, Divine and human desire;
or as the singleness of Divine will, to the "whom" of which the human is
subordinated without either its own or "natural" will. In other words, unity of
will can mean either unity of subject, or else also will-lessness" of the human.
What exactly Patriarch Sergius panted to say when he composed his "exposition"
remains nclear. It seems to be the first choice, since he motivates his
acknowledgment of "single desire" through the impossibility of assuming any
bifurcation or "contradiction" in the will of the God-Man. In addition, he
forbids discussion of two natural volitions and thus, as it were, subtracts will
from the "human" in Christ.
We must distinguish
two profundities in the Monothelite movement. Of course, Monothelitism arose as
a diplomatic movement, as a search for a conciliatory compromise, and one could
say that it was "political heresy," heresy through political motives. But this
is not the beginning and the end of the Monothelite movement. It deeply
disturbed the Church. Monothelitism was a symptom of theological confusion, for
all the theological inspirations of the Monothelite formulas harshly posed a new
dogmatic question, all be it from the reverse. This was the question of human
will. The whole Monothelite dispute was possible only because there was
still no decisive answer to this question. In addition, the question itself had
not yet ripened, had not yet forced its way into consciousness. The temptation
of quietism had still not been overcome. The whole polemic of St. Maximus the
Confessor with the Monothelites, strictly speaking, comes down to this
interpretation that the will is a necessary feature of human nature, and that
without will and freedom, human nature would be incomplete and not authentic.
From these anthropological premises the Christological conclusion follows in and
of itself. In the Monothelite movement the final mystery of Monophysitism was
revealed. This was doubt about human will. This is something different than what
we see in Apollinarius — it is not a temptation regarding human thought. To a
certain extent Monophysitism was the "dogmatic precursor of Islam," as one
scholar observed. The Monothelite movement ended with a silent retreat, with a
vain attempt to take cover in silence — the Τύπος of 648 generally prohibited
discussion of the question of one or two wills. But now was not the time to
compel silence.
The need for a
decisive answer was growing more and more acute. The answer was given at the
Sixth Ecumenical Council in 680 — it ended in 681. The Sixth Ecumenical Council
reiterated and augmented the Chalcedonian oros and continued it in the
following definition: "We also confess, according to the teachings of the holy
fathers, that in him there are two natural wills, that is desires — δύο φυσικάς
θελήσεις ήτοι θελήματα — and two natural operations — δύο φυσικάς ενεργείας —
indivisibly, inalterably, inseparably, unconfusedly. And two natural desires do
not contradict each other as impious heretics have said — that could not be! But
his human desire does not contradict and does not oppose his Divine and
All-Mighty desire but rather follows, or better, is subordinated to it” —
έπόμενον … και μη αντιπιπτον η αντιπαλαιον, μάλλον μεν ουν και υποτασσόμενον.
This definition is taken almost word for word from Pope
Agatho’s
oistle to the Sixth
Ecumenical Council. Pope Agatho was repeating the definition of the Lateran
Council of 649 which complied with the teachings of St. Maximus the Confessor.
That is why the oros of the Sixth Ecumenical Council did not require a
new theological commentary. This commentary had already been given in advance in
the theological system of St. Maximus the Confessor.
Church culture
crystallizes in the sixth and seventh centuries. The non-transient symbol of
this epoch is the great cathedral of Agia Sophia in Constantinople. Creative
tension is felt in a kind of intensity. It is clearer in its ascetics than in
its theology but a new theological synthesis, a new system is born from this new
ascetic experience. It is revealed to us in the works of the venerable Maximus
the Confessor. It is he, and not St. John of Damascus, who sums up the creative
results of early Byzantine theology. This explains the powerful influence he had
on subsequent generations. Again, the conflict between the Empire and the Desert
is exacerbated. It is laid bare with catastrophic force in the iconoclastic
disturbance. A theocratic synthesis in Justinian’s style proved to be ambiguous
and premature, and it collapsed. In this sense the iconoclastic movement closes
the epoch of early Byzantinism, but in its persecutions and the deeds of martyrs
is the dawn of a new life.
Chapter Six.
St. Maximus
the Confessor.
The Life of St.
Maximus.
We know little
about St. Maximus’ worldly life. He came from an old, distinguished family and
was, it seems, favored by Emperor Heraclius — possibly even related to him. He
was born about 580 in Constantinople. He received an excellent education. His
biographer writes that St. Maximus received the εγκύκλιος παίδευσις: Sherwood is
correct in writing that "this would mean that his training lasted from about his
sixth or seventh year till his twenty-first, and contained grammar, classical
literature, rhetoric and philosophy (including arithmetic, music, geometry,
astronomy, logic, ethics, dogmatics and metaphysics), and also that it must have
included his first contact with Aristotle and the Neo-Platonists (through the
commentaries of Proclus and lamblichus)." St. Maximus studied philosophy with a
special love. Later on, St. Maximus’ great gift for dialectic and logic, and his
formal culture with its great erudition, left their mark on his disputes with
the Monothelites. His erudition was not merely restricted to ecclesiastical
topics but included a wide range of secular knowl edge.
From his youth St.
Maximus was distinguished not only by his love for philosophy but also by his
humility, by his character in general. As a young man he served at the palace in
the imperial chancellery. The noisy and turbid life of the palace could hardly
have given satisfaction to the born contemplator, especially among the
Monothelite intrigues which were then beginning. Very soon he abandoned the
world and left for the secluded monastery in Chrysopolis on the Asian waters
across from Constantinople, not far from Chalcedon "where philosophy was
flourishing at that time." That he left the secular world, the world of imperial
life and policy, to enter a monastery because and only because of the
theological controversies then arising over Monenergism and Monothelitism, as
his biographer suggests [Patrologia Graeca 90, 72], is stretching the
evidence and neglecting the contemplative character of St. Maximus. His
biographer gives a reason — St. Maximus had been yearning for a life of quiet,
καθ’ ήσυχίαν. He remained on good terms with the imperial court, as his letters
to John the Chamberlain evidence.
It appears that St.
Maximus made this significant decision in 613/614. In 1910 Montmason in his
La Chronologic de la vie de Saint Maxime le Confesseur had so structured
the life of St. Maximus that his entry into the monastery took place in 630.
That date was ch allenged in 1927 by Grumel in his "Notes d’histoire et de
chronologic sur la vie de Saint Maxime le Confesseur" [in Echos
d’Orient]. Grumel’s argument was convincing and the date of 613/614 is now
commonly accepted. St. Maximus’ attitude towards his humble "ordeal" earned him
the respect of his brethren in the mona stery. His biographer relates
[Patrologia Graeca 90, 72] that St. Maximus stood throughout the night in
prayer. St. Maximus’ biographer stresses the ascetical and devotional life of
St. Maxima s at the monastery, claiming that the monks persuaded him to become
their superior, their hegoumen. Scholars disagree. Some rejec± this as pious
fiction — for example, von Balthasar. Some reject this claim based on the
supposition that his great literary production could not have allowed him to
manage a monastery. Such an argument does not necessarily follow from what we
know of St. Maximus’ abilities in the imperial chancellery. There what was
appreciated was his ability to make quick decisions, there he was respected for
his rapid decisiveness. Whether he became the hegoumen is not important. But
there is no substantial evidence to accept or to deny it. It is true that his
signature ο η the petition to translate the Acts of the Lateran Council into
Greek reads Maximus monachus. It is also true that he is referred to as
ευλαβέστατος μοναχός. But this evidence indicates no thing more than the fact
that he was a monk. Perhaps a more accurate interpretation is that he may very
well have been elected hegoumen by the monks and that he did not accept this
holy office out of humility. Though the chronology of these secluded ye^rs still
remains somewhat unclear, it is clear that from this time on his life is
inseparably connected with the history of the dogmatic struggle against the
Monothelites.
The dogmatic
struggle began to intensify. The Persians were successfully On the offensive,
and in 626 they had reached the walls of Constantinople. Indeed, in 626
Constantinople was faced with the advance of two enemies, the Avars and the
Persians. At some point St. Maximus set out for the Latin West. The argument
that his departure was forced by the invasion of the Persians may well be
accurate. His path, however, was long and difficult — at one point when he was
on Crete he was engaged in controversy with the Severians. It appears that he
stayed in Alexandria for some period of time. In any case we know that he
reached Latin Africa-Carthage. It was here, according to his biographer, that
St. Maximus organized an Orthodox opposition to the Monothelites. "All
inhabitants not only of Africa but also of the nearby islands revered Maximus as
their mentor and leader." Apparently, St. Maximus did a great deal of travelling
around the country, entered into contact with the bishops, established close
contact with the imperial governors of Africa, and carried on an extensive
correspondence.
The main event of
this African period of St. Maximus’ life was his dispute with Pyrrhus, the
deposed Monothelite Patriarch of Constantinople. In June of 645 the famous
dispute took place. A detailed record of this dispute, made apparently by
notaries who were present, has been preserved. Under the intellectual challenge
of St. Maximus Pyrrhus yielded. He set off with St. Maximus for Rome where he
publicly renounced the heresy of Monothelitism. His ordination was then
recognized by Rome and he was received into the communion of the Roman Church.
It appears that Rome also recognized him as the legitimate patriarch of
Constantinople. Pyrrhus1 change did not last for long. At the council of 648
under Pope Theodore in Rome he was again excommunicated as someone who had
fallen anew into heresy. In 652 Pyrrhus again became Patriarch of
Constantinople.
In Rome St. Maximus
experienced a great influence and authority. Under his influence Monothelitism
was condemned at local councils in Africa in 646 [Mansi 10, 761/762]. In 649,
again at the recommendation of St. Maximus, the newly elected Pope Martin I
convened a large council [Mansi 10, 863-1170] in Rome, known commonly as the
Lateran Council. In addition to the one hundred and fifty western bishops
attending the council, there were thirty-seven Greek abbots who were at this
time living in Rome. The Lateran Council promulgated a well-defined and
decisive resolution about the unmingled natural will and energy in Christ. This
was a sharp reply to the demand to sign the Typos of faith which had been sent
from Constantinople. The Typos — τύπος πepί πίστεως — was issued in 648
by Constans II, the goal of which was to command silence on the dispute of the
wills in Christ. The Typos was rejected at the Lateran Council, as
was the earlier Ekthesis of Heraclius — the εκθεσις της πίστεως was an
imperial edict drawn up by Patriarch Sergius to respond to the synodical letter
by St. Sophronius, patriarch of Jerusalem, a letter which has been preserved in
the acts of the Sixth Ecumenical Council. The Lateran Council also
excommunicated and anathe — matized the Monothelite patriarchs Cyrus, Sergius,
Pyrrhus, and Paul. The acts of the Lateran Council, together with an
accompanying papal letter, were sent everywhere, "to all the
faithful."
Severe retribution
soon befell the defenders of orthodoxy, who had disobeyed the imperial will. The
emperor Constans immediately reacted but encountered difficulty — the exarch
sent to Rome had joined the papal opposition. Finally in 653 Pope Martin was
seized by a military force, conveyed to Constantinople, tried in 654, and then
exiled to Cherson in 655, where he died later that year. In Constantinople Pope
Martin I, who had formerly been an apocrisiarius of the papal see at
Constantinople, was imprisoned with common criminals, and was exposed to cold
and hunger.
At the same time
St. Maximus was taken. His trial did not take place until May of 655. He was
tried [Migne, Patrologia Graeca 90, 109-129] in Constantinople as an
enemy and criminal of the state, as a subverter of ecclesiastical and civil
peace. The trial was murderous and tempestuous. The biography of St. Maximus
preserves a detailed and vivid account of it, in the words of one of St.
Maximus1 disciples, Anastasius — who was also arrested along with St.
Maximus.
The political
charges were not merely a pretext. The secular defenders of the heresy were more
than anything irritated by St. Maximus’ spiritual independence and his steadfast
denial of the emperor’s rights in questions of faith — the denial of imperial
power by authority of the Church. They were also irritated by the fact that in
his calm profession of innocence St. Maximus was fighting against a whole swarm
of appeasers of the imperial office. This seemed to be self-importance, as if he
were placing his own will above everything else, for he said: "I think not of
the unity or division of Romans and Greeks, but I must not retreat from the
correct faith ... It is the business of priests, not emperors, to investigate
and define the salutary dogmas of the Catholic Church." An emperor of Christians
is not a priest, does not stand before the altar, does not perform the
sacraments, does not bear the signs of the priesthood.
They argued long
and insistently with St. Maximus and, when he still proved adamant, they passed
a sentence exiling him to a fortress in Byzya in Thrace. In captivity they
continued to try to persuade him. In 656 a court bishop was sent by the new
patriarch, Peter, but St. Maximus refused to change his mind. He was moved then
to the monastery of St. Theodore at Rhegion where again the authorities
prevailed upon him to change his mind, to surrender to the will of the emperor.
Again he refused. They then sent him into exile for a second time, still in
Thrace, but this time to Perberis where he stayed for the next six years. In 662
St. Maximus, his monk and disciple Anastasius, and Anastasius the apocrisiarius
were brought back to Constantinople, where a council was to be held. Back in
Constantinople St. Maximus and his disciples underwent bloody torture — the
tongues and the right hands of the condemned seem to have been cut out. They
were then sent to a more remote exile in Lazica — on the south east shore of the
Black Sea. On August 13, 661 St. Maximus died, broken not only by age but also
by the inhumane treatment he had received.
Many legends about
the life of St. Maximus have been preserved. Very soon after his death his
biography, or panegyric, was composed. After that a Memorial Record was
written by Theodosius of Gangra, a holy monk from Jerusalem — perhaps it was he
who composed the biography? Along with this, the records of St. Maximus’
disciple, Anastasius the apocrisiarius, and the latter’s letter to Theodosius
about the trial and the last years of St. Maximus’ life, have been preserved.
Theophanes also has much to say about St. Maximus in his Chronographia,
much of which is close to biography.
It is obvious that
the sufferings and the "ordeal" of the un -bending defender of the faith made a
strong impression on his contemporaries. A vivid and reverential memory of St.
Maximus was maintained at the place of his death in the Caucasus. With the
victory over the Monothelites and the triumph of orthodoxy at the Sixth
Ecumenical Council in 680/681 St. Maximus’ great martyr’s ordeal was
appreciated, and he was highly honored in Byzantium as a great teacher and
preacher of Christ who incinerated the impudent paganism of the heretics with
his fire-bearing word. He was respected both as a writer and thinker and as a
mystic and ascetic. His books were the favorite reading both of laymen and
monks. Anna Comnena, for example, tells us: "I remember how my mother, when she
served dinner, would often bring a book in her hands and interpret the dogmatic
places of the holy fathers, particularly by the philosopher and martyr
Maximus."
The Writings of St.
Maximus.
St. Maximus’ compositions
were preserved in numerous manuscript copies, not all of which have been
published. His influence is felt in all areas of later Byzantine literature. He
was a typical exponent of the traditions and strivings of Byzantine
antiquity.
His stormy life of
suffering did not prevent St. Maximus from writing a great deal. "He did not
stop writing his compositions for even a short time," his biography tells us. He
combined speculative inspiration with dogmatic steadfastness. He was not only a
theologian but also a mystic and a teacher of contemplative "ordeal" and
love.
His theology is
first of all nourished from the depths of spiritual experience. He did not
construct a theological system. Most of all he loved "to write chapters in the
form of exhortations." Most of his writings are just that — theological
fragments, "chapters," notes. He loved to write in fragments. He discourses only
when he has to, and in debates — most frequently, he explains. He prefers to go
into depth, to lay bare the heart of each theme, as opposed to covering things
in breadth. In this way he was able to develop the dialectical substance of his
conclusions. His insight is greater than his conclusions.
St. Maximus was
extremely erudite but he was not merely a repository of patristic traditions. He
lived in them, and they creatively come to life in his transforming synthesis.
One feels in him most strongly the influence of the Cappadocians, especially the
influence of St. Gregory of Nyssa. In his asceticism and mysticism he bases
himself on Evagrius Ponticus and on the Corpus Areopagiticum. He
continues along the path of the ancient Alexandrians.
It is
characteristic for St. Maximus that he constructs not so much a system of
dogmatics as a system of asceticism. It is the rhythm of spiritual life rather
than a logical connection of ideas which defines the architectonics of his
vision of the world, and one could say that his system has more of a musical
structure than an architectural one. This is more like a symphony — a symphony
of spiritual experience — than a system. It is not easy to read St. Maximus.
Even St. Photius complained much about the inco -herence of his exposition and
the difficulty of his language. St. Photius did add, however, that "his piety
and his pure, genuine love for Christ shine everywhere."
St. Maximus’
language really is unwieldy and astringent, burdened by allegories and tangled
up in rhetorical figures. At the same time, however, one constantly perceives
the intensity and condensation of thought. "They say that the aloofness of
thought and the profundity of this man drive the reader to a frenzy," Anna
Comnena observes. The reader has to divine St. Maximus’ system in his sketches.
When he does, the inner access to the integral world of St. Maximus’ inspired
experience is revealed.
Among St. Maximus’
writings we must first of all mention his exegetical sketches. These are
precisely sketches and notes, not coherent commentaries. They are not even
exegeses but rather reflections on individual "difficult phrases" — or
"aporii." Such are the Questions and Answers to Thalassius; other
special Questions and Answers; the Epistle to Theopemptus
Scholasticus; his Interpretation of the Fifty-Ninth Psalm; and a
short exposition of the Lord’s Prayer — see the fragments in the
catenae.
In his explanations
of the texts St. Maximus always uses the allegory and "elevating" — "analogical"
— method which irritated St Photius so much. St. Photius writes: "The solutions
he thinks up for his questions are far removed from literal meaning and known
history, and even from the questions themselves." This is too harsh. However,
St. Maximus really does approach the Scriptures like a true Alexandrian and
often makes us recall Origen. St. Maximus’ scholia to the
Areopagiticum are of the same nature — as we already mentioned, it is
difficult to pick them out of later codifications. Of the same nature is a
special tract on difficult places in the Areopagiticum and on St. Gregory
of Nazianzus.
St. Maximus wrote
much on questions of spiritual life — the Ascetic Address, first of all,
and then a number of collections of aphorisms or "chapters" of varied content:
"Four Hundred Chapters on Love;" Two Hundred and Forty-Three "Other
Chapters;" "Two Hundred Theological and Oikonomic Chapters"; and
others. To this day, these collections have not been entirely studied. To these
must be added the expansive collection of Common Places — selections from
the Scriptures, the fathers, and others. It is probably known to us in a later
reworking.
It is particularly
necessary to mention the Mystagogia, a mystical, allegorical explanation
of the mysterious meaning of religious rites, written in the spirit of the
Areopagiticum. This book had an exceptional influence on later liturgical
literature in Byzantine. Here is the same method of symbolic mystical perception
that we find in his interpretations of the Scriptures. Strictly speaking, all of
these writings of St. Maximus are in their own way "scholia" notes and
discussions "apropos"
St. Maximus’
dogmatic and polemical compositions are of a special nature. In some sense he
disputes with Monophysites in general and reveals the doctrine of two natures —
these are primarily letters to a certain "celebrated" Peter; to the Alexandrian
deacon Cosmas; one of the letters is to John Cubicularius; the letters to
Julian, an Alexandrian scholastic; and to female hermits who had fallen away
from the faith.
In others he
develops the doctrine of two wills and energies. This, first of all, is the
famous Dispute with Pyrrhus — a contemporary record — and then a number
of dogmatic epistles: On the Two Wills of Christ, Our God — perhaps to
Stephen, who was subsequently Bishop of Dar; another Letter to Stephen;
and a number of letters to the Cypriot presbyter Marinus, and to other
persons.
In these letters
St. Maximus begins with an analysis of the Monothelite definitions and
arguments, and reveals as a counterbalance the system of correct Christological
concepts in their correlations and connections. Here he is mostly a
"scholastic." At the same time he dwells in detail on his explanations of
difficult and controversial texts in the Scriptures and in patristic testi
-monies. The patristic material which he collects and explains is very
complete.
St. Maximus does
not give a systematic exposition of Christology. He speaks out in letters and in
oral arguments, always apropos. He always strives solely to reveal and confirm a
tradition of faith.
Most frequently he
speaks of the Incarnation — but not only according to the conditions of the
time. In his inner experience this dogma was fundamental. He touches upon other
dogmatic themes cursorily. He speaks of the Trinitarian dogma in explanations
written for Gregory the Theologian — in the Dialogues On the Holy Trinity
and in one of the letters to Maximus On the Emanation of the Holy Spirit.
We must also make note of other letters — to archbishop Joseph On the Soul’s
Incorporeality, and to the presbyter John On Eternal Life.
Anthropological questions were naturally raised at this time — in connection
with the Christological disputes — Origenism, which was fading but had not yet
completely died out, and the basis of asceticism. It would be incorrect to think
that St. Maximus did not have a theological system. A great wholeness can be
felt in his sketches. He always speaks on particular events, but his words are
least of all incidental. They have been forged in silent meditation, in the
mystical silence of inspired experience.
The Theology of St.
Maximus.
Revelation as
the Central Theme in the Theology of St. Maximus the
Confessor.
St. Maximus’ whole
system can be understood most easily from the idea of Revelation. This is
that proto-fact to which any theological reflection goes back. God is
revealed — here is the beginning of the world’s coming into being. The
whole world is a revelation of God, and everything in the world is mysterious
and therefore symbolic. The whole world is grounded in God’s thought and will.
Therefore, cognition of the world is a disclosure pf this symbolism, a
perception of Divine will and thought which !s inscribed in the
world.
Further, the world
is a revelation of the Logos. The Logos is the God of revelation.
God the Logos is revealed in the world. This revelation is
completed and fulfilled in the Incarnation. For St. Maximus, the Incarnation is
the focus of the world’s existence — and not only in the plan of redemption but
also in the primordial plan for the creation of the world. The Incarnation is
willed along with creation itself, but not merely in foreknowledge of the fall.
God created the world and is revealed in order to become a Man in this
world.
Man is created so
that God may become man and through the Incarnation man is deified. "He who
founded the existence — origin, "genesis" — of all creation, visible and
invisible, by a single act of his will, ineffably had, before all ages and any
beginning of the created world, good counsel, a decision, that he himself should
inalterably unite with human nature through a true unity of hypostases. And he
inalterably united human nature with himself — so that he himself should become
a man, as he himself knows, and so that he should make man a god through union
with himself."
New Development
of the Logos Doctrine and the
Doctrine of the
Knowledge of God.
The doctrine of the
Logos, which had been shunted into the background in fourth century theology,
again becomes widely developed in St. Maximus. In him the ancient tradition of
the second and third centuries again comes to life. This tradition had, of
course, never ceased in Alexandrian tradition — see St. Athanasius On the
Incarnation, and St. Cyril of Alexandria, especially his interpretation of
the Gospel of St. John. St. Maximus to some extent repeats Origen — more
in his problems than in his answers. But the Logos doctrine has now been
entirely freed from the ancient ambiguity, an ambiguity which was unavoidable
before a precise definition of the Trinitarian mystery.
In any case, it is
the idea of Revelation which defines the whole plan of St. Maximus’
reflections, as it did for the Apologists and the Alexandrians of the third
century. However, all the originality and power of St. Maximus’ new Logos
doctrine lies in the fact that his conception of Revelation is developed
within Christological perspectives. St. Maximus is coming from Origen, as it
were, but overcomes Origen and Origenism. It is not that Christology is included
in the doctrine of Revelation, but that the mystery of Revelation is discernible
in Christology. It is not that Christ’s person demands explanation, but that
everything is explained in Christ’s person — the person of the
God-Man.
In his theological
thoughts St. Maximus sides with the Areopagiticum. In the doctrine of the
knowledge of God he virtually repeats Evagrius. In his unlimited essence, in the
ever-plentiful fulness of his existence, God is inaccessible to man and to all
creation. The created mind only has access to knowledge of the fact that God
exists — and exists as the First Cause of everything which has been created. And
knowledge of God’s essence is totally inaccessible. "We believe that he exists,
but in no way do we dare to investigate what his nature is, as does the demonic
mind’ — fruitlessly, of course.
Created reason is
worthy to bear witness to God only in denials, thereby confessing the complete
inapplicability of any logical categories and concepts to Divine existence. For
God is above everything, above any complexity and plurality. However, knowledge
of God in his exalted existence is possible — not in the concepts of reason, but
in supra-mental perception, in ecstasy.
Apophatic denial
is itself at the same time renunciation — renunciation and the
silencing of thought, renunciation and its liberation from the categorical
stricture of discursive cognition. In other words, it is the emanation or frenzy
of thought — ecstasy. The whole sense of apophatic theology is that it recalls
this ecstatic experience — mystical theology.
As with
Pseudo-Dionysius, apophatic theology for St. Maximus is not dialectic. This
"not" is above dialectic antitheses and even higher than antinomies. This "not"
demands total silence, and calls for the self-overcoming of thoughts which utter
and are uttered. At the same time, it is a call to cognize God, but not as
Creator, and not in those of his perfections which are revealed in deeds and in
creation.
First of all, it is
possible and necessary to cognize God "from the magnitude of his deeds." This is
still preliminary knowledge. And the limit and goal of knowledge of God is to
see God — so that in "ordeal" and in creative upsurge, through abnegation and
love, the mind soars in the ever-peaceful darkness of Divine Mystery where it
meets God face to face and lives in him. This is a kind of "return" of the mind
— επιστροφή. God appears in the world, in certain cognizable forms, so
that he can reveal himself to man; and man comes out to meet him, comes
out of the world to find God as he is outside of the world. This is possible but
only in ecstasy. In other words, through exceeding the measure of nature —
"supra-naturally." By nature the created mind does not have the power to cognize
God directly. However, this is given to the created mind from on high. "The soul
can never break free to knowledge of God if God himself, by his blessed
condescension towards the created mind, does not touch it and raise it to
himself. And man’s mind could never manage to raise high enough to perceive any
Divine illumination if God himself did not enrapture it — as much as the human
mind can be enraptured — and did not enlighten it with Divine
rays."
However, the Holy
Spirit never works outside of man’s cognitive powers. Nor does the Holy Spirit
abolish man’s cog -nitive powers or swallow them up with his activity. Rather,
the Holy Spirit elevates them. Ecstasy is possible only through "ordeal." The
path towards knowledge of God is a ladder which extends its summit into the
Divine darkness, into a "formless and aimless place."
It is necessary to
gradually forget about everything. One must forget about all creation. One must
abstract oneself from everything created, even as something created by God. One
must extinguish one’s love for creation, even though it was indeed created by
God. In the "mystery of love" the mind becomes blind to everything besides God.
"When the mind ascends to God through the attraction of love, it perceives
neither itself nor anything which exists. Illumined by a measureless Divine
light, it is insensible to everything created, just as a sensual glance does not
notice the stars because of the sun’s radiance. Blessed is the man who
continuously delights in Divine beauty while passing all creation
by."
This is
renunciation, not merely distraction. And it is the
transformation of the cognizer himself. Ecstasy is a direct meeting with God,
and therefore knowledge of his essence. At the same time it is the deification
of the mind, the transformation of the very element of thought. The Holy Spirit
envelops the whole soul, and, as it were, transfigures or "transposes" it. This
is a state of beneficial adoption, and the soul is brought to the unity of the
Father’s hidden existence.
In pure hearts God
inscribes his letters through the Spirit as he once did on Moses’ tablets.
Christ’s mind settles in saints — "not by deprivation of our own mental force,
and not by personally or in essence moving to its place, but by illuminating the
force of our mind with his quality and by bringing its activity into a oneness
with himself — (see below on becoming like Christ and Christ’s mystical settling
into human souls). "The illumined one manages to recline with the Bridegroom,
the Logos, in the treasure house of mysteries." This is the highest and the last
stage. The limit and goal of deification in the Incarnation of the Logos and in
that knowledge which the human mind preserved in Christ by virtue of hvpostatic
union. But it is also a return to the first, to the beginning. In this life few
are permitted to reach these mysterious heights: great saints and seers, Moses
on Mount Sinai, the Apostles on the Mount of Transfiguration — Tabor, St. Paul
when he was carried away to the third heaven. The completeness of knowledge of
God will be realized and will become accessible only beyond the bounds of this
world, in the future age. However, it is precisely in ecstasy that the
justification for the cognizing "ordeal" lies.
The way to ecstasy
is "pure prayer" — here St. Maximus follows Evagrius Ponticus. This, first of
all, is the perfect self-discipline and nakedness of the spirit — its being
bared of any thought, of all mental images in general. Such nakedness is a grace
and a gift. "The grace of prayer joins our souls with God, and by this joining
it separates it from all thoughts. And by living with God it becomes God-like."
The mind’s nakedness means rising higher than any images and a corresponding
transformation of the mind itself, which also attains simplicity, uniformity,
and formlessness. "And when in prayer you have a mind estranged from matter and
images, know that you have attained the same measure of apatheia and
perfect love.” The moving force of the “ordeal” is indeed love — αγάπη. “Love is
such a disposition of the soul when it prefers nothing which exists to the
knowledge of God. and he who has a predilection for anything earthly cannot
enter this condition of love.” St. Maximus often speaks of the highest stages of
love as Divine Eros — ό θείος έρως.
Apophatic theology
only testifies to these ineffable mysteries of holy frenzy and love. In this
sense all apophatic expressions are symbolic through and through. Moreover,
knowledge of God is always a continuous and endless path where the end always
means the beginning, and where everything is for the time being only partly in a
mirror or in divination.
However, the basic
mystery of "mystical theology" is revealed to everyone and for all, for it is
the primary dogma of the Christian faith. This is the mystery of Trinity and all
the pathos of knowledge of God is in the comprehension of this mystery. For it
is a knowledge of God in his own essence. This mystery is uttered and told in
words, but it must be comprehended in experience as the mystery of perfect unity
— here St. Maximus follows the Cappadocians, especially St. Gregory of
Nazianzus, and also Evagrius Ponticus. In other words, it must be comprehended
through the experience of deification, through life in God, through the
appearance of the Trinity in the cognizing soul itself. And once again, this
will be allowed only sometime in that last deification — with the perfect
revelation of the Trinity.
The mystery of the
Trinity is a mystery of the inner Divine Life. It is God outside of Revelation,
Deus Absconditus. However, it is recognized only through Revelation,
through theophany, through the appearance and descent of the Logos into the
world. God the Trinity is cognized in the Logos and through the Logos. Through
the Logos the whole world is mysteriously permeated by the rays of the Trinity.
One can recognize the inseparable actions of the Three Hypostases in everything.
Everything is and lives intelligently. In Divine Existence we contemplate the
Wisdom which was born without beginning and the Life which is imparted
eternally. Thus the Divine Unity is revealed as the Trinity — the Tri-Hypostatic
monad; the "unlimited uniting of the Three Unlimited
Ones."
It is not "one in
another," and not "one and another," and not "one above another" — but the
Trinity is also at once a Unity. God is entirely the Trinity without blending.
This removes both the limitedness of Hellenic polytheism, and the aridity of
Judaic monotheism which gravitates towards a kind of atheism. Neither the
Hellene nor the Jew knows about Jesus Christ. This means that contradictions in
doctrines about God are eliminated through Christ — in the revelation of the
Trinity.
It is especially
necessary to note that St. Maximus taught about the Spirit’s procession from the
Father "through the Son." This is nothing more than a confirmation of the
ineffable — but irreversible — order of hypostases in the perfect
consubstantiality of the Trinitarian existence. It is very curious that St.
Maximus had to speak out on the Western filioque — in a letter to the
Cypriot presbyter Marinus, which is preserved only in fragments which one read
in in the Florentine Cathedral. Reassuring the Easterners, St. Maximus explained
that "the Westerners do not represent the Son as the cause of the Spirit, for
they know that the Father is the single cause of the Son and the Spirit — the
former through birth; the latter by procession. They merely show that the Holy
Spirit proceeds through the Son in order to signify affinity and insepar
— ability of essence." Here St. Maximus is completely within the compass of the
ancient Eastern tradition.
The mystery of
Trinity is beyond knowledge. At the same time, it contains the buttress of
knowledge. Everything in the world is a mystery of God and a symbol — a symbol
of the Logos, for it is Revelation of the Logos. The whole world is a Revelation
— a kind of book of the unwritten Revelation. Or, in another simile, the whole
world is the attire of the Logos. In the variety and beauty of sensual
phenomena, the Logos plays with man, as it were, to fascinate and attract him so
that he raises the curtain and begins to see the spiritual sense under the
external and visible images.
God the Logos is
God of Revelation, Deus Revelatus, and everything that is said about the
Godhead in his relation with the world is said first of all about God the Logos.
The Divine Logos is the beginning and the end goals for the world — αρχή καί
τέλος — its creative and preservative force, the limit of all created strivings
and "movements." And the world exists and stands precisely through this
communion with the Divine Logos, through the Divine energies,
through a kind of participation in the Divine perfections. At the same
time it is moving towards God, towards God the Logos. The whole world is in
motion, is striving. God is above movement. It is not he who is moving, but the
created and roused world which he created which moves towards him. Here the
thought is similar to that found in the Corpus
Areopagiticum.
The problem of
knowledge is to see and recognize in the world its first-created foundations, to
identify the world as a great system of God’s deeds, wills, and prototypes. The
mind must leave the perceptible plane, must liberate itself from the
conventionalities of external, empirical cognition, and rise to
contemplation, to "natural contemplation” — φυσική θεωρία — that is,
to contemplation of “nature” in its last Divine definitions and foundations. For
St. Maximus "contemplation" is precisely this search for the Divine Logos of
existence, the contemplation of the Logos in creation as Creator and Founder.
Again this is possible only through "ordeal." Only a transformed mind can see
everything in the Logos and begin to see the light of the Logos everywhere. The
Sun of Truth begins to shine in the purified mind, and for the latter everything
looks different.
It is not becoming
for man to insolently avoid these indirect paths of knowledge and willfully
force his way to the Unap — proachable and Uncontainable. Spiritual life has its
gradualness. "Contemplation" is the highest stage in spiritual
coming-into-existence, in spiritual birth and growth. It is the penultimate —
and unavoidable — stage on the very threshold of mysterious frenzy which
enraptures the soul in the transsubstantiated darkness of the Trinnitanan
reality. And conversely Revelation is a kind of step down from the "natural
mystery" of the Godhead, from the fullness of the Divine Trinity to the
heterogeneity and multitudi — nousness of creation. Following St. Gregory and
Pseudo-Dionysius, St. Maximus speaks of a charitable effusion or imparting of
Good — a Neoplatonic image (see Origen on the Logos as "One and
Many").
The path of
Revelation and the path of knowledge correspond to one another. It is a single
path, but it leads in two directions — apocalypsis and gnosis; descent and
ascent. And knowledge is man’s reply, man’s response. Cognition of nature as
God’s creation has its own special religious significance. In contemplation the
soul is pacified — but contemplation itself is possible through apatheia.
A new motive is creatively introduced into the harmony of the
cosmos.
The world is
creatural that is, it was created and came into being, it was created by the
will of God. The will of — God is God’s very relationship to the
world in general, the point of contact and meeting. For St. Maximus, will
always signifies a relationship to "something else." Properly speaking, God
wills only about the world. One must not speak of an intra-Trinitarian
will, for God’s will is always the indivisible will of the Holy
Trinity.
According to St.
Maximus the world’s createdness means first of all limitedness and finiteness —
limited, because definite. The world is not without beginning, but begins. St.
Maximus resol -utely objects to the conjecture about the world’s eternity, or
its "co-eternity" with God — έ£ άϊδίον. Here he hardly had in mind only Proclus
— see, for example, John Philoponus1 book On the Eternity of the World
Against Proclus. St. Maximus, one must think, had Origen in mind as well.
"Do not ask: How is it that, being eternally Good, God creates
now? How and why is it so recent! Do not look into
this."
This is a direct
challenge to Origen’s quandaries: how can one imagine Divine nature to be
"inactive and idle?" Is it possible to think that goodness at one time did not
do good, and that Omnipotence had nothing? And does God really "becom"
the Creator and begin to create? St. Maximus makes a strict distinction between
God’s will about the world and the actual existence of the world. This will, of
course, is from eternity — God’s eternal counsel. In no way, however,
does this signify the eternity of the world itself — of the "nature" of the
world. "The Creator drew out knowledge of everything which exists, which
knowledge had preexisted in him from eternity, and realized it when he
willed’’ The origin of the world is the realization of God’s eternal plan
for it. In other words, it is the creation of the created substratum itself. "We
say that he is not only the Creator of quality, but also of qualitized
nature. It is for this reason that creations do not coexist with God from
eternity."
St. Maximus
emphasizes the limitedness of creatures and, on the contrary, he recalls God’s
limitlessness. "For the unstudied wisdom of the limitless essence is
inaccessible to human understanding." The world is "something else," but it
holds together with its ideal connections. These connections are the "actions"
or the "energies" of the Logos. In them God touches the world, and the world
comes into contact with the Godhead. St. Maximus usually speaks of Divine
"logoi or words” — λόγοι. This is a very complex, polysemantic, and rich
concept which goes back to the early theology of the Apologists and is continued
by the Cappadocians, Evagrius Ponticus, and others — λόγοι σπερματικοί — in the
Greek East, and St. Augustine continues the idea of Tertullian in the Latin West
— rationes seminales. These are first of all Divine thoughts and desires,
the pre-determinations of God’s will — προορισμοί — the “eternal thoughts of the
eternal Mind" in which he creates or invents the world and cognizes the world.
Like some creative rays, the "logoi" radiate from the Divine center and
again gather in it. God the Logos is a kind of mysterious circle of forces and
thoughts, as in the thought of Clement of Alexandria. And secondly, they are
prototypes of things, "paradigms." In addition, they are dynamic
prototypes. The "logos" of something is not only its "truth" or "sense,"
and not only its "law" or "definition" (oros), but primarily its forming
principle. St. Maximus distinguishes the "logos of nature" or law, the
"logos of providence" and the "logos of judgment” — λόγος της
κρίσεως. Thus the fate of all things and everything is taken in, from their
origin to the resolution of the world process.
In ontology St.
Maximus is close to St. Gregory of Nyssa. For him the perceptible world is
immaterial in its qualitative foundations. It is a kind of mysterious
"compression" — or even "condensation" — of the spiritual world. Everything in
the world is spiritual in its depths. One can recognize the fabric of the Logos
everywhere. There are two planes in the world: the spiritual or that which is
comprehended by the mind — τα νοητά, and the perceptible or corporeal. There is
a strict and precise correspondence between them. The perceptible world is not a
passing phantom, the disintegration or disparagement of reality, but belongs to
the fullness and integrity of reality. It is an image, a “type” — τύπος —
or symbol of the spiritual world. In essence, the world is united and one, "for
the whole spiritual world is mysteriously and symbolically — "in symbolic
eidos” — reflected in the perceptible world — τυπόυμενος φαίνεται — for
those who know how to see. The perceptible world by its foundations — τοΐς
λόγοις — is entirely contained in the world which is comprehended by the mind —
ένυπάρχων. Our world consists of that world, its logoi. And that world consists
of ours, which has images — τοις τύποις?"
The connection or
link between the two worlds is unbreakable and non-blending. St. Maximus defines
it as an "identity through hypostases." "The world comprehended by the mind is
found in the perceptible world, as the spirit is in the body, while the
perceptible world is joined with the world comprehended by the mind like the
body is joined with the soul. Both worlds comprise a single world, as a single
man is comprised of a soul and a body."
By itself the
"material essence" — that is, matter — is the beginning of "non-existence" — μη
ον. However, it is entirely permeated with “spiritual logoi" and
phenomena which are well reinforced in the comprehension of the mind, in
"noumena." To that extent the whole material world is in communion with
the Logos, and only through this communion does it quit non-existence. The
reality comprehended by the mind exists outside of time. This does not, however,
mean “in eternity” but rather “in the ages” — εν αίώνι. The reality comprehended
by the mind is not without beginning, but “originates existence in the ages” —
εν αΐώνι. It begins to be, originates, starts, comes into existence from
non-existence, but it is not put an end to through destruction. God the Creator
grants it indestructibility. In this lies the "non-finiteness" and
"timelessness" of mind-comprehended existence — that is, the fact that it cannot
be captured in time. However, εν αιώνι in no way ever means aei. St. Maximus
defines it thus: "Eon is time without movement, and time is eon measured by
movement." For all that, their mutual correspondence and commensurability —
"symmetricalness," writes St. Maximus — is not removed. The genuine eternity of
the Godhead is non-commensurate with the eons. Here, any "how" or "when" is
unquestionably inapplicable.
At the top of the
created ladder stands the angelic world — the world of pure spirits. St. Maximus
speaks of the angelic world in the same way as does the Corpus
Areopagiticum, and he does not say very much. It is not the angelic world
which is the focus of creation, precisely because the angels are incorporeal —
only the fallen spirits are drawn into matter by virtue of their impious lust
and passion.
Only man, who
actually closes both worlds in himself — the spiritual, "incorporeal" world and
the material world — can be the focus of creation. This thought is developed
from St. Gregory of Nyssa. In his doctrine about man St Maximus expresses the
symbolic motif with special force. By virtue of his bi-unity man is primarily a
symbolic being. The principle of mutual symbolic reflection of some parts of the
world into others is very characteristic of St. Maximus’ whole system.
Essentially, it is nothing more than the principle of harmony and concord we see
in Pseudo-Dionysius. In St. Maximus1 thought, however, it is greater than
dynamism. Concord is given and assigned. The world is harmonious, but it must be
even more harmonious and self-disciplined. This is the task of man, who has been
placed at the center point of creation. This is the content of the created
process. Potentially the whole world is reflected and, as it were, inscribed in
created reason — here is based the possibility for knowledge, for cognition in
general.
By itself, however,
human reason can cognize nothing. The possibility of cognition is realized only
in an efficacious relationship with the external world. St. Maximus always lays
stress on man’s connection with his surroundings because he sees in man a
microcosm, the middle and focus of created existence in
general.
Man’s goal lies in
embracing the whole world, in union — ένωσις, and in uniting it in himself, in
re-uniting it with the Logos which has contained from eternity the life-giving
foundations of all kinds of existence. Man must unite everything in himself and
through himself unite with God. He has been called to this from his creation,
and in this summons is the mystery of God-Manhood.
Man is created as a
microcosm — "a small world in a great one." The mystery of creation is
revealed in man. At the same time it is man who is a living image of the Logos
in creation. Man is an image of God and in him are mysteriously concentrated all
the Divine forces and energies which are revealed in the world. He himself must
become a "mental world." By his very arrangement man is called to deification
and to a process whereby the deification of all creation is accomplished
precisely in him. For the sake of this, the created world was "thought up" and
created.
First of all, man
is summoned to unite. He must take away and extinguish in himself all
"divisions of created nature" — "divisions" — διαιρέσεις, not "differences,” the
foundation of which are in the Logos. Here the influence is from Philo’s
doctrine of λόγος-το μευς. In himself man must overcome the division of sexes,
for in his destiny he is one — "united man." In this respect St. Maximus is
reminiscent entirely of St. Gregory of Nyssa and, together with St. Gregory, he
rejects the Origenist supposition about the pre-existence of souls. Man was
never "incorporeal” — άσαρκος or ασώματος, although by its nature the soul does
not depend on the body — and is therefore imperishable — and the soul possesses
a capability for cognition of God which is equal to that of the
angels.
But man is not a
soul inserted in a body — he is not composed of soul and body. The soul arises
and is born along with the body. From the beginning man was created as he is now
— perhaps "in foreknowledge" of the fall, as in the thought of St. Gregory of
Nyssa and in Nemesius of Emesa’s On Human Nature [περι φύσεως άνθρώπου].
Nemesius’ book, incidentally, was often quoted as St. Gregory of Nyssa’s πepί
κατασκευήw ανθρώπου. Nemesius’ work was heavily used by St. John of Damascus and
by Latin medieval theologians, especially by Albertus Magnus and Thomas
Aquinas.
Without sin,
however, the lower would be subordinated to the higher. Sin destroyed this
possible and originally intended symphony and harmony. Disharmony began — and in
it is all the poignancy of the fall — for it is a direct antithesis to man’s
calling. Man had to unite the whole world in himself, and direct the whole
totality of his powers to God. Through a realization of a genuine hierarchy and
coordination of the cosmic forces, man should have turned the whole world into
an integral and united organism. Then inundating streams of grace would have
poured forth over the world, and God would have appeared entirely in everything,
giving creation immutable and eternal bliss.
It is this goal
which was not fulfilled. The fall broke the chain of existence — into the world
came death, which disunites and decays. This did not alter the plan and
structure of the world. The tasks remained the same. Unrealized through the
creation of the first man, it is settled by Divine force, through the "renewal
of nature," in the New Adam, in the Incarnation of the
Logos.
It is
characteristic of St. Maximus that he judges the Old Adam by the New Adam. He
judges the "beginning" by the "end" — "teleologically," as he himself observes.
He judges and divines man’s calling by the completeness of the God-Man. For
human nature was predestined to it from the beginning, according to God’s
original plan and original will. In this sense, man is mainly a Revelation of
God. This is the created likeness of the Logos. This points out the Incarnation
of the Logos beforehand as the fulfillment of God’s eternal counsel on the
world. And in the image of Christ are combined the fullness of the Godhead and
the fullness of creation. According to St. Maximus the Incarnation of the Logos
enters into God’s original will in the creation of the world. God’s wisdom
distinguishes creatures, while Divine Love ioins them together, and to God. The
Logos becomes flesh, becomes man, and creation ascends to a likeness of
God.
"Incarnation" and
"deification" — σάρκωσiw και θέωσιw — are two linked movements. In a certain
sense the Logos is always becoming incarnate, and in everything, for everything
in the world is a reflection of the Logos, especially in man, who was placed on
the edge of the world as the receiver of God’s grace. The Incarnation of the
Logos crowns God’s descent into the world, and creates the possibility for the
opposite movement. God becomes a man, becomes incarnate, through his love for
man. And man becomes God through grace, is deified through his love for
God.
In love originates
the "beautiful inter-revolution" — καλή άντιστροφή. Christ the God-Man is the
beginning and the end of all oikonomia — the center and the focus of all
ages and all kinds of existence. Divine oikonomia is independent of human
freedom, of its choices and concord, for it is God’s initial creative plan. And
it would have been realized even apart from the fall. "The Logos became flesh"
not merely for redemption. In actual history God’s supervision is realized in a
fallen and dissolute world, and the God-Man proves to be the Redeemer, the
Sacrificial Lamb.
The history which
has come about is the history of a fallen world which has been restored from the
fall, which has been healed of evil and sin. But the mystery of the God-Man, the
mystery of Divine Love is wider and deeper than redemptive mercy. The whole
Revelation is the Incarnation of God, and the Incarnation of the Logos. In this
sense the whole Revelation is anthropomorphic. This relates directly to the
Scriptures. They are all written about him — about Christ the God-Man, not only
about the Logos. Therefore, a direct and literal understanding of the Scriptures
is insufficient and even wrong. For history itself is only a symbol which
appears and covers spiritual reality. The same also applies to the liturgy,
where every action is a mystery, which symbolically signifies and realizes
definite events in the invisible "mind-comprehended" plan. Therefore,
understanding the Scriptures literally and directly is like murdering Christ,
who resides under the letter of the Scriptures. And it is belated Judaism —
indeed, the "letter" of the Law is abolished with the arrival of truth and
grace. Literalism in exegesis is Judaistic insensitivity to the Incarnation.
For, on the whole, the Scriptures are a kind of Incarnation of the Logos. This
is the "sense, the force of all meaning and images of the Scriptures, and the
cognition of visible and invisible creatures." The wise fathers who were
anointed by the Spirit learn directly from the Logos. From the Logos also come
the spiritual illuminations of the ancient patriarchs and all the saints. Thus
St. Maximus partly revives the ancient idea of the "seeds of the
Logos."
St. Maximus’ whole
doctrine about the knowledge of God is essentially Christocentric. First, the
whole problem of knowledge is to recognize the realized God-Man as the basic
theme of created existence and life. Second, knowledge itself is possible only
because God the Logos descends in certain cognitive images, as a forewarning of
his pre-willed Incarnation. Man is created in God’s image, and therefore the
truth is in man’s image.
The
God-Man.
The Incarnation of
the Logos is the basis and goal of Revelation — its basic theme and meaning.
From the beginning God the Logos appoints Incarnation for himself so that the
consecration and deification of all creation, of all the world, is accomplished
in the union of the God-Man.
For man is a
microcosm. He stands on the border of worlds and unites in himself all planes of
existence. He is called to unite and gather everything in himself, as St.
Gregory of Nyssa taught. In the prospects of this universal consecration of
existence, the speculative correctness of strict, precise dyophysitism is
particu -larly clearly evident and comprehensible. This is not only a
soteriological axiom or postulate. St. Maximus does not only show the fullness,
the "perfection" of Christ’s human nature from the necessity of redemption —
"what is not assumed is not healed." He does indeed repeat these words of St.
Gregory of Nazianzus. For the world was created only in order that in the
fulfillment of its fate God should be in everything and that everything should
commune with him through the Logos Incarnate. Hence, it is understandable that
in the Incarnation the whole totality of created nature — πάντα τα ημών —
must be assumed by the Logos and assimilated "without any
omission."
In the fallen world
the Incarnation turns out to be redemption, salvation. But from time immemorial,
it was willed not as a means of salvation, but as the fulfillment of created
existence in general, as its justification and foundation. It is for this reason
that the redemption itself is by no means exhausted by some negative factors
alone — liberation from sin, condemnation, decay and death. The main thing is
the very fact of inseparable union of natures — the entrance of Life into
created existence. For us, however, it is easier to understand the Incarnation
as the path to salvation. It is this aspect which is the most important thing of
all, for we must, first of all, be redeemed in Christ and through
Christ.
The mystery of
God-Manhood has been active in the world from the beginning. St. Maximus
distinguishes two moments and periods: the mystery of the Divine Incarnation and
the "grace of human deification." The Old Testament is the still uncompleted
history of the Church. The historic event of the Gospel is the focus and the
division of two epochs, the summit and mystical focus of oikonomia. This is the
fulfillment, the crowning of the revelations of the Logos in the world the Logos
created, in the Law and Scripture the Logos gave to man.
Christ is born of a
Virgin. Therefore, first of all, he is consubstantial with us — "the same in
nature." But he is born not of seed, but by an immaculate Virgin Birth, a birth
which was "controlled not by the law of sin but by the law of Divine truth."
Therefore he is free of sin — the hereditary sin which is transmitted first of
all in the "illegality" of carnal conception, echoing especially the thought of
St. Gregory of Nyssa. He receives the primordial, still chaste, human nature, as
it was created by God from time immemorial, as Adam had it before the fall. And
with this he "renews" nature, displays it beside the sin "of which decrepitude
consists." However, for the sake of our salvation the Lord primordially
subordinates himself to the order of sufferings and decay. He voluntarily deigns
to accept mortality and death itself, from which he could be entirely free,
being beyond sin. The Lord subordinates himself to the consequences of sin,
while staying not privy to sin itself. In this is his healing
penance.
He becomes a man
"not according to a law of nature," but according to the will of
oikonomia. "Innocent and sinless, he paid the whole debt for mankind, as if
he himself were guilty, and thereby returned them anew to the original grace of
the kingdom. He gave himself for us at the cost of redemption and deliverance,
and for our pernicious passions he gave with his life-giving suffering — the
curative healing and salvation of the whole world."
Christ enters the
"suffering" or "passionate" order of things, lives in it, but inwardly remains
independent of it and free. He is "clothed" in our nature’s capacity for
suffering — this phrase is more accurate than "passion" — through which we are
attracted to sin and fall under the power of the evil one. But he remains
passionless — that is, immobile or non-suffering, "non-passive," free and active
as regards "reproachful" or "anti-natural" or "para-Physical" incentives. This
is "imperishability of the will," "volition." Through abstinence,
long-suffering, and love, Christ warded off and overcame all temptations, and
displayed in his life every virtue and wisdom.
This
imperishability of the will is reinforced later by the imperishability of
nature — that is, the resurrection. The Lord descends even to the gates of hell,
to the very region of death, and deposes or weakens it. Life proves to be
stronger than death Death is conquered in resurrection, as in the abolition of
any suffering, weakness and decay — that is, in a land of "transformation" of
nature into immortality and imperishability. The series of stages is: existence;
true existence or virtue; and eternal existence which is in God, which is
"deification." At the same time there is a series of redeeming actions: union
with God in the Incarnation, imperishability of will in the righteousness of
life, and imperishability of nature in the resurrection.
Throughout, St.
Maximus emphasizes the integrating activity of the God-Man. Christ embraced and
united everything in himself. He removed the cleavages of existence. In his
impassive birth he combined the male and female genders. Through his holy life
he combined the universe and paradise. Through his ascension, he combined earth
and heaven, the created and uncreated. And he traces and reduces everything to
the proto-beginning or proto-cause. Not only because he is the Logos, and
creatively embraces everything and contains it within himself but also by his
human will, his human volition, which brings about God’s will, which organically
coincides with it and receives it as its own inner and intimate measure or
model.
After all, the fall
was a volitional act, and therefore an injury to the human will, a disconnecting
of human will and God’s will, and a disintegration of human will itself, among
passions and subordinating external impressions or influences. Healing must
penetrate to the original wound and the original ulcer of sinfulness. Healing
must be the doctoring and restoration of the human will in its fullness,
self-discipline, integrity, and accord with God’s will — here there is the usual
antithesis: Adam’s disobedience and Christ’s obedience and submissiveness. St.
Maximus extends this with his ontological interpretation.
St. Maximus speaks
the language of Leontius. He opposes nature (and essence), as something general
and merely conceivable — able to be contemplated with the mind — to hypostasis,
as some -thing concrete and real — πραγματικώς υφιστάμενον. For him hypostasity
is not exhausted in features or “peculiarities” but is first of all independent
existence — καθ’ έαυτό. “Non-un-hypostasity” or reality does not unfailingly
signify hypostasity; that is, independence, but can also indicate
"inner-hypostasity" — that is, existence in another, and with another . Only the
concrete or individual is real. As for Leontius, hypostasis is signified not so
much by individualizing features as by an image of existence and life.
Hypostasity is not a special and superfluous feature, but a real originality.
Therefore, "non-self-hypostasity" by no means limits or decreases the fullness
or "perfection" of nature. The fullness of nature is determined and described by
general features, "essential" or "natural" traits — they are "tokens of
perfection," of completeness or fullness.
The Incarnation of
the Logos is the reception and inclusion of human nature into the unalterable
hypostasis of the Logos. Christ is united, a "united hypostasis," and it is this
which is the hypostasis of the Logos. It is for just this reason that it is
said: the Logos became flesh, for the Logos is the subject. As St.
Maximus explains, "became flesh" precisely signifies acceptance into hypostasis,
and "origin" or genesis through such acceptance.
In a certain sense,
through the Incarnation the hypostasis of the Logos changes from simple to
complex — "compound;" συνθετος. However, this complexity merely signifies that
the single hypostasis is at once and inseparably the hypostasis; that is, the
personal center, for both of the two natures. The complexity is in the union of
natures which remain without any change in their natural characteristics. The
Incarnation is "God’s ineffable humility," his kenosis, but it is not the
"impoverishing of the Godhead." And the human in the hypostasis of the Logos
does not cease being "consubstantial with," "of the same essence with"
us.
St. Maximus defines
"hypostatic union" precisely as the union or reduction of "different essences or
natures" in a unity of person — hypostasis. The natures remain different
and dissimilar. Their “differentness” does not cease with union, and is also
preserved in that indissoluble and unflagging inter-communion, inter-penetration
— περιχώρησις eις άλλήλας, which is established by the union. "In saying that
Christ is of two natures, we mean that he consists of Divinity and humanity as a
whole consists of parts; and in saying that after the union he is in two
natures, we believe that he abides in the Godhead and in Manhood, as a whole
consists of parts. And Christ’s "parts" are his Divinity and Humanity, of which
and in which he abides." What is more, he is not only "of two" or "in two" but
simply "two natures." Since there is no mixing, it is necessary to count.
Christ’s human nature is consubstantial with ours, but at the same time it is
free of original sm — this is also connected with the immaculate conception of
Christ and the virgin birth. In other words, primordial human nature is
displayed and realized anew in Christ in all its chastity and
purity.
And by virtue of
this hypostatic nature all that is human in Christ was permeated with Divinity,
deified, transformed — here the image of the red hot iron is used. Here the
human is given a new and special form of existence, and this is connected with
the very purpose of the coming of the Logos — after all, he "became flesh" in
order to renew decayed nature, for the sake of a new form of existence. The
deification of the human is not its absorption or dissolution. On the contrary,
it is in this likeness to God, or likening to God, that the human genuinely
becomes itself. For man is created in the image of God, and is summoned to the
likeness of God. In Christ is realized the highest and utmost measure of this
likening, which fortifies the human in its genuine natural originality.
Deification signifies the indissoluble connection, perfect accord and unity.
First of all, there is inseparability — always "in communion with one
another." By virtue of hypostatic union Christ,while being God, is "incarnate
but unaltered," and always acts in everything "not only as God or according to
his Divinity but at the same time as a man, according to his humanity." In other
words, all of Divine Life draws humanity into itself and manifests itfcelf or
flows out only through it. This is a "new and ineffable form for revealing
Christ’s natural actions" — in inseparable union, however, without any change or
decrease in what is characteristic for each nature,
"immutably."
The possibility for
such a union is founded in the natural "non-non-divinity" of the human spirit
which is the intermediary link in the union of the Logos with animated flesh, an
idea taken from the thought of St. Gregory of Nazianzus. The form of Christ’s
activity in humanity was different from ours, higher than it, and often even
higher than nature, for he acted entirely freely and voluntarily, without
hesitation or bifurcation, and in immutable harmony, and even union of all
desires with the will of the Logos. And again, this was more the fulfillment of
human measure than its abolition. God’s will, which motivates and forms human
volition, is accomplished in everything. However, this did not eliminate human
volition itself. It befits man to do God’s will, accepting it as his own, for
God’s will reveals and builds the tastes and paths which most correspond to the
goals and meaning of human life.
St. Maximus sees
first of all the unity of life in the unity of person. Because this unity is
realized in the two natures so fully, human nature is generally a likeness of
Divine nature. Recalling man’s likeness to God makes it much easier for St.
Maximus to disclose and defend Orthodox Dyophysitism. This was also an important
argument against Monophysitism in general, with its anthropological
self-depreciation or minimalism. In St. Maximus there was no longer that
vagueness which remained in Leontius in connection with the analogy of soul and
body. St. Maximus flatly rejects the possibility of mixing or of the conjunction
of hypcstases for a certain time, then their new separation or restoration.
Therefore he categorically denies even the logical possibility of the
pre-existence of Christ’s humanity before the Incarnation. In general, he uses
the comparison with the human composition with very great restraint. He always
emphasizes that we are speaking of the Incarnation of the Logos, and not the
deification of man. By these same motives he brusquely rejects the doctrine of
the pre-existence of souls as being completely incompatible with the true
hypostatic unity of each person.
In the doctrine of
the two wills and two energies in Christ Orthodox Dyophysitism becomes totally
complete and definite. Only an open and direct confession of natural human
energy and will in Christ removes any ambiguity in the doctrine of the God-Man.
The metaphysical premises of St. Maximus’ discussion of two energies can be
expressed in the following way. First, will and energy are essential traits of
spiritual nature — they are natural traits. Therefore, the two natures
unavoidably entails a two-ness of natural energies, and any wavering in
acknowledging their two-ness signifies indistinctness in the confession of the
two natures. Secondly, one must clearly and precisely distinguish natural
will as the basic trait or characteristic of spiritual existence — θέλημα
φυσικόν — and as selective volition, volitional choice and variation
between possibilities which differ in significance and quality — θέλημα
γνωμικον.
St. Maximus dwells
on these preliminary definitions in great detail, for it is here that the basic
disagreement with the Monophysites was revealed. The Monophysites claimed a
union of volition and energy in Christ, a union of personal or hypostatic
will, for Christ is one, his will is one. Consequently, one volition and one
will. Does not unity of person include unity of will? And does not the
assumption of two volitions weaken the union of the person of the God-Man? The
Monophysites’ misunderstanding revealed an authentic theological question: what
can the two wills and two energies mean given the unity of the willing subject?
To start with, there are essentially two questions here. The concept of
hypostatic will" can also be ambiguous: it means either the absorption or
disintegration of human will in the Divine dynamic unity of volition; or the
assumption of some "third" will, which corresponds to a "complex hypostasis" of
the God-Man, as a special principle apart from and equal to the natures being
unified.
St. Maximus first
of all dismisses this last supposition: the whole is not some third thing — it
does not have a special existence apart from its components; the wholeness
signifies only the new and special form of existence of these components,
but at the same time no new source of will and energy arises or is
revealed.
The unity of
hypostasis in Christ determines the form of the self-disclosure of the natures,
but does not create any special "third" independent reality. The hypostasis of
the God-Man "has only that which is characteristic of each of his natures. What
is more, the hypostasis of Christ is, after all, the hypostasis of the Logos,
which is eternal and unalterable, and which became the hypostasis for the
humanity it received. Consequently, unity of "hypostatic volition" can
practically mean only the unity of the will of God, which absorbs human will.
This would clearly damage the fullness or "perfection" of the human composition
in Christ. Least of all can one speak of a temporary and "relative assimilation"
of human will by the Logos in the order of oikonomic adaption. This means
introducing Docetism into the mystery of the Incarnation.
Will is a trait or
characteristic of reasoning nature. St. Maximus defines it as "the force of
striving for what conforms to nature, a force which embraces all traits or
characteristics which essentially belong to the nature." One must add: the force
of a reasoning soul, a reasoning striving, which is "verbal" or "logical," and a
free and "masterful striving" — κατ’ έξουσιαν. Will, as the capacity to desire
and freely decide, is something innate. A "reasoning" nature cannot be anything
but volitional, for reason is essentially "despotic," a "dominating" principle;
that is, a principle of self-determination, the capability of being defined by
one’s self and through one’s self. Here is the boundary which divides
"reasoning" beings from "non-reasoning" or "non-verbal" ones, who are blindly
allured by nature’s might. They objected to St. Maximus by asking: but is there
really no nuance of necessity or inevitability in the very concept of "nature,"
which cannot be eliminated? So the concept of "natural will" includes an
internal contradiction. St. Athanasius was reproached for the same thing in his
day; and Theodoret reproached St. Cyril for this as well.
St. Maximus
resolutely deflects this reproach. Why is nature a necessity? Does one really
have to say that God is forced to be, that he is good by necessity? In created
beings "nature" determines the purposes and tasks of freedom, but does not limit
it. Here we arrive at a basic distinction: will and choice —
γνώμη. One could say volition and desire, or willfulness, almost arbitrariness.
Freedom and will are not arbitrariness at all. Freedom of choice not merely does
not belong to the perfection of freedom. On the contrary, it is diminishing and
a distortion of freedom. Genuine freedom is an undivided, unshakable, integral
striving and attraction of the soul to Goodness. It is an integral impulse of
reverence and love. "Choice" is by no means an obligatory condition of freedom.
God wills and acts in perfect freedom, but he does not waver and does not
choose. Choice — προαιρεσις — which is properly "preference," as St. Maximus
himself observes, presupposes bifurcation and vagueness — the incompleteness and
unsteadiness of the will. Only a sinful and feeble will wavers and
chooses.
According to the
idea of St. Maximus the fall of the will consists precisely in losing integrity
and spontaneity, in the fact that the will changes from intuitive to discursive,
and in the fact that volition develops into a very complex process of search,
trial, and choice. In this process that which is personal and special is
attendant. Thus do personal desires take shape. Here incommensurate attractions
clash and struggle. But the measure of perfection and purity of will is its
simplicity — that is, precisely its integrity and uniformity. This is only
possible through: "Let Thy will be done!" This is the highest measure of
freedom, the highest reality of freedom, which accepts the first-created will of
God and therefore expresses its own genuine depths. St. Maximus always speaks of
the reality and efficacy of the human will in Christ with special stress;
otherwise all oikonomia would turn into a phantom. Christ, as the "new man," was
a complete or "perfect" man, and accepted all that was human in order to heal
it. But it was the will, the desire, which was the source of sin in the Old
Adam, and therefore it was the will which demanded doctoring and healing most of
all. Salvation would not have been accomplished if the will had not been
accepted and healed.
However, all of
human nature in Christ was sinless and viceless, for this is the nature of the
Primordial one. And his will was the primordial will, which was still untouched
by the breath of sin. In this is all the originality of Christ’s human will — it
differs from ours only "as regards the inclination to sin." There are no
waverings or contradictions. Inwardly, it is unified and inwardly it conforms to
the will of the Godhead. There is no clash or struggle between the two natural
wills — and there must not be! For human nature is God’s creation, God’s will
realized. Therefore, in it there is nothing — and cannot be anything — contrary
to or opposing God’s will. God’s will is not something external for human will,
but its source and goal, its beginning and its telos. Of course, this
coincidence or accord of wills is not their mixing.
In a certain sense
human actions and will in Christ were higher than nature or above it. "For
through hypostatic union it was entirely deified, for which reason it was also
completely not privy to sin." Through hypostatic union with the Logos everything
human in Christ was strengthened and transformed. This transformation is
proclaimed first of all in perfect freedom. Human nature in Christ is taken out
from under the power of natural necessity, under which it found itself only by
virtue of sin. If it remains within the bounds of the natural order, that is not
so under compulsion but voluntarily and competently. The Savior voluntarily and
freely takes upon himself all the weaknesses and sufferings of man in order to
free him from them — like fire melts wax, or the sun drives away the
fog.
St. Maximus
distinguishes a dual assumption — the same distinction appears later in St. John
of Damascus. First, there is natural or essential assumption. The
Logos accepts the entire fullness of human nature in its primordial innocence
and guiltlessness, but in that feeble condition into which it fell through sin,
with all the weaknesses and flaws which are the consequences of sin or even
retribution for sin but are themselves not anything sinful — the so-called
"unreproachable passions" such as hunger and thirst, fear, fatigue. At the same
time, though, the acceptance of weaknesses and disparagement are acts of free
subordination, for in incorrupt nature there is no need to be feeble or under
someone’s power. It is especially necessary to observe that St. Maximus directly
ascribes omniscience to Christ through humanity as well. Indeed, as he
understands it, "ignorance" was one of the most shameful flaws of human nature
in sin. Secondly, there is relative or oikonomic assumption —
acceptance in love and compassion. Thus the Savior accepted sin and man’s guilt,
his sinful and guilty feebleness. In the portrayal by St. Maximus Christ’s human
nature proves to be particularly active, efficacious, and free. This concerns
the redemptive sufferings more than anything else. This was free passion,
the free acceptance and fulfillment of the will of God. In the Savior’s
chaste life the restoration of the image of God in man was accomplished —
through human will. And by his free acceptance of cleansing — not
punitive — suffering, Christ destroyed the power of the Old Adam’s free
desire and sin. This was not retribution or punishment for sin, but the movement
of saving Love.
St. Maximus
explains Christ’s redeeming work as the restoration, the healing, the gathering
of all creation in ontological, not moral, terms. But it is Love which is the
moving force of salvation. The Love displayed on the Cross most of all. Christ’s
work will be fulfilled in the Second Coming. The Gospels lead to this, to the
"spiritual" appearance of the Logos, the God-Man, just as the Old Testament led
to the Logos Incarnate. Here St. Maximus follows Origen’s
motif.
Man’s
Path.
Man has been
created in freedom. He had to come into being in freedom, and he fell in
freedom. The fall is an act of will; and sin is primarily in the will — it is a
condition, or form, or arrangement of the will. Man is a free being. This means
that he is a volitional being. Sin is a false choice and false contrariness and
arbitrariness of the will. Evil is the feebleness and insufficiency of the will.
Evil is of an "elliptical" nature. Here St. Maximus comes very close to St.
Gregory of Nyssa and the thought expressed in the Corpus Areopagiticum as
well. Evil does not exist by itself. Evil is really the free perversion of
reasoning will, which turns aside from God, which circumvents God, and thus
turns to non-existence. Evil is "non-existing" primarily as this striving or
this will to non-existence.
The fall manifests
itself primarily in the fact that man falls into the possession of passion.
Passion is a sickness of the will. It is the loss or limitation of freedom. The
hierarchy of the soul’s natural forces is perverted. Reason loses the capability
and power to control the soul’s lower forces — man passively — that is,
"passionately" — subordinates himself to the elemental forces of his nature, and
is enticed by them — he spins in the disorderly movement of these forces. This
is connected with spiritual blindness. The feebleness, the weakness of
the will is connected with the ignorance of reason — άγνοια, as the
opposite of γνώσις. Man forgets and loses the ability to contemplate and
recognize God and the Divine. His consciousness is overcrowded with sensual
images.
Sin and evil are
movements downward, away from God. Man not only does not transform and animate
the world or nature, where he was placed as priest and prophet, not only does
not raise nature above its level; but rather descends himself, and sinks below
his measure. Called to deification, he becomes like the dumb beasts. Called to
existence, he chooses non-existence. Created from a soul and body, man loses his
integrity in the fall, and splits in two. His mind grows coarse, and becomes
overcrowded with earthly and earthy and sensual images. And his very body
becomes coarse.
In these general
conclusions about the nature and character of evil St. Maximus is merely
repeating generally accepted opinions. The only thing of his that is original
is his insistent stressing of volitional factors. This allows him to develop
the ascetic doctrine of the "ordeal" as the transformation of the will with
greater consistency. In general, in his anthropology St. Maximus is closest to
St. Gregory of Nyssa. For sin — that is, the "sin of volition" — man was "vested
in leathern garments." This is the feebleness of nature — its passivity,
coarseness, and mortality. Man is drawn into the very maelstrom of natural
decay. His passivity is a certain immanent exposure of passion, an unmasking of
its inner contradictions. The decay of man is proclaimed most clearly in his
sinful birth, a birth from a seed, from male lust and voluptuousness like the
way of the dumb beasts. Here St. Maximus follows St. Gregory of Nyssa. It is
through this sinful birth that the decay and feebleness of nature spreads and,
as it were, accumulates in the world. For St. Maximus “birth” — γέννησις as
opposed to γένεσις — is a synonym of original sin and sinfiilness. Objectively,
sin is the quality of having no exit from passion — a fatal circle: from
passionate birth in lawlessness and sin and through decay to decayed death. This
first of all must be healed through a new animation, through Christ’s entering
the region of death.
Man’s freedom did
not, however, fade away in the fall and in sin — it merely grew weak. Rather,
inertia of nature increased very much after the fall — it was shot through and
through with the sprouts of "unnatural" or "para-physical" passions and grew
heavy. But the capacity for free movement, for circulation and return, did not
dry up and was not taken away. Here is the pledge of resurrection and liberation
from under the power of decay and sin. Christ delivers and frees, but everyone
must accept and experience this deliverance within himself, creatively and
freely. It is for this reason that this is liberation, a way out of slavery and
the oppression of the passions to freedom — a shift form passivity to activity —
that is, from passivity (being included in the rotation of non-verbal nature) to
mobility, to creativity and the "ordeal."
St. Maximus always
makes a clear distinction between these two factors: nature and
volition or will. Christ heals nature once and for all, without
the actual participation of individual persons, and even independently of their
possible participation — even sinners will be resurrected. But everyone must be
liberated in a personal "ordeal." Everyone is called to this liberation — with
Christ and in Christ.
Christian life
begins with a new birth, in the baptismal font. This is the gift of God. It is
participation in a pure and chaste birth of Christ from the Virgin. However, one
must approach baptism with faith, and only through faith does one receive the
gifts of the Spirit which are offered. In baptism forces or energies — δύναμις —
for a new life or the possibility of a new life are offered. Realization is the
task of free "ordeal." Man is given the "grace of innocence" — της άναμαρτησίας.
He can simply no longer err, but he must also actively not sin. He must become
perfect. He must fulfill the commandments and activate good principles in
himself.
Grace through the
sacraments frees man, tears him away from the First Adam, and unites him with
the Second Adam. It raises him above nature’s measures — for deification has
already begun. This is, however, only the fulfillment of man’s most natural
calling, for he was created to outgrow himself, to become higher than himself.
It is precisely for this reason that the activity of grace cannot be only
external, and is not forced. Grace presupposes exaction and susceptibility. It
awakens freedom, and arouses and animates volition. It is "volition" which is
the repository of grace. St. Maximus considers the synergism between "volition"
and "grace" to be self-evident. The gifts which are given in the sacra -ments
must be kept and nurtured. Only through volition can they manifest themselves
and change into the activity of the New Man.
The sacraments and
the "ordeal" — these are two indissoluble and indivisible factors of Christian
life. Again, the way of Divine descent and human ascent, the mysterious meeting
of God and man, is in Christ. This relates both to the personal life of every
Christian. In every soul Christ has to be born and "become incarnate" anew — as
St. Paul writes in Galatians 2:20: "but Christ… lives in me." And it
relates to the Church as the Body of Christ. In the Church the Incarnation
continues and is fulfilled. But God, when he humbles himself and descends, must
be recognized and acknowledge. In this is the theme of "ordeal" and history —
movement towards a meeting, abnegation for the sake of
deification.
The "ordeal" is,
first of all, a struggle with passions, for the goal of the "ordeal" is
precisely apatheia. Passion is a false arrangement of will directed to
the lower, to the sensual, instead of to the spiritual, the higher. In this
sense it is a perversion of the natural order, a distortion of perspective. Evil
is the preference for the sensual. And precisely in the quality of being falsely
preferred the sensual or visible becomes sinful, dangerous, venomous, evil. The
"visible" must signify and manifest the "invisible" — that is, the spiritual. It
is in such a symbolic transparency that the whole sense and justification of its
existence lies. Consequently, the "visible" becomes senseless when it becomes
non-transparent, when it covers and conceals the spiritual, when it perceives
itself as something final and self-sufficient. Not the visible as such, but an
excessive and fallacious evaluation of the visible is what is an evil and a
sin.
Passion is such an
over-evaluation, or preference, a certain riveting to or affection for
the sensual world. "Passion is the unnatural movement of the soul, either
through illogical and nonsensical love or foolhardy hatred for something
sensual, or for the sake of something sensual. Or again: evil is a sinning
judgment about cognized things which is accompanied by their unseemly use." St.
Maximus repeats the customary ascetic outline of the development of passion:
around the sensual image which is introduced into soul. Fallacious points of
crystallization arise in man’s spiritual life, as it were. For this reason, the
whole spiritual structure gets out of order. One can distinguish three types of
passion: pride (carnal), violence (or hatred), and
ignorance (spiritual blindness). But the world of passions is very motley
and heterogeneous. There are two poles in it: pleasure and glory. At the same
time St. Maximus always stresses that man constantly finds himself, if not under
the sway of, then under the secret influence of demonic actions. Diverse demons
swirl or hover around every soul, trying to entice it, interest it with the
sensual, and lull the mind and spiritual susceptibility. This demonic influence
is a very mighty factor. But all die same, the outcome of the struggle always
depends on the will and on the ultimate choice.
Evil itself, and
passion, are of a dynamic nature. It is a false assessment of things, and
therefore false and harmful behavior is false and harmful because it leads us
away from our genuine goals into the emptiness and impasses of non-existence. It
is aimless, and therefore realizes nothing. On the contrary, it loses us and
breaks us down. In other words, it is discord, disorder, disintegration. One
could say it is illegality, lawlessness — ανομία. Law in general forms a
counterbalance to illegality and lawlessness. Partly this is the "natural law"
which is inscribed in man’s very nature as a demand to live "in conformity with
nature." Through contemplation of the world one can understand that this
"natural law" is God’s will and measure, which has been established for that
which exists.
Law is order,
measure, harmony, coherence, and structure. However, it is very difficult for
man in his fallen feebleness to be guarded by this "natural law" alone. He was
given a written law, the law of the commandments. In content this is the same
law of nature, but it is expressed and exposed differently. It is simpler, more
comprehensible, and more accessible. For precisely this reason, however, it is
insufficient. It is only a prototype — a prototype of the Gospel and the
spiritual law, which is both deeper and higher than nature and leads man
directly to God. Rather, these are three different expressions of a single law,
a single assignment and calling of human life. The very motif of the law
as a measure, more internal than external, is important.
One of the tasks of
the "ordeal" is the organization of the soul. Victory over the passions is
primarily organization. This is the formal aspect. In essence, it is
purification, catharsis, and liberation from the sensual fetters and weaknesses.
However, catharsis, too, is organization — the levelling and restoration
of the true hierarchy of values. Ascetic "doing" — πραξις — or "practical
philosophy" is the overcoming or eradication of passion in the human soul. In
it, the main thing is not definite external actions, but inner struggle. First
of all desire and lust must be controlled — set into the strict structure of the
soul, so to speak. These lower, but natural, forces of the soul must be directed
towards goals that are genuine and Divine through the power of reasoning
discretion. The mind must become really "dominating" in man, and the focus of
all the soul’s powers. And the mind itself must obtain its focus and support in
God. This is the factor of abstinence. Here one frequently must resort to
drastic surgical methods of healing. One is forced to cut off and eradicate
inclinations and predilections, the "free passions" — that is, the predilections
of the will. There is another aspect, as well — the "involuntary passions,"
sufferings. Mark the Hermit has written insightfully on the "free" and
"involuntary" passions. Rather — temptation or testing through suffering, grief
from suffering. In essence, this is an evil and worldly grief — concealed,
unsatisfied and nagging lust, the desire for enjoyments. One has to
endure these "involuntary passions," these sufferings, without grieving
for the deprivation of enjoyments.
It is even harder
to overcome hatred and rage. To court mildness and temperance it takes even
longer. This is a kind of insensitivity to irritations. Thus the passionate
forces of the soul are subdued, but even more remains. One must bar the way to
temptations. This entails, on the one hand, exercising the senses and, on the
other hand, a mental battle, purifying and overcoming one’s thoughts. It
is here that the ascetic problem is solved, for otherwise the danger of sin is
always generated anew. One must drive thoughts away while focusing one’s
attention on something else, discipling one’s mind in spiritual sobriety and
prayer — or else one must, in any case, neutralize them while cultivating a kind
of indifference towards them in one’s self. Here "doing" turns from negative to
positive. One must not only cut off the passions, but aiso create good. And
apatheia does not end with mere suppression of the passions but also
signifies a certain positive state of the soul. "Doing" begins with fear of God
and is accomplished in fear. Love, however, drives fear away — rather, it
transforms it into reverential trembling.
At the same time
the mind begins to see clearly, and matures into contemplation in order to
become capable of rising higher Apatheia and gnosis together lead
to Divine Love. There are stages in it, and it is the very element of "ordeal,"
success, and perfection. And the courting of pure and indivisible love is the
limit and task of ascetic "doing." Love flares up and absorbs all spiritual
movements to the extent that it increases the "ordeal" is crowned with and ends
in love. Love is free. Ascetic "doing," ascetic activity is the overcoming and
extinguishing of sinful pride, and it is concluded in love. Love is complete
abnegation and self-lessness," when the soul places nothing higher than
knowledge of God." St. Maximus calls this love άγάπη. Later, Divine eros blazes
up on the very heights of mysterious life. Love begets knowledge,
"gnosis" This knowledge is contemplation, "natural
contemplation" — that is, the judgment of Divine measures of existence. There
are five basic themes of knowledge or contem -plation: knowledge of God;
knowledge of the visible; knowledge of the invisible; knowledge of God’s
providence; and knowledge of God’s judgment. This enumeration of five
"contemplations" seems to go back to Origen and is also found in Evagrius
Ponticus. Again, there are stages here. At first, only the foundations —
logoi — of natural existence are cognized, then the intellectual world is
comprehended. Only towards the end does the mind which is hardened in prayerful
"ordeal" know God. "Theological knowledge" or "unforgettable knowledge" is
realized only in a protracted contemplated "ordeal."
By contemplation
St. Maximus generally understands not the simple perception of things as they
are given in daily experience, but a unique spiritual intuition and a gift of
beneficial illumination. Contemplation is cognition in the Logos, the
perception of the world in God, or of God in the world, as it is implanted in
incomprehensible Divine simplicity. Only through spiritual illumination does the
mind obtain the capacity for recognizing the energies of the Logos which are
hidden and secret under sensual covers. Contemplation is inseparable from
prayer. In the contemplative penetration to the sources and creative foundations
of existence, the human mind becomes like the Divine mind — it becomes a small
logos as it reflects the great Logos.
This is the second
stage of spiritual restoration — apokatastasis. But it is not yet the
summit or the limit of spiritual ascent. In contemplation, the mind cognizes the
intellectual or mental world and God as Creator, Provider, and Judge. However,
the mind must leave the mental or intellectual world and ascend even higher to
the mysterious darkness of Divinity itself. This is the goal and problem of the
"ordeal" — meeting with God and tasting, or rather, pre-tasting Divine bliss.
This is the level and condition of pure prayer. The mind rises higher than forms
and ideas, and commun -icates with Divine unity and peace. It cognizes the
transsubstantial Trinity in this world, and is itself renewed in the image of
the Trinity. On the heights the hermit becomes the temple and cloister of the
Logos. It finds repose on the all-good couch of God, and the mystery of
ineffable unity is accomplished. This is marriage and betrothal to the Logos. In
essence the Christian travels his whole path together with Christ, for he lives
in Christ, and Christ in him. Fulfillment of the commandments unites with
Christ, for they are his energies. Contemplation leads to Christ, the Logos
Incarnate, as to the source and focus of an ideal world.
St. Maximus speaks
much and in great detail about Christ mysteriously moving in and living in
believing souls. Here he is leaning on St. Gregory of Nazianzus, especially St.
Gregory’s Orations for Christmas and Easter. This is one of St. Maximus1
motives of asceticism — a life in Christ. Another motive also goes back to St.
Gregory: the contemplation of the Trinity. Here, though, St. Maximus is closer
to Evagrius Ponticus. Through Evagrius, he received Origen’s legacy. He handled
it, however, freely. He bore Origen’s experience and piety in mind, and
transformed it in his own synthesis. In addition, he resolutely rejected
Origen’s metaphysical conjectures and conclusions. In general, St. Maximus was
not very original in his asceticism. All of his ideas can be found in earlier
teachers and writers. St. Maximus wants only to repeat accepted doctrine, but he
gives a synthesis and not a compilation.
Man’s fate is
decided in the Church. The Church is the image and likeness of God because it is
united: "for through the grace of faith, it accomplishes in believers the same
unblended unity which the Creator, who contains everything, produces in
different existing things through his endless insight and wisdom." The Church
unites all believers in itself. Rather, Christ himself unites and reunites with
himself his creations, which have received their very existence from him. At the
same time the Church is the image and likeness of the whole world, a kind of
microcosm. The Church is man’s likeness, a kind of
"macro-humanity" as it were. The Church takes shape and grows until it
accommodates all who are called and foreordained. Then the end of the world will
come.Then time and all movement will cease. Everything will stop, for it will
settle. The world will die, for it will grow decrepit. Its visible side will
die, but it will be resurrected anew from the obsolete on the day of the
expected resurrection. Man will rise in the world or with the world, as a part
with the whole, as the great in the small. Resurrection will be a renewal and an
animation. Decay will no longer exist. God will be everything in everything.
Everything will become a perfect symbol of the single God -head.Everything will
manifest God alone. Nothing will remain outside of God — έκτος
Θεου.
St. Maximus recalls
the well-known analogy of white hot iron. However, in this Divine flame neither
nature, nor man, nor even man’s "despotism" or freedom will be consumed. In his
eschatological reflections St. Maximus is very close to St. Gregory of Nyssa
and, through him, close to Origen. His whole scheme of thought is the
same: disintegration and restoration of the primordial harmony — that is,
apokatastasis, but an apokatastasis of nature, not of freedom.
"Nature" will be restored in its entirety. This does not yet mean, however, that
freedom, too, will be redefined as good. It does not yet mean, for
freedom or will is a special reality which in no way is reducible to anything
else. One may think that St. Maximus learned about this originality and the
irrationality of the will from the experience of ascetic struggle. To recognize
good does not mean to love or choose it. Man is also capable of not falling in
love with the recognized good. Here St. Maximus directly parts with St. Gregory
of Nyssa.
The Logos will be
everything for everybody, but it will not be a blessed Sabbath and repose for
everybody. For the righteous the fire of Divinity will be revealed as an
enlightening light. For the impious it will be revealed as a singeing, burning
flame. For people contending and mustering their natural powers in the "ordeal"
it will be joy and repose. For the unprepared it can prove to be only unrest and
pain. All nature will be restored in its primordial and natural measures in the
unflagging apokatastasis. God in his immeasurable love will embrace all
creation, the good and the evil. But not everyone will be allowed to share in
his love and joy, and not everyone who is allowed will share in the same or
similar ("analogical") way. St. Maximus makes a distinction between
deification through grace — κατά χάριν — and union or unification without
grace — παρά την χάριν. Everything which exists communes with God to the extent
that it has its very existence from him and is kept by his acting
powers.
This is, however,
still not beneficial communion. In fulfilling the fates God will restore the
full entirety of his creation not only in existence but also in eternal
existence. But not in good-existence, for good-existence cannot be given from
without, cannot be given without the demanding and accepting of love. God will
give to sinners and return everything they lost through sin, restoring their
souls in the fullness of their natural forces and capabilities. They will
receive the capacity for spiritual knowledge and moral evaluation. They will
cognize God. Perhaps they will even lose memory of sin and come to God in a
certain understanding — τη έπιγνώσει. However, they will not receive communion
with his blessings — ου τη μεθεξει των αγαθών. Only the righteous are capable of
savoring and enjoying. Only they receive communion with Life, while people of
evil will who have collapsed in their thoughts and desires are far from God, are
devoid of Life, and constantly decay and constantly die. They will not taste
Life, and will be tormented by belated repentance, by the consciousness of the
senselessness of the path they took to the very end. This will be ineffable
sorrow and sadness. According to St. Maximus’ notions, it is not God but the
sinner himself who prepares his own torment and grief on judgment day. For bliss
and joy are possible only through the free concordance of human will with
the Divine will, through a free and creative fulfillment of the Divine
definitions, through illumination and transformation of the will itself in
creation of his commandments.
St. Maximus does
not assume that clear cognition of the truth must inevitably determine the will
to truth. St. Maximus flatly rejects Origen’s conception of the
apokatastasis. Certainly, evil and sin are only in the will, but this
does not mean that they will disperse like phantoms. As an ascetic and a
theologian who defended the reality of human freedom and human will in Christ,
St. Maximus could not help but be at variance with Origen and the Origenists in
their intellectualism.
In the distinction
of fate beyond the grave is the final basis and justification for the "ordeal."
With a composing force it enters the last judgment. For man is called to
creativity and work, called to the task of installing God’s will in his own.
Only people of good will, people of righteous aspiration, will find satisfaction
in God’s destiny, and the limit and fulfillment of their lives in the love and
joy of communion with God. For the others, God’s will will remain an
external act.
Deification is the
goal of creation, and for its sake everything which came into being was created.
And everything will be deified — God will be everything, and in everything. This
will not, however, be violence. Deification itself must be accepted and
experienced in freedom and love. St. Maximus came to this conclusion from a
precise Christological doctrine of two wills and two
energies.
The Sixth Ecumenical
Council.
Emperor Constans II (641-668)
was murdered in his bath in 668. His son, Constantine IV (668-685) reversed the
religious policy of Constans II. He managed to remain on good terms with Pope
Vitalian (657-672), Pope Adeodatus (672-676), Pope Donus (676-678), and with
Pope Agatho (678-681). St. Maximus the Confessor was soon to be vindicated by
the definition of faith of the Sixth Ecumenical Council. The acts are preserved
in the Greek original (Mansi 11, 195-922) and in two Latin versions. Unlike the
swiftness of Justinian’s Fifth Ecumenical Council, the Sixth Ecumenical Council
lasted approximately ten months, from November of 680 until September of
681.
In his letter to
Emperor Constantine IV Pope Agatho, after writing that it was difficult to find
competent persons to send to the council, gives a confession of faith from the
Roman Apostolic see.
"We confess the
holy and inseparable Trinity; that is, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,
to be one divinity, of one nature and essence. We will confess also that the
Trinity has one natural will, power, operation, dominion, majesty, potency, and
glory. And whatever is said of the same Holy Trinity essentially in singular
number we understand to refer to the one nature of the three consubstantial
Persons … But when we make a confession concerning one of the same three Persons
of that Holy Trinity, of the Son of God or God the Logos, and of the mystery of
his adorable oikonomia according to the flesh, we assert that all things
are double in the one and the same our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ according to
the evangelical tradition … We confess his two natures, his divine and his human
[nature], of which and in which he, even after the wonderful and inseparable
union, exists. And we confess that each of his natures has its own natural
property and that the divine has all things that are divine without any sin. And
we recognize that each one [of the two natures] of the one and the same
Incarnate … Logos of God is in him unconfusedly, inseparably and unchangeably …
For we equally detest the blasphemy of division and of co-mixture. For when we
confess two natures and two natural wills and two natural operations in our one
Lord Jesus Christ, we do not assert that they are contrary or opposed one to the
other (as those who err from the path of truth and accuse the apostolic
tradition of doing. Far be this impiety from the hearts of the faithful!), nor
as though separated ... in two persons or subsistences, but we say that as the
same our Lord Jesus Christ has two natures so also he has two natural wills and
operations, the divine and the human: the divine will and operation he has in
common with the consubstantial Father from all eternity; the human, he has
received from us, taken with our nature in time. This is the apostolic and
evangelical tradition, which the spiritual mother of your most felicitous
empire, the Apostolic Church of Christ, holds. This is the pure expression of
piety. This is the true and immaculate profession of the Christian religion, not
invented by human cunning, but which was taught by the Holy Spirit through the
princes of the apostles. This is the firm and irreprehensible doctrine of the
holy apostles..."
This lengthy letter
by Pope Agatho to Emperor Constantine IV contains a full expression of the Roman
primacy, a full expression of Rome’s consciousness of its position in the
Church.
"For this is the
rule of the true faith, which this spiritual mother of your most tranquil
empire, the Apostolic Church of Christ, has both in prosperity and in adversity
always held and defended with energy; which, it will be proved, by the grace of
Almighty God, has never erred from the path of the apostolic tradition, nor has
she been depraved by yielding to heretical innovations, but from the beginning
she has received the Christian faith from her founders, the princes of the
apostles of Christ, and remains undefiled unto the end, according to the divine
promise of the Lord and Savior himself, which he uttered in the Holy Gospels to
the prince of his disciples, saying: ‘Peter, Peter, behold, Satan has desired to
have you that he might sift you as wheat; but I have prayed for you, that your
faith fail not. And when you are converted, strengthen your brethren.’ Let your
tranquil Clemency therefore consider, since it is the Lord and Savior of all,
whose faith it is, that promised that Peter’s faith should not fail and exhorted
him to strengthen his brethren, how it is known to all that the apostolic
pontiffs, the predecessors of my littleness, have always confidently done this
very thing."
In the remainder of
his lengthy letter Pope Agatho presents and comments upon Biblical texts which
reveal two wills in Christ. He then presents catenae of quotations from the
fathers which support the doctrine of two wills in Christ, followed by his
commentary on the catenae. Throughout Pope Agatho interlaces the primacy of Rome
and Rome’s acceptance of "the five holy ecumenical councils." Since the
Apostolic See of Rome holds such a confession of faith, since the Apostolic See
of Rome "cannot err" — no mention is made of Pope Honorius — Pope Agatho urges
the emperor that this confession of faith be accepted by the entire
Church.
Pope Agatho also
held a council in Rome. The pope sent a letter from this council with his
legates. In this letter there is a fuller confession of
faith.
"We believe in God
the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and
invisible; and in his Only-Begotten Son who was begotten of him before all ages;
very God of very God, Light of Light, begotten not made, being of one essence
with the Father, that is of the same essence as the Father; by him were all
things made which are in heaven and which are in earth. And in the Holy Spirit,
the Lord and giver of life, who proceeds from the Father, and with the Father
and the Son together is worshipped and glorified. The Trinity in unity and Unity
in Trinity; a unity so far as essence is concerned, but a Trinity of Persons or
Hypostases [Subsistences]. And therefore we confess God the Father, God the Son,
and God the Holy Spirit, not three gods, but one God, the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Spirit, not a subsistence of three names but one essence of three
hypostases [subsistences]. And of these Persons one is the essence, or substance
or nature, that is to say one is the Godhead, one the eternity, one the power,
one the kingdom, one the glory, one the adoration, one the essential will and
operation of the same Holy and inseparable Trinity, who has created all things,
has made disposition of them, and still contains them."
"Moreover, we
confess that one of the same Holy Consubstantial Trinity, God the Logos, who was
begotten of the Father before the ages, in the last days of the world for us and
for our salvation came down from heaven and was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and
of our Lady, the holy, immaculate, ever-virgin and glorious Mary, truly and
properly the Mother of God, that is to say, according to the flesh which was
born of her. And truly became man, the same being very God and very man. God of
God his Father, but man of his Virgin Mother, incarnate of her flesh with a
reasonable and intelligent soul: of one essence with God the Father concerning
his Godhead, and of one essence with us concerning his manhood, and in all
points like us except without sin. He was crucified for us under Pontius Pilate,
he suffered, was buried and rose again; ascended into heaven, and sits at the
right hand of the Father, and he shall come again to judge both the living and
the dead, and of his kingdom there shall be no end."
"And this same one
Lord of ours, Jesus Christ, the Only-Begotten Son of God, we acknowledge to
exist of and in two natures unconfusedly, unchangeably, indivis -ibly,
inseparably, the difference of the natures being by no means taken away by the
union, but rather the properties of each nature being preserved and concurring
in one Person and one Hypostasis [Subsistence], not scattered or divided into
two Persons, nor confused into one composite nature. But we confess one and the
same Only-Begotten Son, God the Logos, our Lord Jesus Christ, not one in another
nor one added to another, but himself the same in two natures — that is to say
in the Godhead and in the manhood even after the hypostatic union. For neither
was the Logos changed into the nature of flesh nor was the flesh transformed
into the nature of the Logos, for each remained what it was by nature. We
discern by contemplation alone the distinction between the natures united in him
of which unconfusedly, inseparably and unchangeably he is composed. For one is
of both and through one both because there are together both the height of the
divinity and the humility of the flesh, each nature preserving after the union
its own proper character without any defect, and each form acting in communion
with the other what is proper to itself. The Logos working what is proper to the
Logos, and the flesh what is proper to the flesh; of which the one shines with
miracles, the other bows down beneath injuries. Therefore, as we confess that he
truly has two natures of essences, the Godhead and the manhood, unconfusedly,
indivisibly, and unchangeably [united], so also the rule of piety instructs us
that he has two natural wills and two natural operations, as perfect God and
perfect man, one and the same our Lord Jesus Christ. And this the apostolic and
evangelical tradition and the authority of the Holy Fathers (whom the Holy
Apostolic and Catholic Church and the venerable Councils receive) has plainly
taught us."
The letter
continues by emphasizing that was always the faith, and that this faith was set
forth at the Lateran Council over which Pope Martin I presided. There is then an
apology for the delay in sending the legates. It is to be noted that Pope Agatho
mentions that he had hoped that his "brother bishop, Theodore, the archbishop
and philosopher of the island of Great Britain" would be able to attend the
council to be held in Constantinople. This is St. Theodore of Tarsus (602-690),
the Greek subdeacon who was recommended by the African monk Hadrian to fill the
position of Archbishop of Canterbury. It is obvious that Pope Agatho wanted to
send a respectable delegation to Constantinople. The letter con -eludes with
emphasis on the Roman primacy. "But we, although most humble, yet strive with
all our might that the commonwealth of your Christian empire may be shown to be
more sublime than all the nations, for in it has been founded the See of Blessed
Peter, the prince of the Apostles, by the authority of which, all Christian
nations venerate and worship with us, through the reverence of the blessed
Apostle Peter himself." The Greek text has a slightly different
ending.
At the seventh
session of the Sixth Ecumenical Council direct action in response to Pope
Agatho’s letters and profession of faith was taken. The emperor is recorded as
saying: "Let George, the most holy archbishop of this our God-preserved city,
and let Macarius, the venerable archbishop of Antioch … say if they submit to
the force — ει στοιχοΰσι τη δυνάμει — of the suggestions sent by the most holy
Agatho, Pope of Old [omitted in Latin text] Rome and by his Council." The answer
was affirmative for George and the bishops subject to the patriarchate of
Constantinople. "I have diligently examined the whole force of the suggestions
sent to your most pious Fortitude by both Agatho, the most holy Pope of Old
Rome, and by his Council, and I have scrutinized the works of the holy and
approved Fathers which are stored in my venerable patriarchate, and I have found
that all the testimonies of the holy and accepted Fathers, which are contained
in those suggestions, agree with and in no particular differ from the holy and
accepted Fathers. Therefore, I give my submission to them and thus I profess and
believe." The text of assent from the bishops subject to Constantinople is: "And
we, most pious Lord, accepting the teaching of the suggestion sent to your most
gentle Fortitude by the most holy and blessed Agatho, Pope of Old Rome, and of
that other suggestion which was adopted by the council subject to him, and
following the sense contained there, so we are minded, so we profess, and so we
believe that in our one Lord Jesus Christ, our true God, there are two natures
unconfusedly, unchangeably, undividedly, and two natural wills and two natural
operations. And all who have taught and who now say that there is but one will
and one operation in the two natures of our one Lord Jesus Christ our true God,
we anathematize." Patriarch Macarius of Antioch refused to agree. "I do not say
that there are two wills or two operations in the oikonomia of the
Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ, but one will and one theandric operation."
Patriarch Macarius and his followers, representing the Monothelites, presented
their position during the fifth and sixth sessions. Action against Patriarch
Macarius began only at the eleventh session and continued into the twelfth
session. At the thirteenth session Patriarch Macarius was deposed and sentence
against the Monothelites was decreed.
"After we had
reconsidered, according to our promise which we had made to your Highness, the
doctrinal letters of Sergius, at one time patriarch of this imperial,
God-protected city to Cyrus, who was then bishop of Phasis and to Honorius, once
Pope of Old Rome, as well as the letter of Honorius to the same Sergius, we find
that these documents are quite foreign to the apostolic dogmas, to the
declarations of the Holy Councils, and to all the accepted Fathers, and that
they follow the false teachings of the heretics. Therefore, we entirely reject
them and execrate them as harmful to the soul. But the names of those men whose
doctrines we execrate must also be thrust forth from the Holy Church of God;
namely, that of Sergius, one time bishop of this God-preserved imperial city who
was the first to write on this impious doctrine. Also that of Cyrus of
Alexandria, of Pyrrhus, Paul, and Peter, who died bishops of this God-preserved
city, and were like-minded with them. And that of Theodore, once bishop of
Pharan, all of whom the most holy and thrice blessed Agatho, Pope of Old Rome,
in his suggestion to our most pious and God-preserved lord and mighty Emperor,
rejected because they were minded contrary to our orthodox faith, all of whom we
define are to be subjected to anathema. And with these we define that there
shall expelled from the Holy Church of God and anathematized Honorius who was
one time Pope of Old Rome because of what we found written by him to Sergius,
that in all respects he followed his view and confirmed his impious doctrines.
We have also examined the synodal letter of Sophronius of holy memory, some time
Patriarch of the Holy City of Christ our God, Jerusalem, and have found it in
accordance with the true faith and with the apostolic teachings, and with those
of the holy approved Fathers. Therefore, we have received it as orthodox and as
salutary to the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church and have decreed that it is
right that his name be inserted in the diptychs of the Holy
Churches."
In its lengthy
definition of faith the Sixth Ecumenical Council reaffirms the Nicene Creed, the
Creed of the Second Ecumenical Council, and then recites the definition of faith
of the Council of Chalcedon to which it then adds: "Defining all this we
likewise declare that in him are two natural wills and two natural operations
indivisibly, inconvertibly, inseparably, unconfusedly, according to the teaching
of the Holy Fathers. And these two natural wills are not contrary the one to the
other — God forbid! — as the impious heretics assert, but his human will follows
and that not as resisting and reluctant, but rather as subject to his divine and
omnipotent will. For it was right that the flesh should be moved but subject to
the divine will, according to the most wise Athanasius." The definition then
continues, concluding with: "For we will not admit one natural operation in God
and in the creature, as we will not exalt into the divine essence what is
created nor will we bring down the glory of the divine nature to the place
suited to the creature. We recognize the miracles and the sufferings as of one
and the same [Person], but of one or of the other nature of which he is and in
which he exists, as Cyril admirably says. Preserving, therefore, the
unconfusedness and indivisibility, we make briefly this whole confession,
believing our Lord Jesus Christ to be one of the Trinity and after the
Incarnation our true God, we say that his two natures shone forth in his one
hypostasis in which he both performed the miracles and endured the sufferings
through the whole of his oikonomic conversation — δι’ ολης αυτόυ της
οίκονομικης αναστροφής — and that not in appearance only but in very deed, and
this by reason of the difference of nature which must be recognized in the same
Person, for although joined together yet each nature wills and does the things
proper to it and that indivisibly and unconfusedly. Therefore, we confess two
wills and two operations, concurring most fitly in him for the salvation of the
human race."
The final statement
is the prohibition of bringing forward, writing, composing, thinking, or
teaching a different faith. It is this for which St. Maximus the Confessor
suffered.
Chapter Seven.
St. John
of Damascus.
The Life of St.
John of Damascus.
We do not know much
about St. John’s life. The biographies known to us were composed late — only in
the eleventh century -and it is not easy to pick out what is authentic and
indisputable. St. John was a native of Damascus and was born into the wealthy
Mansur family — the name means "the victorious." He was born in the late seventh
century. The precise year cannot be determined — scholars differ in listing his
year of birth from around 645 to 675. St. John’s father and grandfather had held
ministerial posts, first under the Byzantines and after 636 under the Arab
rulers of Damascus. His father, Sergius (Ibn-Serjun), served in the palace of
the Caliph as "great Logothete." St. John received a good education. According
to legend, he studied with Cosmas Melodus who later became bishop of Maiuma and
with another Cosmas who was a ransomed prisoner from Sicily. Theological
interests were awakened in him very early.
St. John followed
his father as Logothete to the Caliph. We do not know exactly when St. John left
the palace and entered the monastery of St. Sabas near Jerusalem. One can assume
that this was before the beginning of the Iconoclastic Controversy. St. John’s
remarkable addresses in defense of the holy ikons drew universal attention to
him.
St. John’s
biographies tell of slander and persecution against him at the Caliph’s palace,
of cruel punishment and miraculous healing. In the monastery he led a strict,
reclusive life in humility and in obedience — this is vividly and touchingly
described in a well-known biographical tale. Here St. John engaged mostly in
writing, keenly responding to the theological themes of the day, and at the same
time composing his "divine psalms." As he himself has indicated, he was ordained
a priest by Patriarch John V (705-735) of Jerusalem — in any case no later than
734. He did not stay in Jerusalem long. We do not know when precisely St. John
died. There is some evidence to assume that he passed away before the
Iconoclastic Council of 754. The date of his death is usually calculated about
749/750.
The Writings of
st. John of Damascus.
St. John of
Damascus’ place in the history of theology is primarily determined by his works
of a systematic nature. His Fount of Knowledge — πηγή γνώσεως which is
dedicated to Cosmas of Maiuma, is an extensive dogmatic collection consisting of
three unequal parts. The first, the "philosophical chapters" or dialectics
[Dialectica], was composed in the style of Aristotle — see the
interpretations of Porphyry and Ammonius. Here St. John mostly discusses the
definitions of basic concepts. At the same time it is a kind of natural
theology, "knowledge of that which exists as such." The second part of St.
John’s Fount of Knowledge is entitled Briefly on Heresies. This is
a short list of heresies and delusions, one hundred and three in all, composed
mainly from literary sources — beginning with Epiphanius’ Panarion. The
texts cited on the delusion of the Messalians and the quotations from Philo on
essence and hypostasis are interesting. This short hereseological outline ends
with a theological confession of faith. The third part of St. John’s Fount of
Knowledge is his Ekthesis or Exposition of the Orthodox Faith.
This is an experimental system. The material, however, has been collected very
unevenly, and many articles of the faith are not spoken of at all — for example,
there is no special section on the Church. There is no strict order in the
exposition. St. John has more to say on Christological themes than anything
else. And one senses that these were urgent and disturbing topics only very
recently.
In his
Exposition of the Orthodox Faith St. John of Damascus follows, often
literally, preceding fathers, especially St. Gregory of Nazianzus and the "the
great Dionysius." Less frequently but still used are the other Cappadocians, St.
Cyril, and "Leontius of Byzantium." He refers to other fathers very rarely.
Among the Latin Fathers he mentions only Pope Leo. He does not refer to the
pre-Nicene writers at all.
St. John of
Damascus makes no claims to independence. On the contrary, he strives to express
precisely the generally accepted opinion on faith. At the same time he freely
and creatively investigates theological tradition and distinguishes the basic
and the secondary. He does not enter into disputable arguments, but neither does
he conceal problems. In philosophy St. John of Damascus bases himself on
Aristotle but he is more accurately called an eclectic. In many cases he is more
of a Platonist, especially through the influence of his patristic authorities
such as St. Gregory of Nazianzus and Pseudo-Dionysius.
The influence of
this dogmatic code — this word is more accurate than system — was great in both
the Greek East and the Latin West, although St. John had no creative successors
in Byzantium. His Exposition of the Orthodox Faith was translated into
Syriac, Arabic, Armenian, Old Bulgarian or Slavonic, Georgian, and Latin. The
Latin translation was made only in the twelfth century on the instructions of
Pope Eugenius III (1150), and this very faulty translation was used by Peter
Lombard and by Thomas Aquinas. The Slavonic translation was done as early as the
tenth century. The Arabic translation could have been made during St. John’s
lifetime.
Among his dogmatic
writings of a personal content and primarily polemical nature, we must mention
first of all the famous Discourses Against the Iconoclasts. There are
three discourses and they were written between 726 and 730. St. John of Damascus
supports his theological arguments here with a collection of patristic testimony
and other evidence.
St. John’s book
Against the Jacobites — known in two accounts — offers some interest.
Attached to it are a number of individual dogmatic and polemical sketches
against the Monophysites, the Monothelites, and the
Manichees.
It is especially
necessary to note the famous collection of Sacred Comparisons [Sacra
Parallela]. This is a code of texts and patristic dicta on various
questions of faith and piety, organized in alphabetical order by subject. All
the material, however, was originally set forth systematically in three
sections: On God; On Man; and On Virtues and Vices. The
manuscript copies of this original edition have also been preserved. This is
what one may ascribe to St. John of Damascus himself. After this his collection
was subject to reworking on more than one occasion.
The labors of St.
John of Damascus as a Psalmist demand particular attention. Even Theophanes
called him "Gold Stream" — "Chrysorrhoas" — "for the abundance in him of the
grace of the Holy Spirit, which flows in his words and life." It is very
difficult to determine the volume of St. John’s psalmody precisely. It is hardly
possible to ascribe the composition of the Octoechos to him as his
personal work — this is the labor of a number of generations, in which St. John
also put his share. One may also think that it was he who brought the already
set order of the service to a definite plan. The Sunday dogmatics probably
belong to him, as perhaps do the Sunday canons, which are Christological in
content. One must also mention the Easter service in particular — as a whole,
not only the canon — and a number of canons for feasts — Christmas, Epiphany,
the Transfiguration, the Ascension, the Annunciation, the Assumption, etc. In
addition, there are his famous funeral odes.
With St. John of
Damascus, as also with Cosmas of Maiuma, the influence of St. Gregory of
Nazianzus is very perceptible. For example, see the scholia composed by
Cosmas to St. Gregory’s poetry. St. John’s influence in Eastern liturgical
poetry was decisive, and it is also felt in the Latin
West.
St. John of
Damascus engaged in exegetical work comparatively little. He wrote an unoriginal
Commentary to the Epistles of St. Paul, a commentary used by later
churchmen and theologians, including Theophylact of Bulgaria. Some sermons have
been preserved, among which the ones on the feasts of the Assumption and
Transfiguration are especially interesting. It is also necessary to note a
number of individual articles which are ascetic or ethical in content. The
authenticity of the work entitled Barlaam and Joasaph has long been
disputed. Though some scholars now are convinced that it is the work of St.
John, it is still possible that it is not authentic and that it may have been
composed in the mid-seventh century in the monastery of St. Sabas by a certain
John.
The Theological System of
St. John of Damascus.
As a theologian St. John of
Damascus was a collector of patristic materials. In the Fathers he saw
"God-inspired" teachers and "God-bearing" pastors. There can be no contradiction
among them: "a father does not fight against the fathers, for all of them were
communicants of a single Holy Spirit." St. John of Damascus collected not the
personal opinions of the fathers but precisely patristic tradition. "An
individual opinion is not a law for the Church," he writes, and then he repeats
St. Gregory of Nazianzus: one swallow does not a summer make. "And one opinion
cannot overthrow Church tradition from one end of the earth to the
other."
St. John of
Damascus is closest to the Cappadocians and to the Corpus Areopagiticum.
In Christology he repeats "Leontius of Byzantium" and St. Maximus the Confessor.
The connection with the Cappadocians and with the "Great Dionysius" is
proclaimed first of all in the very formulation of the question of the knowledge
] of God in the very first chapters of his Exposition of the Orthodox
Faith. St. John begins with a confession of the inscrutability of the
Godhead and limits theological inquisitiveness to the "eternal bounds," the
bounds of Revelation and "God’s tradition." And not everything cognizable can be
expressed easily. The truth of God’s existence has an immutable and natural
obviousness, and is comprehended from examining the world itself. But what God
is "in essence and by nature" — this is incomprehensible and unknowable.
However, on the contrary, we can perceive with a certain obviousness what God is
not. First of all, negative definitions are possible. "Through the negation of
everything" said about creation one thing is possible and that is "that in God
one thing is comprehensible: his boundlessness and inscrutability." Secondly,
there is knowledge of that which is not the very essence of God,’ but "refers to
nature." Such are the definitions of God as Wise and Good. Positive names of
this kind signify God as the Author of everything in his creative revelation to
the world, and these are transferred to God from his works. St. John thus makes
a distinction between apophatic and cataphatic theology. Cataphatically, he
speaks only of God’s actions or "energies," provided the cataphatic form does
not conceal the apophatic meaning. Theological cataphatic thought must also
always rely on the direct testimony of revelation.
In his account of
the doctrine of the Trinity St. John again repeats the Cappadocians, and most of
all St. Gregory of Nazianzus. He stresses the ineffability and uncognizability
of the Trinitarian mystery. "Believe that God has three hypostases. But how? He
is above any ‘how.’ For God is inscrutable. Do not say: how is the Trinity a
Trinity, for the Trinity is not analyzable." It is also impossible to even seek
out a suitable image or example for comparison. "But there is a Unity and a
Trinity — there was, is, and will be forever. By faith it is cognized and
worshipped — by faith, not by investigation, not by demonstration. And the more
it is investigated, the less it is cognized; and the more curiosity it arouses,
the more it hides."
This does not mean,
however, that the truth of Divine Unity is indistinct or dumb for the reason. On
the contrary, it is in Trinitarian revelation that the contradictions of natural
thought, which constantly wavers between pagan polytheism and the stagnant
monotheism of the Jews, are resolved. The antinomy is removed in synthesis:
"from the doctrine of the Jews comes the Unity of nature; from Hellenism come
differences in hypostases." Following the Cappadocians, St. John of Damascus
speaks mostly about the difference of the hypostases. In God’s single being the
three hypostases are united without mixing or blending; they are inseparably
separated — here is where the mystery lies. In this is the incommensurable
difference between Divine Existence and creation.
In created
existence we at once and in reality see the difference of the hypostases or
"indivisibles;" and then "with the mind and thought" we perceive communality,
connection, and unity. For in the world there exist only indivisibles,
individuals, hypostases — and what is common which does not exist by itself, but
only in many, is realized in them. This is based on Aristotle. Therefore, here
we go back to what is common secondarily, singling out the identical, repeated
characteristics or traits. In other words, creation is an area of real
multitudinousness, in which we discover the common, the similar, the identical,
the united, with our minds and by reflection. It is a region of separate
existence, a region of number in the strict sense of the word: two, three,
many.
We must speak about
God differently. God is one in essence, and is revealed as one. We believe in a
single God: a single beginning, a single essence, a single power, a single
force, a single will, a single action, a single kingdom. We perceive God’s unity
at once and in reality. "We know the one God but with our thought we understand
the difference of characteristics in the Godhead" — that is, the difference in
hypostatic properties. In the one God we "comprehend" the Trinitarian
differences, the very Tri-unity of the hypostases. We come to the hypostases,
but we do not come from them; and we mentally come to them, not as separate
"individuals" or "indivisibles" but as inseparably, unmixed "eternal images of
eternal existence." We distinguish the hypostases only in thought (or in
"intellectual reflection" — επίvοια), but this does not lessen their ontological
irreducibility. The word έπίνοια means the same thing in the thought of St. John
of Damascus as it does in the thought of the Cappadocians: first of all a
“certain reflection, and an intensification which simplifies and clarifies the
integral and undivided perception and knowledge of thing," which reveals
complexity and variety in what had at first seemed to the senses to be simple.
The variety, however, really exists. From Unity we descend to Tri-Unity.
Tri-Unity is entirely real, but real in a different way from all the
multitudinousness in creation. In the Godhead Tri-Unity is given and revealed in
the indivisibility of a Single Being. "In the Holy transsubstantial, and most
high, and inscrutable Trinity, communality and unity are perceived in actual
fact and not in meditation because of the co-eternity of the persons and the
identity of their essence, action, and will, because of the unanimity of thought
and identity of power and energy. I did not say ‘likeness1 but ‘identity.’ For
there is one essence, one goodness, one force, one will, one power. One and the
same. Not three which are similar to one another, but one and the same movement
of three hypostases — μία και ή αυτή. For each of them is united to the others
no less than to himself.”
Therefore, the
distinction is only thought — distinction never crosses over to cleavage,
as difference never crosses over to separation. It is inseparable separation,
for the hypostases of the One God are not only similar, but are identical in
essence. It is not the communality of traits or characteristics which unites
them, like communality of traits and characteristics unites created hypostases
into a single grouping or form, but no more. On the contrary, the difference or
traits or "peculiarities" only marks the Tri-Unity of incommensurate and
irreducible "forms of existence" in the essential unity of Divine Life. God is a
"single simple essence in three complete hypostases, above and before any
perfection." Divine Unity is not composed of hypostases, but is in three
hypostases, is in the Three and is Three. And each of the Three has a
"complete hypostasis;" that is, a complete fullness of existence, just as every
rock is "complete," and is not merely a part of its aspect. "We call the
hypostases complete so as not to introduce complexity into the Divine Unity, for
composition is the beginning of discord" — composition will never give the
actual solidity, continuity, and unity. "And again we say," St. John continues,
"that the three hypostases are situated in one another
reciprocally."
The single Godhead
not only does not consist of hypostases, but neither does it split up into
hypostases, so that the entire fullness of Divine Nature is contained equally
and identically in all of them and in each of them. And the distinguishing
"peculiarities" are not of an "accidental" nature as is the case in created
individuals. "The Godhead is indivisible in the divided;" and what is common in
the divided is inherent in them "individually and jointly." The Father is light,
the Son is light, the Holy Spirit is light; but the thrice-shining light is One.
The Father is Wisdom, the Son is Wisdom, the Holy Spirit is Wisdom; but the
Divine three-lighted, three-sunned Wisdom is One. God is One, and not three.The
Lord is One — the Holy Trinity. Consubstantiality means exactly this concrete
identity of essence — not an abstract communality, but identicality. For the
"origin" of the Second and Third Hypostases from the First does not introduce
any division or distribution, for there is no fluctuation in the Trinity. St.
John of Damascus constantly repeats the word "non-fluctuating" — αρρευστος. The
Father does not find expression or expend himself in the Son and Spirit. But
everything that the Father has, the Son and Spirit also have, while, of course,
abstracting themselves from the incommensurable hypostatic differences. "The
hypostases abide, and are firmly established in one another." They are permanent
and cannot be removed from one another. They are accommodated in One another
"without any destruction, or mixing, or blending."
The Divine
Hypostases differ from one another in that which cannot concern the essence
itself, for, as St. John constantly reminds us, "all of Divine Nature is
completely found in all of the hypostases — all of it is in the Father, all of
it is in the Son, all of it is in the Holy Spirit." The names of the Father, the
Son, and the Spirit signify the form of existence and the form of the reciprocal
relationship of the hypostases. What do these "relationships" signify? As
opposed to the relationships between created hypostases, whose very existence
does not necessarily presuppose a situation in which they are in definite
relationships to one another, the Divine Hypostases are not distinguished from
one another by anything other than their correlative "peculiarities." Therefore,
it is these traits, characteristics or "peculiarities" which are not
"accidental." They coincide with the very existence of the Hypostases. The
Divine Hypostases have one nature inseparably and identically — not only the
same nature.
The mystery of
Divine Life is revealed in the Trinitarian "relations" — solitude would be
devoid of love, a theme which Richard of St. Victor will pick up and
develop, albeit within a filioque context. St. John of Damascus does not develop
this thought, and generally does not go into any speculative exposure of the
Trinity. He limits himself to a repetition of earlier patristic conclusions. "By
the word of the Lord the heavens were established..." This line from the Psalms
[32:6 in the Septuagint], and other similar texts, were more than once
the object of Trinitarian interpretation in the Eastern Fathers before St. John
of Damascus. This is connected with a typical feature of the Eastern notion of
the relation between the Second and Third Hypostases: as Logos and Breath, the
Son and the Holy Spirit originate from the Father "jointly" — αμα,
"co-originate" from him — ξυμποεισι.
In this respect the
Eastern form of representation substantially differs from the Western — the
analogy with the human soul, for example, in St. Augustine’s Trinitarian
thought. For the East the ancient form for representing the Trinitarian mystery
always remained typical — it started from contemplation of the First Hypostasis
as the single beginning and source of the Godhead. In the Latin West a different
type of idea, for which it is characteristic to begin with contemplation of the
general "nature" of the Godhead, has been maintained since St. Augustine. St.
John of Damascus belongs entirely to the Eastern tradition. And if he says that
in theology we proceed from Unity to arrive at Tri-Unity or Trinity, this in no
way means that we are starting with contemplation of a common "nature." It means
recognizing the Father in God. Hence, the Father of the Only-Begotten Son, and
the beginning of the Holy Spirit, whiph co-proceeds to the eternally begotten
Son. "We believe in a Single God" — this means at the same time: in the Single
God the Father.
The Son and the
Spirit are certain hypostatic "energies" of the Father, and originate — or, more
accurately, "co-originate" — from the Father. They co-originate, but in
such a way that at the same time the Son’s birth is mysteriously and
incomprehensibly first: there is a kind of "condition, pleasing to God" for the
co-origin of the accompanying Spirit, "who proceeds through the Son and rests
in him" — αναπαυομενον. For there is a certain mysterious, God-pleasing
"order" — ταξις — of the Divine Hypostases, which is signified and unchanged by
the order of the names themselves, and which allows no rearrangement. Is it not
in this sense that one should understand the famous words of St. Gregory of
Nazianzus, which are repeated by St. John of Damascus. "The Unity, having moved
from time immemorial to duality, stopped at the Trinity. And this is what we
have — Father and Son and Holy Spirit."
The Father, as the
name of the First Hypostasis, indicates his relation to the Second — and, one
must add, only to the Second, for "Fatherhood" and "Sonship," as St. Basil
wrote, are correlative. The Father does not beget the Holy Spirit. "The Holy
Spirit is not the Son of the Father, but the Spirit of the Father,
proceeding from the Father." The Holy Spirit has his existence from the
Father "not according to the image of birth, but according to the image of
procession" although for us the difference between the images of birth and
procession is vague. In any event, the name of Father refers to the First
Hypostasis as the beginning of the Second. At the same time St. John of
Damascus, following St. Gregory of Nazianzus, calls the First Hypostasis
"unborn" in order to set off the Father’s intra-Trinitarian lack of a beginning
— that is, the fact that the Father is the first and beginning
Hypostasis, the "beginning of the Godhead," the "only" and "pre-beginning cause"
of Divine Life, the root and source of the Godhead.
Without beginning
the Father is the beginning — of course "without beginning’; that is, the
eternal and extra-temporal beginning of the "coeternals" — of the Second and
Third Hypostases. Only the Father is the beginning or "natural" cause in the
Trinity’s life. "The Son is not called the cause," for he is of the Father. The
basic name of the Second Hypostasis is the Son, and correspondingly the
hypostatic property is birth, birth outside of time and without beginning, birth
"from the Father’s nature" — that is, by virtue of the "natural productiveness"
of the Godhead. As an "action of nature" St. John, following the ancient
fathers, contrasts birth to creation, an "act of will" or desire. The Divine
birth is without beginning and end — it is higher than any change and origin.
There is "nothing created, nothing first, nothing second, nothing master-slave"
in the Holy Trinity. The Son is the counsel, wisdom, and power of the Father.
And there is no other Logos, Wisdom, Power, or Will in the Father besides the
Son. The Son is the image of the Father, a living, "natural" and
"identical" image "by nature." He is like the Father in everything, and
identical to him in everything — he "bears the whole Father in
himself."
For St. John of
Damascus the name of the Holy Spirit indicates more a kind of Divine breath —
πνευμα from πνειν — than spirituality. In this meaning is a certain proper name
of the Third Hypostasis. The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father —
έκπορευταί. The Father “projects” the Spirit — προβαλλει, and is the “projector”
— προβολευς; πηγή προβλητική — while the Spirit is the projection — πρόβλημα.
The Holy Spirit, in St. John’s confession, proceeds from the Father — εκ
του Πατρός but through the Son — δι’ ύιου. The Holy Spirit, as St. John defines
him, "is the force of the Father and he reveals the hidden Godhead, who
proceeds from the Father through the Son, as he himself knows." There is
hardly any doubt that here St. John of Damascus has in mind not only the
temporal mission or descent of the Holy Spirit into the world for revelation and
the illumination of all creatures. The Holy Spirit is "the force of the Father
who proclaims the hidden Godhead." But not only in revelation is he the Spirit
of the Son. In his explanation of the Thrice-Illumined Trinity St. John of
Damascus says directly: "The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the
Son, but not filially." And in his book Against the Manichees St.
John writes: "The Father existed eternally, having his Logos out of himself, and
through his Logos his Spirit, who proceeds out of him." At the same time,
however, the mysterious "mediation" of the Son in the Holy Spirit’s eternal
intra-Trinitarian procession from the Father "through the Son" which, St. John
maintains, is equivalent in no way to that "causing" by the Father which is the
beginning of the Holy Spirit’s hypostatic existence. So any notion about some
"co-causing" "by the Son" is unquestionably excluded. "Of the Holy Spirit we say
that he is of the Father, and we call him the Father’s Spirit, but we
do not say that the Spirit is also of the Son. And we profess that he was
revealed to us and given to us through the Son" [The Gospel of St. John
20:22]. "The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of the Son, not as from him, but as
through him, proceeding from the Father. For the only author, the only Causer —
μόνος αιτιος — is the Father alone."
St. John of
Damascus steadfastly distinguishes εκ and δια, for him δια does not compromise
any causal factor. "Through the Son" expresses a completely special relationship
between the Second and Third Hypostases — a kind of "mediation" of the Son as
the "preceding" in the order of the Holy Trinity, as the Second before the
Third." The Holy Spirit is of the Father, the Spirit is of the Son
but not from out of the Son. The Spirit is the Spirit of God’s mouth, the
proclaimer of the Logos. The Holy Spirit is an image of the Son, as the Son is
an image of the Father. This means that the Logos is revealed in the Holy Spirit
as the Father is revealed in the Logos. For the Logos is the herald of the Mind,
and the Holy Spirit is the disclosure of the Logos. The Holy Spirit,
who proceeds from the Father, rests in the Son as his power of
manifestation. In speaking of the appearance, the "passage," the "shining" of
the Holy Spirit through the Son, the fathers of the fourth and fifth centuries
meant primarily to reveal and affirm the truth of Trinitarian consubstantiality,
and the most genuine eternal unity of the Holy Spirit with the Logos and the
Father. Therefore, one must not limit" through the Son" only to the fact
of the Holy Spirit’s descent in time to creation.
In this sense, the
doctrine of the Cappadocians, St. Gregory of Nyssa in particular, is especially
significant. St. Gregory of Nyssa directly points out as the distinguishing
feature of the Third Hypostasis the fact that the Son originates "directly from
the Father," while the Holy Spirit comes "from the First with the mediation of —
"through" — the One who came from the Father directly. And this "mediation" — ή
του Υιου μεσιτεία — preserves the uniqueness, the “Only-Begottenness” of the
Sonship. According to St. Gregory of Nyssa, the Holy Spirit originates from the
Father not in the same way as the Only-Begotten, but rather originates
through the Son himself, as a light which shines "through born light"
which, in turn, however, "has the reason of hypostasis from the prototypical
light." St. John of Damascus attaches himself directly to these words of St.
Gregory of Nyssa. He also repeats the latter’s notion of the Holy Spirit as the
"middle" or "that which connects" the Father and the Son: the Holy Spirit is the
"middle between the not-born and the born," and through the Son the Holy Spirit
is united to — or "attaches to" — the Father, in the words of St. Basil. St.
Maximus expressed himself in the same way: the Holy Spirit "ineffably proceeds
in essence from the Father through the born Son." After St. John of Damascus,
the patriarch Tarasius expressed himself in the same way in his synodicon which
was adopted at the Seventh Ecumenical Council: "I also believe in the Holy
Spirit, the Lord and the Giver of Life, who proceeds from the Father through
the Son." St. John of Damascus was only the exponent of a common Eastern
theological tradition. With him, perhaps, "through the Son" obtained die
additional sense of an intentional contrast to the Latin filioque, which
had — as early as St. Augustine — a causative nuance, the motif of the Son’s
co-causality.
In the East, on the
contrary, theologians always emphasized the complete singleness of "beginning"
or "cause" in Holy Trinity. This is the Father’s proto-source Hypostasis, "the
begetting and projecting source," according to St. John of Damascus. Hence, the
co-equality of the Son and the Holy Spirit as hypostases which eternally
"originate" from a single being — in such a way, however, that the God-revealed
order of the hypostases is not changed, and the Holy Spirit is cognized "in
third place." The Holy Spirit proceeds "through the Son." This means that the
procession is pleasing to God and inscrutably "presupposes" the eternal birth of
the Son. And the oikonomic order of revelation, crowned by the appearance
of the Holy Spirit, reproduces, as it were, and reflects the ontological order
of the Life of the Holy Trinity, in which the Holy Spirit proceeds like a kind
of shining which reveals the hidden goodness of the Father and proclaims the
Logos.
This order and
connection are indisputably clear in the basic form of the Logos or Word and the
Breath: the Word and the Breath are combined, but the Breath is for the sake
of the Word, that is "through the Word." In the order of Revelation
the Holy Spirit is the "completing force." The Holy Spirit is not a secondary
force, but the life-giving Lord, the dominating Spirit, all-accomplishing and
all-powerful, the Creator, the Fulfilling One and the Almighty, "who created and
brought about everything without exception through himself," the illuminating
and the preserving One. The Holy Spirit completes what is created by the Logos
and gives life, for he is life.
St. John of
Damascus speaks little and fragmentarily about creation. Following the ancient
fathers, St. John defines creation as an act of Divine will which brought into
existence that which had not been, and which kept what had been created in
existence. God creates by thought, and this thought, fulfilled by the Logos and
accomplished by the Holy Spirit, becomes deed. This is literally from St.
Gregory of Nazianzus. The reason for creation — provided it is possible to speak
of the reason for Divine creativity -lies in the most abundant goodness of God,
which willed that something originate which could communicate with God. The
images and plans of that which would be accomplished by God — "ikons" and
"paradigms" — existed in him from time immemorial. This is "God’s eternal
counsel" about the world, which is without beginning and unchanged. These images
are God’s thoughts about everything. St. John of Damascus directly refers to the
Corpus Areopagiticum but he does not dwell in detail on interpretation as
to how real things relate to the Divine prototypes.
Following St.
Gregory of Nazianzus, he supposes that creation of the angels precedes the
creation of man.The angels are also created in God’s image. "Only the Creator
alone knows the appearance and definition of this essence." The angels are
incorporeal, but this definition only opposes them to us, while compared to god
everything proves to be coarse and material. Only God alone is essentially
incorporeal. St. John of Damascus speaks briefly about the angels, repeating St.
Gregory of Nazianzus more than the Corpus Areopagiticum. The angels were created
through the Logos and achieved perfection from the Holy Spirit who gave them
illumination through grace.
God creates man in
his image and likeness out of two natures -the reasoning and the sensual — as a
kind of "connection" between the visible and the invisible, as a kind of
microcosm. Man is the image of God "through imitation." The Mind and Freedom are
the images of God, and the ascent to virtue signifies likeness. God gives his
own image and his own breath to man, but man does not preserve this gift in the
fall. God comes down to receive our poor and feeble nature "in order to cleanse
us and liberate us from decay and again make us communicants of his
Divinity."
In creation God
gave man not only existence, but also blessed existence. He clothed mankind in
his grace, and gave him the right and the capacity to enter into and abide in
continual unity with God through his own volition. He created man as a kind of
"new angel" to reign over the earthly and move into the celestial. "He made him
deified through gravitation towards God — this is what constitutes the goal of
the mystery — deified through communion with Divine illumination, but not
transformed into God’s essence." Primordial man was settled in paradise and
Divine paradise was two-fold: corporally, man resided in a divine and most
sublime place, while in his soul he resided in a place incomparably more sublime
and lofty, having as his abode God, who resided in him. Man was created in
imperishability, apatheia, immortality, for a life equal to that of the
angels — that is, a life of continuous contemplation and unceasing glorification
of the fl Creator. However, the primordial man had to assimilate everything that
was given to him with his freedom, for only that which is not involuntary and
not compelled is virtue.
In man’s will and
freedom is the beginning of evil — not in nature, but in will. Sin, evil, or
vice is something anti-natural, but | living virtuously conforms to nature. The
fall shakes man’s nature. Having turned from God, man gravitates toward the side
of matter — after all, man in his make-up is placed "in the middle" between God
and matter. Plunging into matter, man becomes mortal and falls under lust and
passions. Man was created in chastity, and from the very beginning chastity was
implanted in man’s nature — "chastity resided in paradise." If man had not
fallen, God "could have multiplied the human race by another method," not
through conjugal joining, and not through birth, as man’s original formation was
not by birth.
The Lord himself
came to triumph over death and vice — "the Lord and Creator himself enters into
battle for our creation." The Evil One caught man, having promised him divine
dignity, and he is caught himself when God appears in the form of flesh. God’s
wisdom finds a worthy solution to the insurmountable difficulty. "And the newest
of the new is accomplished and it is the only new thing under the
sun."
That which was
accomplished in Christ, as in the beginning, is repeated in everyone who desires
it — through communion with Christ. The opportunity for a second birth is given
— by Christ. Eternal and imperishable food is given — in the Eucharist. God
inscrutably transforms matter, "and through what is common by nature is
accomplished that which is higher than nature." People wash with water and
anoint themselves with unction, and here is God combining unction and water with
the grace of the Holy Spirit and making baptism a bath of regeneration. People
nourish themselves on bread and drink water and wine, and God combines these
substances with his Divinity and makes them his flesh and his blood. Through the
common and the natural, we obtain what is higher than nature. In the Eucharist
all become "communicants of the Divinity of Jesus" and are reunited and
communicate with one another, like members of a single body. St. John of
Damascus speaks of the Eucharist as the crowning of redemption — as a gift and a
return of imperishability or immortality. About the illumination of the Holy
Gifts he writes: "They are transformed" — μεταποιούνται. They are transformed
through the invocation of, through calling upon the Holy Spirit — επίκλησις —
and "through this calling there appears rain for the new farming, for the
overshadowing force of the Holy Spirit appears."
St. John of
Damascus elucidates the image of the mysterious transformation with a comparison
to the Incarnation itself and to how bread and wine in natural feeding change
into the flesh and blood of the receiver, becoming indistinguishably identical
to the former body. The Eucharistic bread is bi-natural through union with the
Godhead, as a kind of blazing coal which is dissolved by fire — this is
reminiscent of the "doubly-natural coal" in some liturgical texts. This is the
"beginning of the future bread" — the Body of the Lord is spiritual, for it is
born of the Holy Spirit.
Then there is the
image, the prototype of the future age when communion with Christ’s Divinity
will be realized directly, through contemplation. This will be a likening to the
angels. However, man is already above the angels, and is extolled over them, for
God did not become an angel, but a real and perfect man. Also, the angelic
nature is not assimilated by the Logos in his hypostasis. The angels are only
privy to grace and God’s actions, while mankind — in the Eucharist — is given
more, for God is hypostatically united with the Holy
Sacraments.
All of Christ’s
life — but most of all his Holy Cross — was a redemptive deed and a miracle. It
is the Cross which abolished death, resolved sin, revealed resurrection, and
secured a return to ancient bliss. "Christ’s death, or the Cross, vested us in
God’s hypostatic wisdom and force’ [see Galatians 3:22]. In this is the
token of resurrection, as the final "restoration of the fallen." In the saints
this resurrection is already anticipated, for "the saints are not dead." It is
not fitting to call those who rest in the hope of resurrection, with faith in
the Resurrected Commencer of Life, dead. They reigned over the passions and
preserved undamaged the likeness of God’s image according to which they were
created. With their freedom they joined themselves to God and received him into
the abode of their hearts. And having communicated with him, through grace they
became what he is by nature. Slaves by nature, they are friends of Christ by
choice, and sons by grace, for they have become the treasure-house and abode of
God. Therefore, even in death — rather, in sleep — they are alive, for they are
in God, and God is life and light.
As for the angels,
the Scriptures do not say that they will mount the throne of glory with Christ
on the Judgment Day. "They will not co-reign, nor will they be glorified with
him, nor will they sit at the Father’s table." This, however, is said about the
saints. And the angels will stand before them trembling. Even now, the angels
stand before human nature "which sits in Christ on the throne of glory," in fear
and trembling.
Through Christ
"nature ascended from the earth’s lower depths higher than any authority and
mounted the Father’s throne." "We were substantially illumined from the time
when God the Logos became flesh, becoming like us in everything but sin, joining
our nature without mixing, and immutably deifying the flesh through its
inter-communion or circumincession with the Godhead — περιχώρησις. And we
were essentially liberated from the time when the Son of God, and God, being
impassive through his Divinity, suffered through receiving human nature, and
paid our debt, having poured forth on us true and surprising redemption, for the
Son’s blood is mad merciful before the Father and is sacred. We essentially
became immortal from the time when he, who had descended into hell, proclaimed
to the souls who had been bound there from time immemorial: to the captive,
absolution; to the blind, sight; and, having bound the strong one, he rose with
an abundance of power, after making our flesh, which he had received,
imperishable. We were essentially adopted from the time of our birth by water
and the Spirit."
In his
interpretation of Christ’s redemptive deed, St. John of Damascus follows the
Cappadocians. Following St. Gregory of Nazianzus, St. John rejects die Origenist
view of Christ’s sacrifice as a ransom to the devil, but retains individual
features of this theological theory — probably under the influence of St.
Gregory of Nyssa. It is the notion of the devil’s misuse of the power which he
has seized, and the notion of the devil being deceived. "Death approaches, and,
having swallowed the body — the lure — is pierced by the Godhead as if by a
fish-hook. Having tasted the sinless and life-giving body, it perishes and gives
back all whom it had once swallowed."
St. John of
Damascus borrows the notion of the separation of the sexes in the foreknowledge
of the fall from St. Gregory of Nyssa.
St. John of
Damascus wrote towards the end of the Christological epoch, and it is no
accident that his system speaks mostly about Christological themes. He is really
summing up all of Eastern Christology here. God became man to save and renew or
"deify" man. The Incarnation of the Logos is accomplished through the activity
of the Holy Spirit, as everything which exceeds nature’s measure. It is created
by the power of the Holy Spirit who accomplished the very creation. The Holy
Spirit cleanses the pleasing Virgin and gives her the power to receive the
Divinity of the Logos into herself and bear the Logos in the flesh. And then she
was shielded, like some Divine seed, by the Son of God, the hypostatic Power and
Wisdom. And he formed from her chaste blood the beginning of our nature. At the
same time St. John stresses that "the human form did not take shape through
gradual increments, but was completed at once." The entire fullness of the body
was given at once, although it was not fully developed. And a three-fold deed
was accomplished at once: the acceptance, the existence (that is, the origin
itself), and the deification of humanity by the Logos. For Christ’s flesh is
thus the flesh of the Logos — without any temporal separation. The Holy Virgin
did not bear a simple man, but God Incarnate. Therefore, the name
Theotokos "contains the whole history
oikonomia"
In the Incarnation
God the Logos receives not abstract humanity, as it is perceived by pure
speculation, for this would not be Incarnation but a phantom and deceit. Nor did
he receive all of human nature as it is realized in all the human race, for he
did not receive all the hypostases of the human race. But he receives manhood as
it is, in the indivisible. He received it, however, in such a way that by itself
it was not and is not a special or preexisting hypostasis but receives its very
existence in his hypostasis. Manhood in Christ is hypostasized in the very
hypostasis of the Logos. It is enhypostasized to the Logos. And therefore
Christ in his Manhood is similar to people as to numerically different
hypostases of the human race, even though there is no human hypostasis in
him.
At the same time
the non-individualized human nature is enhypostasized to the Logos in
such a way that the sense of the perception is limited to the confines of a
single human hypostasis, the the boundary of numerical peculiarity. But the
human nature, in the fullness of its essential definitions, is hypostasized and
realized only through the power of the Divine hypostasis. It is precisely for
this reason that everything acquired by the Savior through his Manhood is
potentially and dynamically imparted to and divided among the whole human race,
which is consubstantial with him. Human hypostasity does not suppose this
boundary in Christ, although it is impossible to say that Christ is
multi-hypostatic. Human nature in Christ is the Logos’ own humanity, and
therefore it is numerically delimited from all other hypostases. On the other
hand, however, it is precisely a nature, in the totality of the basic or
essential definitions — that is, man’s very composition as such. And to the
extent that it is imparted or accommodated — without being compelled in any way,
but to the extent and by virtue of a living and free reunion with Christ in his
twofold hypostasis — it is realized in the sacraments.
We must make note
of a very important distinction. The Logos’ acceptance or "assumption" of
everything human is discussed in two different senses. It is necessary to
distinguish "natural or essential" assumption and "personal and relative"
assumption. On the basis of the former, the Lord received our nature and
everything natural — he became a man by nature and in fact. In the second sense,
through compassion and love, "taking upon himself the face of another," the Lord
assumed our curse and abandonment, and everything similar which does not belong
to nature "not because he is or became such but because he accepted our person
and placed himself next to us." Here St. John of Damascus is repeating St.
Maximus the Confessor.
When summing up the
struggle with the Monophysites, St. John of Damascus expresses Christological
dogma in terms of his predecessors — "Leontius of Byzantium" and St. Maximus the
Confessor. Everything exists only in hypostatic form, either as a
hypostasis of its own kind or in the hypostasis of another kind. Christ’s
Manhood exists precisely this way — enhypostatically, in the hypostasis
of the Logos. Therefore the hypostasis of the Logos turns out to be "complex"
and "two-fold." Following the thought of "Leontius of Byzantium," St. John of
Damascus insistently stresses that the name of Christ is without question a
unique name. It signifies the unique union of the person of the Logos in his
Divinity and in his Humanity. And there is no, will be no, and can be no other,
second Christ, no other God-Man. The name of Christ receives the Logos with the
Incarnation, in which humanity is anointed by the Divinity of the
Logos.
The two natures are
not separate, for they are inseparable within the union of the hypostasis —
contrary to the thought of Nestorius and the rest of their "demonic mob"
— and they are not mixed, but abide — contrary to Dioscorus and Eutyches and
their "Godless followers." The unmixability and immutability of natures and the
reciprocal imparting of properties or the reciprocal penetration of natures are
characteristic for hypostatic union — in an equal degree. At the same time
everything said about two natures is said about a united and identical
hypostasis. Therefore, although the natures are enumerated, the enumeration does
not separate.
In Christ manhood
is deified — not through transformation, change, or mixing, of course, but
through manhood’s complete union and permeation with the flame of the Godhead,
which is all-penetrating and imparts perfection to its flesh without striking it
with weaknesses and passions, as the sun which illuminates us does not damage
itself. St. John considers the circumincession — περίχώρησίς — of natures as a
unilateral permeation of humanity with Divinity, as "deification" — "not on the
side of the flesh, but from the Godhead." For it is impossible that flesh
penetrate through the Godhead, "but Divine nature, once it penetrated flesh,
gave flesh an ineffable penetration into the Godhead, which is what union is."
Flesh, which by itself is mortal, becomes Divine and life-giving through the
activity of the Godhead. And the will is deified — not mixing, but uniting with
the Divine and almighty will and becoming the will of God Incarnate. By virtue
of this, the worship of the One Incarnate Logos is fitting — and the flesh of
the Lord is worshipped as something united with the Godhead, "in the single
hypostasis of the Logos." "I worship both natures in Christ jointly," exclaims
St. John of Damascus, "because the Godhead united with his flesh. I am afraid to
touch the burning coal because the fire is united with
wood."
St. John of
Damascus bases his defense of and justification for the veneration of ikons on
this circumincession — περίχωρησις — of natures and the deification of
the flesh. “Along with the emperor and God I worship the purple mantle of the
body,” he writes, “not as clothing and not as the fourth person! No! But as
something united with God and abiding without change, as that which anointed it
— the Godhead. For the nature of the flesh does not become the Godhead, but as
the Logos became flesh immutably, remaining what it was, so the flesh became the
Logos without losing what it had but becoming identical to the Logos
hypostatically."
Following St.
Maximus the Confessor, St. John develops the doctrine of the God-Man’s two wills
and two energies. The Monothelite storm had not yet abated, and it was still
necessary to elucidate and justify the definition, the oros, of the Sixth
Ecumenical Council (680). Will and energy belong to nature, and not to the
hypostasis. It is also necessary to clearly distinguish "natural will" and
"elective will." The property of or the "capacity for willing" belongs to man’s
nature, and in this God’s image is proclaimed, for freedom and will are
characteristic of the Godhead by nature. But the defmiteness of will and
volition, the "image of volition," does not belong to nature. And mankind has
the possibility of choice and decision — της γνωμής. Man has this possibility,
but not God, to whom it is not fitting to ascribe choice in the true sense, for
God does not think things over, does not choose, does not waver, does not change
his mind, "does not advise" — God is a being who is unquestionably Omniscient.
Like St. Maximus, St. John of Damascus infers from the two natures in Christ the
two wills, for the Lord "also accepted our will in nature." One must not,
however, speak of choice and reflection in the proper sense when discussing the
Savior’s human will, for it was not characterized by ignorance.The Savior did
not have "certain inclinations of the will."
By virtue of the
hypostatic union, the Lord’s soul knew everything, and did not in its desire
become separated from the decision of his Divine will, but rather coincided with
it in the object of desire — freely, of course. Freely set in motion, the Lord’s
soul freely willed precisely what his Divine will willed to will. This was not
compulsion, for the flesh was moved not only at the beck of the Logos, as was
the case in the prophets. The two wills of the Lord were distinguished not in
mood but by nature. But the Lord did not have hesitation and choice, for by
nature he had an inclination to the good. He possessed the good by his very
nature, for in him human nature returned to a natural state from its
anti-natural one — and virtue is natural. At the same time, human nature was not
only preserved, but fortified as well. Christ, however, did not perform what is
characteristic of man as a simple because he was not only a man but also God.
That is why his sufferings are salutary and life-giving. However, he also did
not perform those deeds which are characteristic of the Godhead in a way which
is characteristic of God because he was not only God but also a man. His human
activity was sympathetic with the Divine, and his Divine activity was
sympathetic with the human, with the actions of the flesh — both when the flesh
was allowed to suffer and when salutary acts were performed through the flesh.
"Each nature in Christ acts with the participation of the other," St.
John concludes. In this sense it is possible to speak of a united "God-Man
activity," as Pseudo-Dionysius spoke.
What has been said
about the will must also be said about the mind, about knowledge, and about
wisdom. In conformity with the two natures the Lord had two minds, and it is
through the human mind, as an intermediary, that the Logos is united with the
coarseness of the flesh — not, however, in simple co-habitation, but in
in-dwelling. Having accepted, on the one hand, the human mind, Christ thought,
and will always think, like a man. On the other hand, "Christ’s holy mind
performs its natural actions, thinking and understanding that it is the mind of
God, and that all creation worships it, remembering at the same time his sojourn
and suffering on earth. Christ’s mind participates in the activity of the
Divinity of the Logos, in the Logos’ arranging and controlling of everything,
thinking and understanding and arranging not like a normal human mind but like a
mind hypostatically joined to God which receives the title of the mind of
God."
With total
resoluteness St. John of Damascus asserts the fullness and perfection of
Christ’s human knowledge — and from his very conception — so that in reality
there was no learning or growth. The opposite view seemed to him to be Nestorian
abuse. He connects his judgment in the given question with the characteristics
of the will, perceiving in the perfection of knowledge the condition and cause
for the mind’s unwavering steadfastness. At the same time he deduces it from his
general notion of the reciprocal penetration of natures in
Christ.
The Savior’s
humanity in general is permeated with the Godhead — not only is it favored or
anointed but it is also deified through hypostatic union, through the acceptance
as the Logos’ own property into the Hypostasis of the Logos. Therefore, one must
not speak of the ignorance of the Lord through his manhood. Therefore, one can
speak of Christ’s success through humanity only in the impersonal sense — either
in the sense that he displayed the wisdom existing in him more and more as he
grew corporeally; or in the sense that he assumed our merely human success
"relatively." And if the Lord prayed, it was not for his own sake and not
because he had a real need for something and had to turn to God the Father. But
rather because he had assumed our person, was "imitating in himself what was
properly ours," and in order to fulfill every truth for us — that is, to pave
the way of ascent to God for us with his holy mind.
St. John of
Damascus extends this explanation to the prayer at Gethsemane as well. In it he
sees an example and an image, and at the same time a manifestation of the
natural resistance to death, even though it was voluntarily willed and accepted
by the Savior. Christ accepted and assumed everything in our nature in order to
illumine it. Consequently, he also accepted the natural and guiltless passions
—φυσικά και αδιάβλητα πάθη — that is, the suffering of the soul and the body.
And he really suffered, grieved, and was afraid. However, these "guiltless
passions” in Christ were at the same time both in conformity with nature and
above nature — κατά φύσιν καί υπέρ φυσιν, for everything in Christ was voluntary
and not forced, everything was there by his free tolerance, and nothing natural
in Christ preceded his will. By his own will he hungered and thirsted. He was
afraid voluntarily. He was tempted by the Devil, but from without, externally,
not through his thoughts. There was nothing of the slave, nothing submissive in
Christ, for how could the Lord be a slave. In Christ manhood ceases to be
servile. But he accepted the image or form of a slave for our sake and delivers
us from slavery.
The Lord suffers
and dies on the Cross for our sake. He suffers, of course, through his manhood —
that is, what suffers is his suffering human nature, body and soul. The Godhead,
through the Incarnation of the Logos, "arrived" not privy to suffering. And the
Lord died willfully because he "was not subject to death," because death is the
wages of sin, and there was neither sin nor deceit in him — "…and there was no
deceit in his mouth" [Isaiah 53:9]. Therefore, his death was a sacrifice.
In suffering, however, as in death the hypostatic union was not violated. Christ
was never abandoned by God — that is, by his own Divinity. In the struggle at
Gethsemane he prayed "as one who had assumed our person," as one speaking "from
and in our place." Properly speaking, it was not Christ who was abandoned, but
we who were forsaken and neglected. Christ hung on the Cross in the flesh, but
abided in two natures. And when his pure soul separated from his body in death,
the hypostasis did not divide, but remained inseparably with both, which abided
equally in it. Thus, having separated in death, having separated "as to place,"
the two natures remained united in the hypostasis. The hypostasis of the Logos
was the hypostasis of both the body and the soul. Neither the body nor the soul
of Christ received an isolated existence for one instant; that is, a special
hypostasis. And since neither nature had its own hypostasis, the two natures
were preserved in the single hypostasis of the Logos. To this St. John of
Damascus adds another distinction between “decay” and “through decay” — φθορά
and διαφθορα, understanding under the former the “passive state” of the body —
τα πάθη — and under the latter decomposition or disintegration into elements.
The body of the Lord did not experience this διαφθορα. In this sense the body of
the Lord is imperishable or, rather, non-diaphthoric from the beginning. But in
the first sense, contrary to the mindless Julian, the body of the Lord becomes
imperishable only in the Resurrection. And through the Resurrection of the Lord,
who became the source of resurrection for us, imperishability and immortality
were granted to us — in hope.
In the death of the
Lord his deified soul descends into hell with a word of good news and is
worshipped. And, having freed the prisoners, he returns from the midst of the
mortal and rises from the dead — in the same body, a body which is now glorious
and without weaknesses, but without having removed anything of g: the human
nature. And in this glorified body he sits corporeally at the right hand of the
Father — that is, in the glory and honor which is ever his as the consubstantial
Son. He mounts the throne "as God and Man, willing our salvation," without
forgetting his deeds on earth. Thus it is and will be on the day of the dreadful
yet glorious Second Coming, the day of universal resurrection — in
imperishability.
The Defense of the Holy
Ikons.
The controversy over ikons
was not a ceremonial dispute. It was a dogmatic controversy, and theological
depths were revealed in it. Secular power began the controversy, but
iconoclastic sympathies also proved to be strong among the clergy, even among
the bishops. Iconoclastic bishops were not only currying the favor of the
emperors — they frequently acted by conviction. For this reason, the situation
demanded a theological basis for the veneration of ikons.
People disputed the
image of Christ first of all — his depictability or "describability." From the
very beginning the defenders of the ikons, the iconodules, reduced this question
to its Christological premises. The veneration of ikons was not established in
the Church immediately. In any event, it did not occupy a noticeable place in
Christian piety in the first centuries. Even among the writers of the fourth
century we find only rare, occasional mention of holy ikons — and these were
either Biblical episodes or else portrayals of the "ordeals" of the
martyrs.
There are no
"ikons" — in the true sense of the word — among the most ancient paintings known
to us. These were partly symbolic signs — the anchor, the dove, the "fish" — and
allegories, usually parables from the Gospels. They were partly prototypes of
the Old Testament — "types." At times they were apocalyptic visions. These ikons
had primarily a decorative significance, sometimes a didactic one. "For what the
word of a narration offers to the ears, a silent painting shows through
imitation," wrote St. Basil the Great. Subsequently, these words by St. Basil
are almost literally repeated by St. John of Damascus and by Pope Gregory —
quod legentibus scriptura, hoc idiotis praestatpictura cernentibus. The
counsel of St. Nilus of Sinai is very characteristic: "And let the hand of the
most skillful painter fill the holy temple with the histories of the Old and New
Testaments so that even those who do not know literacy and cannot read the Holy
Scriptures may commit the courageous ordeals of those who truly served God to
memory" (Letter 4, 58).
The didactic
explanations do not, of course, exhaust the essence of ikon-painting. The
ancient paintings were, however, really an original kind of "illuminated Bible"
— Biblia picta — in selected fragments and episodes. Ikons in the narrow
sense of the word are connected not so much with Church painting as with
representations of holy subjects. Most important was the veneration of the
"Image Not Made By Hands." Because of a paucity of historical data we cannot
trace the early history iconography in all its details. By the end of the sixth
century ikons were already in universal use.
However, we do know
about sharp objections to ikons. First of all, we must recall the opinion of
Eusebius of Caesarea in his letter to Constantia, the sister of Constantine the
Great. Eusebius considered the pictorial representation of Christ to be
impossible and impermissible. This was subsequently explained as his "Arianism."
Actually, Eusebius came to his "iconoclastic" conclusions entirely consistently
— from Origenistic premises. "Of course, you seek the ikon which depicts him in
the image of a slave and in the flesh, in which he clothed himself for our sake.
But we are taught that it is dissolved by the glory of the Godhead, and the
mortal is swallowed by life. In Christ the visible, as it were, perceptibly
melted away in the brilliance of his Divinity, and is therefore beyond
representation in deathly lines and paints. And the attention of the true
Christian must not be directed to Christ’s sensual or earthly image. He already
anticipates a vision of the future age, face to face." In Eusebius1 argument one
plainly feels the sharp distinction between the "sensual" and the "spiritual"
which was so characteristic for Origen himself. Only the "unlearned" are
occupied with recollections of the earthly and kenotic life of the
Savior, the days of his flesh, the Cross. The true "gnostic" contemplates his
Divine Glory and is distracted from his oikonomic kenosis. Moreover, for
Origen, Christ, through his ascension, is "no longer a man." Origen’s pathos of
abstract spirituality makes any return to sensual realism corrupting. Eusebius
was hardly alone when he drew "iconoclastic" conclusions from Origen’s system.
One may think that other "Origenists" reasoned the same way. On the other hand,
opponents of Origenism — St. Epiphanius, for example — came to similar
conclusions. With St. Epiphanius this was a relapse into Judaism -see the
prohibitions of the Council of Elvira in 306. Subsequently it was the Jews who
attacked the veneration of ikons. From the sixth and seventh centuries we know
of a number of apologetical works in defense of the holy ikons directed
precisely against the Jews. The testimony of Leontius, the bishop of Neapolis in
Cyprus and a famous hagiographer, is especially characteristic. His conclusions
were subsequently repeated and embellished by St. John of Damascus (see the
Apologia of Stephen of Bostra). The ikons are placed in churches for the
sake of grandeur, for remembrance, and for veneration — προσ άνάμνησιν και
τιμήν. And Leontius explains that the veneration concerns the ikons themselves.
"I trace and draw Christ and the sufferings of Christ in the churches and homes,
on squares, and on ikons, and on linen, and in pantries, and on clothing, and in
any place, so that by clearly seeing them one might remember and not forget… And
as you, in worshipping the book of the Law, worship not the nature of the hides
and ink but the words of God found in it, so do I worship the ikon of Christ.
Not the nature of the wood and the paints — Heaven forbid. But, in worshipping
the inanimate ikon of Christ, through it I think to embrace Christ himself and
worship him. We Christians, by corporeally kissing an ikon of Christ, or of an
apostle, or of a martyr, spiritually kiss Christ himself or his martyr." This is
no longer merely a didactic justification of ikons. Leontius is emphasizing the
hieratic realism of the images. And that "recollection" of which he speaks is
not only the psychological movement of the soul.
On the very eve of
the iconoclastic explosion, the Council of Trullo or the Quinisext Council (692)
established the basic principles of iconography in the famous Eighty-Second
Canon. "In some pictures of the venerable ikons, a lamb is painted to which the
Precursor points his finger, which is received as a type of grace, indicating
beforehand through the Law, our true Lamb, Christ our God. Embracing therefore
the ancient types and shadows as symbols of the truth and patterns given to the
Church, we prefer ‘grace and truth,’ receiving it as the fulfillment of
the Law. In order therefore that ‘that which is perfect1 may be delineated to
the eyes of all, at least in colored expression, we decree that the figure in
human form — κατά ανθρωπίνον χαρακτήρα — of the Lamb who takes away the sin of
the world, Christ our God, be henceforth exhibited in ikons instead of the
ancient lamb, so that all may understand by means of it the depths of the
humiliation of the Logos of God, and that we may recall to our memory his
conversation in the flesh, his passion and salutary death, and his redemption
which was wrought for the whole world." The same council in its Seventy-Third
Canon refers to the veneration of the Cross. "Since the life-giving Cross has
shown to us Salvation, we should be careful that we render due honor to that by
which we were saved from the ancient fall. Wherefore, in mind, in word, in
feeling giving veneration — προσκυνησιν — to it, we command that the figure of
the Cross, which some have placed on the floor, be entirely removed therefrom,
lest the trophy of the victory won for us be desecrated by the trampling under
foot of those who walk over it. Therefore those who from this moment on
represent on the pavement the sign of the Cross, we decree are to be cut off."
Characteristic here, especially in the Eighty-Second Canon, is the sharp
contrast between the Old and the New Testament. "Grace" and "truth" and "the
perfect" — the stress here is precisely on evangelical realism, “on the memory
of his life in the flesh” — προς μνήμην της ένσάρκου πολιτείας. The Council of
Trullo consolidates the sacred-historical realism already established in
ikon-painting, and abolishes the archaic symbolism of the Old Testament "symbols
and types." The "outlines" or symbols and types were realized and fulfilled, and
"grace and truth" appeared. And the ikon must not prophesy as much as "recall."
Here is given the theme of the later theological defense of the holy
ikons.
The prohibition of
holy ikons in the early eighth century was issued by the emperor. It is hard to
determine his motives precisely. In any case, in the actions of the iconoclasts
we can detect a coherent program of Church reform and social reform. It does not
take shape immediately. And it was possible to reach similar conclusions from
different premises — it was possible to resort to the same practical measures
from different motives. However, the basic tendency of the iconoclastic movement
is entirely clear. This is the fallacious pathos of ineffability, the pathos of
the gap between the "spiritual" and the "sensual" — one could say a fallacious
religious symbolism from the temptation of the holy ikons’ historical realism.
Ultimately it is a lack of feeling for the sacred realism of history. The
defenders of the veneration of ikons, the iconodules, realized this at once.
Even the patriarch Germanus divined a kind of Docetism in iconoclasm — his
letter to Thomas of Claudiopolis, written before open persecution began,
witnesses to this. Later, George of Cyprus flatly declared in an argument with
the iconoclastic bishop Cosmas: "He who thinks like you, blasphemes Christ, the
Son of God, and does not confess his oikonomia in the flesh" — την
ενσαρκον οίκονομίαν. We find no coherent system of dogmatic conclusions in the
first defenders of the veneration of ikons. It is perfectly clear, however, that
for them the possibility of ikon-painting is connected precisely with the
reality of the history of the Gospel and the truth of the
Incarnation.
St. John of
Damascus for the first time attempts to develop the defense of the holy ikons
into a theological justification. Here he relies on earlier apologetic
experience — probably on Leontius of Cyprus most of all. Unfortunately these
apologies of the seventh century are known to us only in later excerpts. St.
John of Damascus bases the possibility of sacred iconography on a general notion
of the relationship between the spiritual and the material, between the
invisible and the visible, as it is revealed to us in the light of the
Incarnation.To him iconoclasm is a land of Docetism, an insensitivity to the
mystery of the God-Man, and, in a sense, a kind of pre-Christian frame of
mind.
God, through the
pure spirituality of his nature, is invisible, "infinite," and therefore
"indescribable” and undepictable. He has no actual image in the material world.
One must remember that περιγραφή means at once both “description” and
“limitation” — hence the remark about “infiniteness." However, even the
invisible can be described in word, at least symbolically. In general, an image
is the "disclosure and portrayal of what is hidden." In this sense, a visible
depiction of the invisible is possible "so that a corporeal image displays a
certain incorporeal, mental contemplation." Such were the prophetic images, the
Old Testamental "Tabernacle" itself — the "ikon of all creation" shown on the
mountain, in the words of St. Gregory of Nyssa — the Ark of the Covenant and the
Cherubim over it, as standing before God. God appeared in images in the Old
Testament, and Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, and all the prophets saw an image of God,
not the very essence of God. The Burning Bush is an image of the Theotokos. This
type of image is symbolic.
In creation itself
there are certain natural images which show us, however dimly, the Divine
revelations — created analogies to the Trinity, for example. Therefore,
discussion of God is generally possible, although it always remains imprecise
and approximate, since knowledge of the invisible is mediated by visible signs.
St. John of Damascus distinguishes several kinds of images. God created the
first image himself. First he bore the Only-Begotten, "his living, natural ikon,
the perfect outline of his eternity." Secondly, he created man in his image and
likeness. One is connected with the other. God also appeared in the Old
Testament "as a man" — see especially Daniel’s vision. "They saw not God’s
nature then, but a prototype and depiction of the One before whom they were to
appear — "typos" and "ikon" For the Son and the Invisible Logos of
God intended to become a true man in order to be united with our nature and
visible upon the earth." The second kind of image is God’s Eternal Counsel about
the world; that is, the sum total of images and examples or "paradigms" of that
which has been and will be created. The third kind of image is man, an image "by
imitation." Then St. John of Damascus speaks of prophetic images, created
analogies "for the sake of our understanding," memorable signs, and the images
of memory.
"And the law, and
everything which is according to the law, was somehow a shadowy foretelling of
the future image — that is, of our service, and our service is an image of
future blessings. And reality itself, the Heavenly Jerusalem, is something
immaterial and not made by hands. Everything was for its sake: that which is
according to the law, and that which is according to our service." Thus, St.
John of Damascus reduces the question about the possibility of iconography to
the basic problem of appearance and Revelation.
The relationship
between the visible and the invisible changes substantially with the coming of
Christ. "In antiquity God, incorporeal and not having form, was never
portrayed," St. John writes, continuing: "now, after God has appeared in flesh
and lived among men, we portray the visible in him." God appeared and became
visible. Therefore, let us portray him — no longer merely symbolically or in a
model, but in the direct sense of a descriptive reproduction of what was. "I do
not portray the invisible Godhead, but God’s flesh which has been seen." In
antiquity Israel did not see God, but we saw, and see, the glory of the Lord.
"We have beheld his glory, the glory as of the only Son from the Father"
(John 1:14). "I saw God’s human image, and my soul was saved. I
contemplate God’s image as Jacob saw — but differently, for he saw the
immaterial prototype of the future with the eyes of the mind, while I
contemplate that which recalls the Visible in the flesh."
Thus, for St. John
of Damascus, iconography is based first of all on the very fact of the
historical Gospel, on the fact of the Incarnation of the Logos, who is
accessible and subject to description — "Write everything, in word and in
paints." St. John brings these two kinds of "description" together. "An ikon
is a reminder. And what the book is for those who are trained in letters, so
the ikon is for the untrained. And what the word is to the ear, so the ikon is
to the eye — mentally we are joined to it." Through this we illumine our
senses of sight and hearing. We see the ikon of our Lord and are illumined
through it. "Books for the illiterate." By this St. John of Damascus means not
only that for illiterate ikons take the place of speech and the word. But rather
he also establishes a general category for any kind of "description." After all,
even the Scriptures are are "descriptions," and a kind of verbal portrayal of
the "Invisible" and the Divine. Iconography is as possible as the Scriptures —
through the fact of Revelation, through the reality of visible theophanies. In
both cases "we ascend through corporeal contemplation to the
spiritual."
The Old Testament
prohibition against making "any likeness," which the iconoclasts cited before
anything else, had in St. John’s mind a temporary significance and force, and
was an educational measure for cutting off the Judaic inclination towards
idolatry. But now the upbringing has ceased, the educational process has peaked,
and not all of the Law retains its force in the kingdom of grace. "But you saw
no form. Take good heed to yourselves. You saw no form on the day that the Lord
spoked to you at Horeb out of the midst of the fire." St. John of Damascus cites
this text from Deuteronomy (4:12,15) and asks: "What is being
mysteriously demonstrated here? It is obvious that when you see that the
Incorporeal has become a man for your sake, you will make an image of his human
aspect."
The invisible God
is really indescribable and not portrayable. But he became visible and
describable through the Incarnation. "He accepted the nature, and the volume,
and the appearance, and the color of flesh. When the Invisible becomes visible
in flesh, you will depict a likeness of what has been seen. When the
incorporeal, which has no form, no quantity, and no size, which is incomparable
in view of the superiority of its nature, which Exists in God’s image — when he
accepts the form of a slave and humbles himself in it, down to quantity and
size, and vests himself in a corporeal image, draw him on a board, and on it put
for contemplation the One who permitted that he be seen." And St. John of
Damascus concludes: "And we wish to contemplate his
features."
At the same time,
by virtue of the hypostatic union, the "flesh became Logos," as well, so that
"the body of God is God." "As that which unites with fire becomes fire, not by
nature but by union through burning and communion, so too, the flesh of the
Incarnate Son of God." Consequently, a description of Christ in his visible and
human image is a genuine portrayal of God himself. God is depictable in the true
sense only through the Incarnation, but the image of the Incarnate One is the
image of God, and not merely the image of a body. St. John does not develop this
thought in detail, but it directly follows from his general Christological
premises: the acceptance of the human into the hypostasis of the Logos is
deification, and consequently all of what is human in Christ is a living image
of what is Divine.
Against the
iconoclast it was necessary to defend not only iconography but even more the
veneration and of ikons — προσκυνησις. If the "description" or "portrayal" of
God is even possible, is it permitted? Is it useful? St. John of Damascus
answers directly, again citing the Incarnation. The Incarnation of the Logos
illumines the flesh, "deifies" it, as it were, and thus makes it worthy of being
venerated — not as matter, of course, but by virtue of its union with God. "I do
not worship matter, but the Creator of matter, who became material for my sake
and who deigned to reside in matter, and who made my salvation through matter.
And I will not cease venerating the matter through which my salvation was
accomplished." This also concerns Christ’s flesh ("I worship the body’s purple
mantle") and to all "the remaining matter through which my salvation was
accomplished," for it, too, is full of Divine power and grace — the Cross, the
Sepulchre, Golgotha, the Gospels — which, after all, are also a kind of ikon, an
image or description of the Incarnate Logos.
Matter in general
is not something low or despicable, but a creation of God. Ever since the
uncontainable Logos was contained in it, matter has been worthy of praise and
veneration. Therefore, material images are not only possible, but also
necessary, and have a direct and positive religious significance, for "our
nature was glorified and moved into imperishability." This justifies iconography
and the veneration of ikons in general — the ikons of the saints as a triumph
and a sign of victory, "an inscription in memory of victory." "For this reason
the deaths of the saints are also celebrated, and churches are raised to them,
and ikons are painted." In the Old Testament human nature was still under
censure — death was considered a punishment, and the body of the dead impure.
But now everything has been renewed. "We have been illumined since the time when
God the Logos became flesh and, without mixture joined with our
nature."
Man was adopted by
God and received imperishability as a gift. And properly speaking the saints are
not dead. "After he who is Life itself and the Initiator of Life was numbered
among the dead, we no longer call ‘dead’ those who are resting in hope of
resurrection with faith in him." They are alive with the audacity to stand
before God. The morning star has already risen in our hearts. And the grace of
the Holy Spirit is present in the bodies and souls of the saints, during life
and in death, and in depictions of them and on ikons (whose grace and energy
work miracles). And human nature is extolled higher than the angelic ranks, for
the God-Man sits on the Father’s throne. "The saints are the sons of God, sons
of the kingdom, the co-heirs of God and of Christ. Therefore, I venerate the
saints and glorify them: slaves and friends, and the co-heirs of Christ — slaves
by nature, friends by choice, sons and heirs by Divine grace." For by grace they
became that which he is by nature. This is the triumphant army of the heavenly
king.
St. John of
Damascus distinguishes various kinds of worship. First of all comes service —
κατά λατρείαν, which is fitting for God only, but has various types and degrees
— servile worship, worship out of love and ecstasy, worship in the form of
thanksgiving. Otherwise, it is fitting to honor created things only for the
Lord’s sake. Thus it is fitting to honor the saints, for God rests in them. It
is fitting to honor everything connected with the cause of salvation — Mount
Sinai, Nazareth, the manger in Bethlehem, the Holy Sepulchre, the blessed garden
of Geth -semane, "for they are the receptacle of Divine activity." It is also
fitting to venerate one another, "as those who have their destinies in God and
are created in the image of God." Such honor ascends to the source of all
goodness, God.
St. John of
Damascus does not settle the question of the painting and veneration of ikons in
his writings. Not everything in his writings is entirely clear. It was he,
however, whom later writers followed. And the fundamental principles of the
doctrine of veneration of ikons were expressed by St. John: ikons are possible
only by virtue of the Incarnation, and iconography is inseparably connected with
the renewal and deification of human nature which were accomplished in Christ.
Hence, the close connection between the veneration of ikons and the veneration
of the saints, especially in their holy and imperishable relics. In other words,
the doctrine of the veneration of ikons has a Christological basis and
significance. So it was before St. John of Damascus, and so reasoned his
successors.
The Seventh Ecumenical
Council 787.
The history of the struggle
against iconoclasm is a long and complex history, a history that develops the
original iconoclastic theology into a sophisticated philosophical vision. The
Church was sorely disrupted, sorely rent over the dispute — indeed, bloodshed,
violence, and compulsion from the imperial authorities reign throughout the long
history from 726 until the ultimate victory of the Church over iconoclasm in 843
under Patriarch Methodius. In 787 Empress Irene managed to convoke a council
which expressed the theology of the Church on the dispute, a council which is
accepted as the Seventh Ecumenical Council. Although the Church would not gain
its final victory over iconoclasm until 843, this council utilized as a base the
theology of St. John of Damascus. Just as the iconoclastic position is more
sophisticated than is often realized, so also the position of the iconodules as
expressed in the brief theological position at the Seventh Ecumenical Council is
far more sophisticated and philosophical than it first appears. The basic
position as sketched by St. John of Damascus was developed more deeply and more
penetratingly by other theologians — especially by Patriarch Nicephorus who
succeeded Patriarch Tarasius in 806 but was exiled by Emperor Leo V in 815 with
the resurgence of iconoclasm. The Seventh Ecumenical Council does, however,
provide the essential position of the Church on a subject little understood in
the Latin West — indeed, the theology of ikons is, as it were, still not fully
grasped by theologians from the Western Christian
tradition.
The very convoking
of this council was cloaked in intrigue. Emperor Leo IV (775-780), an
iconoclastic emperor, died in 780. The entire governmental apparatus was in the
hands of iconoclasts. Any thought of a restoration of a theology of ikons seemed
remote, if not impossible. The famous iconoclastic Council of Constantinople in
754 appeared unbreakable. The army was still under the command of many of the
officers who had served under the most iconoclastic emperor of all, Emperor
Constantine V Copronymos (741-775), and they were dedicated iconoclasts and also
dedicated to the memory of Emperor Constantine V. But when Irene assumed power
in 780 in the name of her minor son, Constantine VI, she was determined to
restore a theology of ikons and annul the work of the iconoclastic council of
754. She began to change the personnel of the government, replacing the
iconoclastic ministers with those she knew were supportive of iconodulism. Pope
Hadrian I was informed of her intention to convoke an ecumenical council, an act
of which he thoroughly approved. Patriarch Paul IV, an iconoclast, was replaced
by Irene’s governmental secretary, Tarasius. At the beginning of 786 notice was
given throughout the empire of the scheduled council. Rome sent two delegates —
an archpriest Peter and the hegoumen Peter the Greek. Approximately three
hundred and fifty bishops from the Byzantine empire proper attended. The council
opened in late July or early August of 786 in Constantinople but iconoclastic
elements within the imperial guard forced their way into the church with swords
drawn and disbanded the council. Irene and Patriarch Tarasius realized they had
to take even greater caution in preparing for the council. Irene transferred the
iconoclastic army in Con -stantinople to Asia Minor with the pretext that a
campaign against the Arabs was to commence. The army in Thrace was supportive of
the iconodule position and these troops were brought to Constantinople. New
invitations were sent in May of 787 — the new council would meet in
Nicaea.
The Seventh
Ecumenical Council acted swiftly under Patriarch Tarasius — it opened on the
twenty-fourth of September and completed its business by the thirteenth of
October. Eight sessions were held. However, the first three sessions had to
confront the question of how to handle those iconoclastic bishops, especially
those who participated in the iconoclastic council of 754. Numerous monks were
present and it was they who opposed the council’s decision to accept the
iconoclastic bishops once they had renounced their opposition to ikons. The
fourth and fifth sessions examined the question of ikons from the evidence from
Biblical and patristic sources. The sixth session took up the matter demanded by
Pope Hadrian I that the iconoclastic council of 754 be condemned. It was at the
seventh session that the oros, the definition of faith, was proclaimed.
Twenty-two disciplinary canons were promulgated. Empress Irene invited the
fathers of the council to conduct the eighth session in Constantinople at the
Magnaura Palace. Irene personally addressed the council, had the definition of
faith read and proclaimed, and then signed it — prior to the signing by her son
Constantine VI and the two papal legates. The Byzantine Church gained a period
of relative peace for approximately thirty years before the resurgence of
iconoclasm. The reception of the acts of the council did not fare well in the
Latin West, for Charlemagne challenged them and had his Prankish theologians
write a response to the Seventh Ecumenical Council — the Libri
Carolini.
The Definition
of Faith.
"The holy, great,
and Ecumenical Council which by the grace of God and the will of the pious and
Christ-loving Emperors, Constantine and Irene, his mother, was gathered together
for the second time at Nicaea, the illustrious metropolis of Bithynia, in the
holy church of God which is named Sophia, having followed the tradition of the
Catholic Church, has defined as follows:"
"Christ our Lord,
who has bestowed upon us the light of the knowledge of himself, and has redeemed
us from the darkness of idolatrous madness, having espoused to himself the Holy
Catholic Church without spot or defect, promised that he would so preserve her,
and gave his word to this effect to his holy disciples when he said: ‘Lo! I am
with you always, even unto the end of the world,’ which promise he made, not
only to them, but to us also who should believe in his name through their word.
But some, not considering this gift, and having become fickle through the
temptation of the wily enemy, have fallen from the right faith. For, withdrawing
from the traditions of the Catholic Church, they have erred from the truth and
as the proverb says The husbandmen have gone astray in their own husbandry and
have gathered in their hands nothingness’ because certain priests, priests in
name only, not in fact, had dared to speak against the God-approved ornament of
the sacred monuments, of whom God cries aloud through the prophet, ‘Many pastors
have corrupted my vineyard, they have polluted my portion.’
"
"And, following
profane men, led astray by their carnal sense, they have calumniated the Church
of Christ our God which he has espoused to himself, and have failed to
distinguish between holy and profane, styling the ikons of our Lord and of his
Saints by die same name as the statues of diabolical idols. Seeing which things,
our Lord God — not willing to behold his people corrupted by such manner of
plague — has of his good pleasure called us together, the chief of his priests,
from every quarter, moved with a divine zeal and brought hither by the will of
our princes, Constantine and Irene, to the end that the traditions of the
Catholic Church may receive stability by our common decree. Therefore, with all
diligence, making a thorough examination and analysis, and following the trend
of the truth, we diminish nothing, we add nothing, but we preserve unchanged all
things which pertain to the Catholic Church, and following the Six Ecumenical
Councils, especially that which met in this illustrious metropolis of Nicaea, as
also that which was afterwards gathered together in the God-protected imperial
city" [the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed follows].
"We detest and
anathematize Arms and all the sharers of his absurd opinion. Also Macedonius and
those who, following him, are well called ‘Foes of the Spirit’ (Pneumatomachi).
We confess that our Lady, St. Mary, is properly and truly Theotokos
because she was the Mother after the flesh of One Person of the Holy Trinity,
that is, Christ our God, as the Council of Ephesus has already defined when it
cast out of the Church the impious Nestorius with his colleagues because he
taught that there were two Persons [in Christ]. With the Fathers of this council
we confess that he who was incarnate of the immaculate Theotokos and
Ever-Virgin Mary has two natures, recognizing him as perfect God and perfect
man, as also the Council of Chalcedon has promulgated, expelling from the divine
Atrium — αυλής — as blasphemers, Eutyches and Dioscorus, and placing in the same
category Severus, Peter and a number of others, blaspheming in various ways.
Moreover, with these we anathematize the fables of Origen, Evagrius, and
Didymus, in accordance with the decision of the Fifth Council held at
Constantinople. We affirm that in Christ there are two will and two operations
according to the reality of each nature, as also the Sixth Council, held at
Constantinople, taught, casting out Sergius, Honorius, Cyrus, Pyrrhus, Macarius,
and those who agree with them, and all those who are unwilling to be
reverent."
"To make our
confession short, we keep unchanged all the ecclesiastical traditions handed
down to us, whether in writing or verbally, one of which is the making of
pictorial representations, agreeable to the history of the preaching of the
Gospel, a tradition useful in many respects but especially in this, that so the
Incarnation of the Logos of God is shown forth as real and not merely imaginary,
for these have mutual indications and without doubt have also mutual
significations."
"We, therefore,
following the royal pathway and the divinely inspired authority of our Holy
Fathers and the traditions of the Catholic Church — for, as we all know, the
Holy Spirit indwells in her — define with all certitude and accuracy that just
as the figure of the precious and life-giving Cross, so also the venerable and
holy ikons, as well in painting and mosaic as of other fit materials, should be
set forth in the holy churches of God, and on the sacred utensils and on the
vestments and on hangings and in pictures both in houses and by the wayside,
that is, the ikon of our Lord God and Savior Jesus Christ, of our spotless Lady,
Theotokos, of the honorable Angels, of all Saints and of all pious
people. For by so much more frequently as they are seen in iconographic
representation, by so much more readily are men lifted up to the memory of their
prototypes, and to a longing after them. And to these should be given due
salutation and honorable reverence — άσπασμόν και τιμητικήν προσκυνησιν — not
indeed that true worship of faith — Xarpeiav — which pertains alone to the
divine nature. But to these, as to the figure of the precious and life-giving
Cross and to the holy Gospels and to the other holy objects, incense and lights
may be offered according to ancient pious custom. For the honor which is paid to
the ikon passes on to that which the ikon represents, and he who reveres the
ikon reveres in it the subject represented. For thus the teaching of our holy
Fathers, that is the tradition of the Catholic Church, which from one end of the
earth to the other has received the Gospel, is strengthened. Thus we follow
Paul, who spoke in Christ, and the whole divine Apostolic company and the holy
Fathers, holding fast the traditions which we have received. So we sing
prophetically the triumphal hymns of the Church, ‘Rejoice greatly, Ο daughter of
Zion; Shout, Ο daughter of Jerusalem. Rejoice and be glad with all your heart.
The Lord has taken away from you the oppression of your adversaries. You are
redeemed from the hand of thine enemies. The Lord is a King in the midst of you.
You shall not see evil any more, and peace be unto you forever.’
"
"Those, therefore,
who dare to think or teach otherwise, or as wicked heretics to spurn the
traditions of the Church and to invent some novelty, ore else to reject some of
those things which the Church has received — that is, the Gospel, or the figure
of the Cross, or iconographic representation, or the holy relics of a martyr —
or evilly and sharply to devise anything subversive of the lawful traditions of
the Catholic Church or to turn to common uses the sacred utensils or the
venerable monasteries, if they be bishops or clerics, we command that they be
deposed; if monks or laymen, that they be excommunicated."
The Council’s
Letter to Irene and Constantine VI.
The letter from the
Seventh Ecumenical Council to the Irene and Constantine VI contains an
explanation of the definition.
"…[We have likewise
decreed] that these ikons are to be venerated — προσκυνείν — that is,
salutations are to be offered to them. The reason for using the word is that it
has a two-fold signification. For κυνειν in the old Greek language signifies
both “to salute” and “to kiss.” And the preposition προς gives to it the
additional idea of strong desire towards the object; as for example, we have
φέρω and προσφέρω, κυρώ and προσκyρω, and so also we have κυνέω and προσκυνέω.
This last word implies salutation and strong love, for that which one loves he
also venerates — προσκυνεί and what he venerates that he greatly loves, as the
everyday custom, which we observe towards those we love, bears witness and in
which both ideas are practically illustrated when two friends meet together. The
word is not only made use of by us but we also find it set down in the Holy
Scriptures by the ancients. For it is written in the histories of the Kings,
‘And David rose up and fell upon his face and did reverence to — προσεκυνήσε —
Jonathan three times and kissed him’ (I Kings 20:41). And what is it that
the Lord in the Gospel says concerning the Pharisees? ‘They love the uppermost
rooms at feasts and greetings — ασπασμους — in the markets.’ It is evident that
by “greetings” here, he means reverence — προσκύνησιν — for the Pharisees being
very high-minded and thinking themselves to be righteous were eager to be
venerated by all, but not [merely] to be kissed. For to receive salutations of
this latter sort savored too much of lowly humility and this was not to the
Pharisees’ liking. We have also the example of Paul the divine Apostle, as Luke
in the Acts of the Apostles relates: ‘When we were come to Jerusalem, the
brethren received us gladly, and the day following Paul went in with us to James
and all the presbyters were present. And when he had saluted — άσπασάμενος —
them, he declared particularly what things God had wrought among the Gentiles by
his ministry’ (Acts 21:17-19). By the salutation here mentioned, the
Apostle evidently intended to render that reverence of honor — τιμητικήν
προσκύνησιν — which we show to one another, and of which he speaks when he says
concerning Jacob that ‘he reverenced’ — προσεκυνησεν — the top of his staff
(Hebrews 11:21). With these examples agrees what Gregory surnamed the
Theologian says: ‘Honor Bethlehem and reverence — προσκννήσον — the
manger.’"
"Now who of those
rightly and sincerely understanding the Holy Scriptures has ever supposed that
these examples which we have cited speak of the worship in spirit — της εν
πνεύματι λατρείας? [Certainly no one has ever thought so] except perhaps some
persons utterly bereft of sense and ignorant of all knowledge of the Scriptures
and of the teachings of the Fathers. Surely Jacob did not worship — έλάτρευσεν —
the top of his staff. And surely Gregory the Theologian does not bid us to
worship — λατρεύειν — the manger? By no means. Again, when offering salutations
to the life-giving Cross, we together sin: ‘We venerate — προσκυνώμεν — thy
Cross, Ο Lord, and we also venerate — προσκυνώμεν — the spear which opened the
life-giving side of thy goodness1. This is clearly but a salutation and is so
called, and its character is evinced by our touching the things mentioned with
our lips. We grant that the word προσκύνησις is frequently found in the Holy
Scriptures and in the writings of our learned and holy Fathers for the worship
in spirit — επί της εν πνεύματι λατρείας, since, being a word of many
significations, it may be used to express that kind of veneration which is
service. As there is also the veneration of honor, love, and fear. In this sense
it is that we venerate your glorious and most noble majesty… Therefore, because
this term has these many significations, the Holy Scriptures teaching us, ‘You
shall venerate the Lord your God, and him only shall you worship,’ says simply
that veneration is to be given to God, but does not add the word Only,’ for
veneration, being a word of wide meaning, is an ambiguous term; but it goes on
to say ‘you shall worship — λατρεύσεις — him only,’ for to God alone do we
render worship — latria."
"The things which
we have decreed, being thus well supported, it is confessedly and beyond all
question acceptable and well-pleasing before God that the ikons of our Lord
Jesus Christ as man, and those of the undefiled Theotokos, the
Ever-Virgin Mary, and of the honorable Angels and of all the Saints, should be
venerated and saluted. And if anyone does not so believe, but undertakes to
debate the matter further and is evil affected with regard to the veneration due
to the holy ikons, such an one our holy ecumenical council, fortified by the
inward working of the Spirit of God and by the traditions of the Fathers and of
the Church, anathematizes. Now anathema is nothing less than complete separation
from God. For if any are quarrelsome and will not obediently accept what has now
been decreed, they but kick against the pricks and injure their own souls in
their fighting against Christ. And in taking pleasure at the insults which are
offered to the Church, they clearly show themselves to be of those who madly
make war upon piety, and are therefore to be regarded as in the same category
with the heretics of old time, and their companions and brethren in
ungodliness."
The Iconoclastic
Controversy.
"The Iconoclastic
Controversy" appeared as "Origen, Eusebius, and the Iconoclastic
Controversy" in Church History, Vol. XIX, No. 2 (1950), 77-96. Reprinted
by permission of Church History and the author.
THE ICONOCLASTIC
CONTROVERSY was undoubtedly one of the major conflicts in the history of the
Christian Church. It was not just a Byzantine conflict; the West was also
involved in the dispute. It is true, however, that the West never followed the
East in the theological argument, nor did it suffer all the implications and
consequences of the Byzantine theology of the Icons. In the history of the
Christian East it was, on the contrary, a turning point. All levels of life were
affected by the conflict, all strata of society were involved in the struggle.
The fight was violent, bitter, and desperate. The cost of victory was enormous,
and tensions in the Church were not solved by it. The Church in Byzantium has
never recovered again her inner unity, which had been distorted or lost in the
Iconoclastic strife.
Strangely enough,
we seem to have lost the key to this momentous crisis of history. The origin,
the meaning, and the nature of the Iconoclastic conflict are rather uncertain
and obscure. Modern historians do not agree on the main points of the
interpretation. It has been fashionable for several decades, since
Paparrigopoulo and Vasiljevsky, to interpret the Iconoclastic crisis primarily
in political and social categories and to regard its religious aspect as a side
issue. It has been variously suggested that originally the conflict had nothing
to do with doctrine, and theological arguments or charges were invented, as it
were, post factum, as efficient weapons in the struggle. Some historians
went so far as to suggest that the religious problem was simply a kind of a
"smoke screen" manufactured and employed by the rival parties as a disguise to
conceal the true issue, which was economic.1 Even quite recently, a
prominent Byzantine scholar contended that theology "counted for nothing" in the
dispute and that the whole controversy was "concerned with anything but
philosophical speculation."2 Byzantium was supposed to
have been spiritually dead and exhausted long before the Iconoclastic
controversy arose, and the conflict itself was merely a symptom of sterility of
the Byzantine Church. A kind of deadlock had been reached in her development.
"Intellectual curiosity was practically dead. On the Orthodox side there is
scarcely a sign of it." On the other hand, Iconoclasm "was in itself of little
importance intellectually."3 The Iconoclastic struggle,
therefore, should not be interpreted in the perspective of the great doctrinal
conflicts of the preceding centuries; the old Christological heresies had been
condemned and were dead issues by that time. Their ghosts were invoked in the
Iconoclastic dispute just for the sake of polemical efficiency.4 And finally, it is
contended that we should not dig out these corpses again.
In the light of the
recent research, these arbitrary statements are hopelessly old-fashioned and out
of date. The theological setting of the whole dispute has been rediscovered and
reestablished by impartial scholars beyond any reasonable doubt. It is enough to
quote the studies of George Ostrogorsky, Gerhart B. Ladner and, especially,
Lucas Koch, O.S.B.5 Most modern scholars now
recognize that the true problem under discussion was specifically religious, and
that both parties were wrestling with real theological problems. The
Iconoclastic debate was not simply ecclesiastical or ritualistic; it was a
doctrinal controversy. Some ultimate issues of faith and belief were at stake.
It was a real struggle for "Orthodoxy." St. John of Damascus, Patriarch
Nicephorus and St. Theodore of Studium were indeed true theologians, and not
just controversialists or ecclesiastical schemers. It is very instructive that a
close study of the works of Nicephorus (a large part of which is still
unpublished) has compelled J. D. Andreev to revise and reverse his earlier
interpretation of the Iconoclastic controversy. He began his studies in the mood
of Paparrigopoulo, but ended with a firm conviction that Iconoclasm was an
integral phase of the great Christological dispute, that Patriarch Nicephorus
was a "mighty exponent of the Greek genius." Unfortunately, Andreev's book was
never published and his manuscript, which was ready for the printer, seems to
have been lost.6
This new conclusion
should not deny or minimize the political and social aspects of the conflict.
But these aspects are to be viewed in proper perspective. All doctrinal
movements in the Early Church (and possibly, all doctrinal and philosophical
movements) were, in some sense, "politically involved" and had political and
social implications, and even Monotheism itself was "a political
problem."7 Yet, by no means were they
just an ideological superstructure over a political or economic foundation. In
the Iconoclastic conflict the political strife itself had a very definite
theological connotation and the "Caesaro-papalism" of the Iconoclastic emperors
was itself a kind of theological doctrine.8 Iconoclasm was, no doubt, a
complex phenomenon. Various groups were associated with the movement, and their
purposes and concerns, their motives and aims, were by no means identical.
Probably, there was no real agreement inside the Iconoclastic party itself, if
there was a party at all or, at least, one particular party. As a matter of
fact, we know there was considerable disagreement. And therefore, the recovery
of a theological setting or perspective does not settle all problems at once. It
brings, rather, some new problems to the fore. We have to admit frankly that our
knowledge of the epoch is still very inadequate and incomplete. There is here
still much to be done before we could attempt an inclusive historical synthesis.
Even the major theological documents of the epoch have not yet been properly
studied. We have no reliable book on the theology of St. Theodore of Studium,
and no monograph at all on St. Patriarch Nicephorus. And much of the available
information has been overlooked or misinterpreted, owing to certain prejudices
and presuppositions, which were never seriously
scrutinized.
It would not be an
exaggeration to say that, on the whole, we know and understand the position of
the Iconodules much better than the theology of the Iconoclasts. The theological
contentions and aspirations of the defenders of the Holy Icons are, more or
less, clear and comprehensible. They were plainly stated and summarized by the
prominent writers of the time. We know what they stood for and what they
opposed, and what their reasons were.9 The theological position of
the Iconoclasts, on the contrary, is still rather obscure. Of course, this is
due primarily to the scarcity of information. Our documentation is fragmentary
and scanty. The original writings of the Iconoclasts were almost completely
destroyed by their antagonists and are to be reconstructed only upon the
evidence of their enemies. To some extent this has been done.10 Still we do not know,
exactly, what was the starting point of the Iconoclastic argument nor the real
perspective of that argument. This missing perspective usually has been supplied
by the conjecture of historians, as it were, by analogy. Judaic or Moslem hatred
and repudiation of sacred images, on one hand, and the later Puritanical
condemnation of the sacred art, on the other, seemed to provide a relevant
analogy, especially because there were parallel movements of a similar type in
other contexts, almost contemporaneous with the Iconoclastic outburst in
Byzantium. The main problem for a historian, however, is still: what was the
main inspiration of those Church groups, which committed themselves to the
Iconoclastic cause? It would be a precarious endeavour to use analogy, before
this first question is settled. It is a gratuitous assumption, and a too easy
solution, if we simply suggest (as it had been so often done) that they were led
mainly by the desire to please the Emperor.11 This assumption does not do
full justice to the obvious facts. Bishops, as we know, did not go as far as
some politicians, and yet they seemed to be quite sincerely against the
Iconodulia. Even Kopronymos had to justify his policy and convictions by
theological arguments, obviously, not so much to impress his opponents, as to
make a convincing appeal to his prospective supporters, and he had to speak
their idiom, even if it was not his own, i.e. even if his main reason was not
ultimately a theological one. And we know that the pseudo-council of 754 did not
follow the Emperor's lead completely.12
It is not the
purpose of this paper to make an attempt at synthesis. Its scope and purpose is
very modest and limited. I am going to bring to the fore some neglected evidence
and suggest some fresh lines of research. It is to be a programme of study, not
a report on achievements. We shall begin with a concrete question: What was the
main authority of the Iconoclasts? It was an appeal to antiquity, and this was
possibly the strongest point both of their attack and of their self-defense. It
was a double appeal to Scripture and Tradition. It is usual, in modern
interpretation, to give priority to their scriptural proof. Their patristic
references were rather neglected. They seemed to be less instructive and
convincing. But in the eighth and ninth centuries the patristic proofs would
carry full weight. It seems to me, we should have given much more attention to
these references, not to pass a judgment on the fight, but to ascertain the
reasons and aims of the contending parties.
First of all, some
few comments on the scriptural proofs will not be out of place. The Old
Testament prohibition of images comes first, and the defenders of the Icons
themselves gave much attention to this point. They re-interpreted in many ways
this Old Testament witness. Yet, can we be sure, that it was the real focus of
the debate, and was it not rather a borrowing from other literary sources? What
I mean is simply this: there was a controversy between Jews and Christians, on
that very point, immediately before the outbreak of the Iconoclastic movement in
the Byzantine Church. Obviously, in this controversy the Old Testament witness
had to have an indisputable priority. We have every reason to admit that in this
debate the Christian apologists developed some standard arguments and compiled
some patristic testimonia to vindicate the Christian position.13 We have no direct evidence
to prove that the internecine strife within the Church was an organic
continuation of the earlier Judaeo-Christian controversy. Yet, of course, it was
quite natural for both sides to use or apply the readily available arguments and
"proofs." But was this really the point of the Byzantine controversy? Usually,
the whole Iconoclastic argument is reconstructed as a "Semitic" objection
against the "Hellenistic" re-paganization of the Church. Iconoclasm then appears
to be merely Oriental resistance to a more or less acute Hellenization of
Christianity. We have to concede that, in some respects, it is a very plausible
hypothesis.14 Iconoclasm was born in the
Orient, and its first promoters were Phrygian bishops (Constantine of Nacoleia
and Thomas of Claudiopolis). Yet, let us not overlook the strange fact that
their names completely disappear in later documents — probably because they
would not appeal too much to the new strata which were sustaining the
Iconoclastic cause in its later phase.15 Again, the Iconoclastic
movement in Byzantium was preceded by a persecution of a similar character in
the Caliphate. Still, no direct link with the Moslem opposition has been
detected — there was no more than a parallelism and "analogy."16 Even the defenders of an
Oriental inspiration concede that the role of the Orientals in the later
development of the struggle was nul.17 On the other hand, the
first theologian of Icons emerged in the East, in a Moslem environment, and St.
John of Damascus was by no means an exceptional figure. We should not forget
also that, at least in the later period of the struggle, the Iconoclastic cause
was popular in the Hellenized quarters, in the court circles, and in the army,
whereas in the lower classes it never had flourished, even if there are recorded
some cases of violence among the masses. This observation was made by
Schwartz-lose.18 Even if the initial impetus
came from the Orient and from the masses, the movement grew rapidly on Greek
soil and was supported mostly by the learned. This was the main reason
Paparrigopoulo construed Iconoclasm into an early system of Enlightenment. In
any case, we have to warn ourselves against easy generalizations. The situation
seems to have been more complicated than an Oriental hypothesis can explain. It
remains to determine precisely why and how Iconoclasm could appeal to the higher
clergy and other intellectuals in Byzantium. They were the opponents with whom
Nicephorus and Theodore had to debate the issue. The subservience and
opportunism of these men is not an explanation. It simply explains away an
unwelcome question. It has been customary to look for the "sources" of the
Iconoclasm in the most remote quarters: Judaism, Islam, Paulicianists and other
Oriental heresies.19 But Hellenistic precedents
or "sources" have been overlooked or ignored.
Let us turn now to
the patristic references of the Iconoclastic party. Most of them are colorless
and irrelevant — detached phrases taken out of their original context. There are
only two references which are of importance and can substantiate a theological
thesis. First, a letter of Eusebius of Caesarea to Constantia Augusta. Secondly,
quotations from Epiphanius or "Epiphanides" or Pseudo-Epiphanius, if we have to
agree with Ostrogorsky on the point of the authorship. The witness of Epiphanius
was discussed extensively by Holl and Ostrogorsky, and we can leave it aside in
the present study. We have, however, to remember that, for Holl, the witness of
Epiphanius (which he regarded as authentic) was a proof of a dogmatic
connotation of the whole problem of Images, as early as the fourth
century.20 The evidence of Eusebius,
strangely enough, was never given much attention. It has often been quoted, but
never properly analyzed. There is no reason whatsoever to question its
authenticity.21 It seems to be the
key-argument in the whole system of Iconoclastic reasoning. It was hardly an
accident that St. Nicephorus felt compelled to write a special "Antirrheticus"
against Eusebius. The name of Eusebius demands attention for another reason: the
whole Iconoclastic conception of the Imperial power and authority in the Church
goes back to Eusebius. There was an obvious trend of archaism in Iconoclastic
policy.
The letter of
Eusebius is not preserved in full. Some parts of it were quoted and discussed at
the Council of Nicea and again by Nicephorus, and all excerpts available were
put together by Boivin and published for the first time in the notes to his
edition of Nicephorus Gregoras' History (1702). The text has been
reproduced several times since, and a critical edition is badly
wanted.22 This time, however, we are
not concerned with the exact reading.
The letter cannot
be accurately dated. It was a reply to Constantia Augusta, a sister of
Constantine. She had asked Eusebius to send her an "image of Christ." He was
astonished. What kind of an image did she mean? Nor could he understand why she
should want one. Was it a true and unchangeable image, which would have in
itself Christ's character? Or was it the image he had assumed when he took upon
himself, for our sake, the form of a servant? The first, Eusebius remarks, is
obviously inaccessible to man; only the Father knows the Son. The form of a
servant, which he took upon himself at the Incarnation, has been amalgamated
with his Divinity. After his ascension into heaven he had changed that form of a
servant into the splendor which, by an anticipation, he had revealed to his
disciples (at the Transfiguration) and which was higher than a human nature.
Obviously, this splendor cannot be depicted by lifeless colors and shades. The
Apostles could not look at him. If even in his flesh there was such a power,
what is to be said of him now, when he had transformed the form of a servant
into the glory of the Lord and God ? Now he rests in the unfathomable bosom of
the Father. His previous form has been transfigured and transformed into that
splendor ineffable that passes the measure of any eye or ear. No image of this
new "form" is conceivable, if "this deified and intelligible substance" can
still be called a "form." We cannot follow the example of the pagan artists who
would depict things that cannot be depicted, and whose pictures are therefore
without any genuine likeness. Thus, the only available image would be just an
image in the state of humiliation. Yet, all such images are formally prohibited
in the Law, nor are any such known in the churches. To have such images would
have meant to follow the way of the idolatrous pagans. We, Christians,
acknowledge Christ as the Lord and God, and we are preparing ourselves to
contemplate him as God, in the purity of our hearts. If we want to anticipate
this glorius image, before we meet him face to face, there is but one Good
Painter, the Word of God himself. The main point of this Eusebian argument is
clear and obvious. Christians do not need any artificial image of Christ. They
are not permitted to go back; they must look forward. Christ's "historical"
image, the "form" of his humiliation, has been already superseded by his Divine
splendor, in which he now abides. This splendor cannot be seen or delineated,
but, in due time, true Christians will be admitted into that glory of the age to
come. It would be superfluous for our present purpose to collate the parallels
from the other writings of Eusebius.23
This testimony of
Eusebius was disavowed by the Orthodox and rejected as heretical, as betraying
his impious errors. It was emphasized that Eusebius was an Arian. We would
phrase this charge somewhat differently. Eusebius was an Origenist, and his
letter to Constantia was composed in an Origenistic idiom. Now, we have to ask
this question: was the letter of Eusebius just an accidental reference
discovered (by the Iconoclasts), post factum, and brought forward, along
with many others, to vindicate a thesis that had been formulated quite
independently? Or, do we have here one of the original sources of the
Iconoclastic inspiration, at least in its later theological form? Should we not
explain the obvious popularity of the Iconoclastic bias among the learned
bishops and clergy (whom it would be ridiculous to associate with either the
Moslems, Paulicianists, or other obvious heretics) on the basis of their
Origenistic leaning? To do this, of course, one would have to go through the
list of all the bishops and clergy concerned and ascertain to what extent this
suggestion could be substantiated in each particular case. We are speaking now
especially of the prelates present at the Iconoclastic pseudo-councils of 754
and 815. This inquiry cannot, however, be undertaken in the present preliminary
study. In any case, Origenism was by no means a dead issue by that time.
Origen's spiritual ideal, through Evagrius and St. Maximus the Confessor, was
integrated into the current Orthodox synthesis. For St. Maximus himself,
Origenism was still a living theology and he had to wrestle with its problems
and shortcomings quite in earnest. It is not yet quite certain whether he had
actually overcome all of them.24 This was but a century
before the outbreak of Iconoclasm. The Orient especially was infected by
Origenistic ideas of all sorts. It is true, the name of Origen was never
mentioned in the Iconoclastic debate, and Nicephorus treated Eusebius simply as
an Arian and does not mention Origen. We are not concerned at this point,
however, with what Nicephorus had to say against Eusebius.25 The Origenistic character
of the letter in question is beyond doubt. Obviously, the Iconoclasts would have
condemned themselves, if they had dared to claim for themselves the authority of
Origen. Yet, the whole tenor and ethos of Origenism was undoubtedly favorable to
that course of theological reasoning which was actually adopted by the
Iconoclasts. Therefore, the defense of Holy Icons was, in some sense, an
indirect refutation of Origenism, a new act in the story of the "Origenistic
controversies."
First of all,
Origen's Christology was utterly inadequate and ambiguous. The whole set of his
metaphysical presuppositions made it very difficult for him to integrate the
Incarnation, as an unique historical event, into the general scheme of
Revelation. Everything historical was for him but transitory and accidental.
Therefore the historical Incarnation had to be regarded only as a moment in the
continuous story of permanent Theophany of the Divine Logos — a central moment,
in a sense, but still no more than a central symbol. In the perspective of a
continuous Divino-cosmic process there was no room for a true historical
uniqueness, for an ultimate decision, accomplished in time, by one major event.
No event could, in this perspective, have an ultimate meaning or value by itself
as an event. All events were to be interpreted as symbols or projections of some
higher, super-temporal and super-historical, reality. The historical was, as it
were, dissolved into the symbolic. Now, a symbol is no more than a sign,
pointing to a beyond, be it eternity or "the age to come," or both at once. The
whole system of symbols was something provisional, to be ultimately done away.
One had to penetrate behind the screen of symbols. This was the major exegetical
principle or postulate of Origen. The exegetical method of Origen, by whatever
name we may label it, was meant precisely for that ultimate purpose — to
transcend history, to go beyond the veil of events, beyond the "letter" which
would inevitably kill even under the New Dispensation of Grace, no less than
sub umbraculo legis. The reality or historicity of the events was not
denied, but they were to be interpreted as hints and signs and symbols. It would
be an obvious injustice, if we imputed to Origen a neglect of history, of the
''historic Jesus" and him Crucified. As Bigg has aptly remarked: "the Cross in
all its wonder, its beauty, its power, was always before the eyes of
Origen."26 This symbolism of Origen
had nothing docetical about it. Yet, the "historic Cross" of Jesus was for
Origen just a symbol of something higher. Only the simpliciores, "who are
still children," could be satisfied, in Origen's opinion, with the "somatic"
sense of Scripture, which is but "a shadow of the mysteries of Christ," just as
the Law of old had been a shadow of good things to come. The more advanced are
concerned with the truth itself, i.e. with the "Eternal Gospel" (or a
"Spiritual" Gospel), of which the historic Gospel or Evangel is but an enigma
and shadow. Origen emphatically distinguishes and contrasts an "external" and a
"hidden" Christianity. He admits, it is true, that one has to be at once
"somatic" and "pneumatic," but only for educational reasons and purposes. One
has to tell the "fleshly" Christians that he does not know anything but Christ
Jesus and Him Crucified. "But should we find those who are perfected in the
spirit, and bear fruit in it, and are enamoured of the heavenly wisdom, these
must be made to partake of that Word which, after it was made flesh, rose again
to what it was in the beginning, with God." Ultimately, we have to "transform"
the "sensual" Evangelium into the "spiritual";27 that is to say that the New
Testament is to be interpreted in the same manner as the Old — as an
anticipation. This basic orientation towards the future, towards that which is
to come, implies a definite devaluation of the past, of that which had already
happened. It implies also an ultimate levelling of the whole temporal process,
which is but natural since everything temporal is but a symbol of the eternal,
and at any point one can break into the eternal. The whole "allegorical" or
rather symbolical method of interpretation implies a certain equality of the two
historical dispensations: they are both, in an ultimate sense, but provisional,
and should be interpreted as such. Both are but "shadows," if in a different
sense. And Origen concludes, therefore, that in the Old Testament the whole
truth was already available for the advanced. The prophets and the sages of the
Old Dispensation have actually seen and known more and better than "somatics" in
the Church, "and could see better than we can the realities of which (the
happenings of their times) were the shadows." They have seen the glory of
Christ, the image of the invisible God, "advanced from the introduction they had
in types to the vision of truth." He dwells at length on this topic and
concludes: "those who were made perfect in earlier generations knew not less
than the Apostles did of what Christ revealed to them, since the same teacher
was with them as He who revealed to the Apostles the unspeakable mysteries of
godliness." The only advantage of the Apostles was that "in addition to knowing
these mysteries, they saw the power at work in the accomplished
fact."28 The allegorical method was
first invented in order to interpret the promise. It could not suit the new
purpose: a Christian exegete had to interpret an achievement. In other words, a
Christian allegorist was approaching the Gospel as if it were still nothing more
than the Law; he approached the New Testament as if it were still the Old; he
approached the achievement as if it were but a promise. There was indeed a
further promise in the achievement, yet the fact of the accomplishment should
not have been disregarded. And it was at that point that the "allegorical"
method was bound to fail. We may describe the allegorical method as "Judaic,"
i.e. as an approach to the Gospel in the spirit of Prophecy. Of course, this
"Judaism" was in no sense "Semitic"; it was a typical Hellenistic approach. "For
the mere letter and narrative of the events which happened to Jesus do not
present the whole view of the truth. For each one of them can be shown, to those
who have an intelligent apprehension of Scripture, to be a symbol of something
else." We have to ascend from the narratives themselves to the things which they
symbolized.29 The story or narrative is
but a starting point. One begins with Jesus of the Gospel, with Him the
Crucified, but his aim should be to arrive at the vision of the Divine glory.
The humanity of Jesus is but the first and lowest step of our spiritual
understanding, which is to be transcended.30
In fact, we have to
deal here not only with the steps and degrees of interpretation. Jesus himself
has transcended the state of his humiliation, which had been superseded and, as
it were, abrogated by the state of his glorification. His humanity has not been
laid aside, yet it was exalted to a higher perfection, in an intimate blending
with his divinity.31 This is strong language
indeed. "And truly, after his resurrection, he existed in a body intermediate,
as it were, between the grossness of the one he had before his sufferings, and
the appearance of a soul uncovered by such a body." And therefore, after his
resurrection, Jesus simply could not appear to the people "in the same manner as
before that event." Even in the days of his flesh he "was more things than one,"
i.e. he had no standing appearance, "nor was he seen in the same way by all who
beheld him." His external outlook depended upon the measure of ability to
receive him. His glorious transfiguration on the Mount was but one instance of
the adaptability of his body. "He did not appear the same person to the sick,
and to those who needed his healing aid, and to those who were able by reason of
their strength to go up the mountain along with him."32 These varying appearances
of Jesus are to be referred to the nature of the Word, who does not show himself
in the same way, or indifferently, to all, but to the unprepared would appear as
one "who has neither form nor beauty" (to the "sons of men") and to those who
can ascend with him in a "surpassing loveliness.33
As strange and
forbidding as this interpretation may seem to be, it has been preserved in the
tradition up to the later ages. We find it, for example, in St. Maximus. He
speaks of the mystical experience, but his phrasing is almost a literal
quotation from Origen. The Lord does not appear to all in his present glory, but
to those who are still under way he comes in the form of a servant, and to those
who are capable of following him up to the mountain of his transfiguration he
would appear in the form of God, in which he existed before the world
began.34
For Origen, even in
the days of the earthly life of Christ, his body was "an altogether miraculous
body."35 After the resurrection it
was assumed into his divinity, and could no more be distinguished from
it.36 "Ideo omnia quod est in
Christo jam nunc Filius Dei est."37 If he was truly man, he is
now man no more, and therefore we also are no more men when we follow his words,
for he, as the prototokos of all men, has transformed us into
God.38 "Si autem Deus est qui
quondam homo fuit, et oportet te illi similem fieri, 'quando similes ejus
fuerimus, et viderimus eum sicut est' (I Jo. 3:2), te quoque necesse erit
Deum fieri, in Christo Jesu."39 For our immediate purpose,
there is no need to go into any further detail. The main contention of Origen is
clear. And we could not fail to observe the close and intimate resemblance
between Origen's ideas and those in the letter of Eusebius to Constantia.
Origen's Christology was the background and presupposition of Eusebius. He drew
legitimate conclusions from the principles laid down by Origen. If one walks in
the steps of Origen, would he, really, be interested in any "historical" image
or "ikon" of the Lord? What could be depicted was already overcome and
superseded, and the true and glorious reality of the Risen Lord escapes any
depiction or description. Moreover, from the Origenist point of view, the true
face of the Lord could hardly be depicted even in the days of his flesh, but
only his image accommodated to the capacity of a "somatic" and "fleshly" man,
which "appearance" was in no sense his true and adequate image. Of course,
Origen himself was not concerned with the pictorial images. Yet, what he had to
say against pagan images could be very easily used against
icons.40 Again, there was an obvious
parallelism between the two problems: the problem of Scripture and the problem
of pictorial representation. It was the same problem of "description." We know
that this was a major topic of the whole Iconoclastic controversy. St. John of
Damascus had clearly seen the connection of the two topics and problems:
Scripture itself is "an image."41 If we apply the exegetical
method of Origen to the problem of the artistic and pictorial "description," we
shall have at least to hesitate. Possibly, we would have no difficulty in
accepting "symbolic" representations, just as the Bible is to be taken as a book
of symbols, which, by their very nature, compel us to go beyond. But, surely, we
shall be most seriously embarrassed by a "historical" image. This was exactly
what had happened at the Iconoclastic pseudo-councils in 754 and 815. The very
point of their argument was this: they felt very strongly the utter
disproportion between all historical ("sensual") images and the "state of glory"
in which both Christ and his saints were already abiding. One instance will
suffice: was it permissible, so asked the Iconoclastic bishops in 754, to depict
the saints, who already shine in the glory ineffable, and to recall them thereby
again to earth?42
Iconoclasm was not
just an indiscriminate rejection of any art. There was a wide variety of opinion
among the opponents of the icons. Yet, in the main, it was rather a resistance
to one special kind of religious art, namely the icon-painting, an "icon" being
a representation of a true historical person, be it our Lord or a saint. This
type of Christian art was growing at that time. Its birth-place was probably in
Syria, and its distinctive mark was, as Louis Brehier put it recently, "la
recherche naive de la verite historique" — a special emphasis on the
historic truth.43 One of the favorite
subjects was the Crucified Christ. It was not necessarily a "naturalism," but it
was bound to be some sort of a historic realism. This was the main contention of
the new trend. A true "icon" claimed to be something essentially different from
a "symbol." It had to be a "representation" of something real, and a true and
accurate representation. A true icon had to be, in the last resort, a historic
picture. This accounts for the stability of the iconographic types in the East:
there is no room for an artistic "invention." The iconographic types belong to
tradition, and are stabilized by the authority of the Church. Only the execution
belongs to the artist. Thus was it formulated at Nicaenum II.44 The final appeal is not to
an artistic imagination or to an individual vision, but to history, — to things
seen and testified. In this connection, canon 82 of the Council in Trullo
(691-692) is illustrative. It deals directly only with one particular case (the
immediate circumstances of the decision are uncertain), but, at least by
implication, it establishes a general principle too. The Council forbids a
symbolic representation of Christ as a Lamb. Apparently, the Council was
objecting to a semi-historical scene: St. John the Baptist pointing to the
coming Christ, and Christ represented symbolically. The reasons for prohibition
are highly instructive. The lamb is a "typos," or an "image" or figure of the
coming Grace, which signifies the very Lamb, Christ. Now, the old "types" and
"shadows," i.e. symbols and signs, must be respected. Yet, priority belongs to
"grace" and "truth," which is the fulness of the Law. The Council prescribes
that Christ should be represented or depicted as man, instead of the "ancient
lamb," in remembrance of His incarnation, passion and redeeming death, and of
the universal redemption, thereby accomplished.45 It is much more than an
ordinary canonical regulation, it is a doctrinal statement and pronouncement. It
is a doctrinal programme, a true preamble to all subsequent literature on the
Holy Icons. Strangely enough, this canon was completely overlooked by the
historians of Iconoclasm. The case, to which the Council refers, seems to be
very special. But the canon lays down a principle. There must have been some
reason for that. What is remarkable is that the painting of icons is
emphatically linked with the relation between the "types" and the (historic)
"truth," or possibly between the two Testaments. We touch again upon an
exegetical problem. All ancient "types" are already over, the Truth had come,
Christ, the Incarnate and Crucified. It was a solemn approbation and
encouragement of the new "historical" art. The phrasing seems to be deliberate.
An emphasis on the "human form" of Christ was quite natural at the time when the
last Christological controversy had been in the process of being settled. It
directs the painter's attention to the historical
achievement.
It is commonly
agreed that theological defense of Holy Icons, especially by St. Theodore, but
earlier by St. John of Damascus, had been based on Neo-platonic presuppositions.
The whole conception of the "prototype" and the "image" (reflection on a lower
level) was platonic. On the whole, this statement is obviously fair. Yet, it
needs a qualification. In any case, the argument includes an open reference to
the (historic) Incarnation. The Iconodules were not speaking simply of "images"
of some "eternal" or "heavenly" realities. They were speaking precisely of the
"images" of some "earthly" realities, as it were, of historic personalities, who
lived in time on earth. And this makes a difference.
At this moment, we
are not concerned with the doctrine of the Iconodules. Let us admit that they
were platonic or rather pro-platonic. Unfortunately, it has been overlooked that
there was, in Neo-platonism, an obvious Iconoclastic tendency as well.
Porphyrius, in his Life of Plotinus, tells us that Plotinus, it seemed,
"was ashamed to be in the flesh," and it is precisely with that statement that
Porphyrius begins his biography. "And in such a frame of mind he refuses to
speak either of his ancestors or parents, or of his fatherland. He would not sit
for a sculptor or painter." Should one make a permanent image of this perishable
frame? It was enough that one is compelled to bear it.46 Plotinus would gladly
forget that he had an earthly biography, parents or fatherland. The
philosophical aspiration of Plotinus must be carefully distinguished from an
"Oriental" asceticism, Gnostic or Manichean. Plotinus was not a dualist. Yet,
his practical conclusion was still that we should "retreat" from this corporeal
world and escape the body. Plotinus himself suggested the following analogy. Two
men live in the same house. One of them blames the builder and his handiwork,
because it is made of inanimate wood and stone. The other praises the wisdom of
the architect, because the building is so skillfully erected. For Plotinus this
world is not evil, it is the "image" or reflection of the world above, and
perhaps the best of all images. Still, one has to aspire beyond all images, from
the image to the prototype, from the lower to the higher world, and Plotinus
praises not the copy, but the pattern or exemplar.47 "He knows that when the
time comes, he will go out and will no longer have need of any
house."48 This was why he was
unwilling to sit for a painter. The picture of this "perishable frame" could
never be his true "image," an image of his immortal self. No picture can ever be
taken of the very self of man. And therefore, all pictures are deceiving. They
would imprison man's imagination in a "perishable frame." Now, is not this
admirable passage of Plotinus a good introduction to the Iconoclastic mind? A
Christian would, of course, put the whole problem a bit differently. Possibly,
instead of a "world above" he would speak of the "age to come." Yet, to the same
effect. Origen, at least, was not so far from Plotinus at this point. It is
interesting to notice that among the ancient testimonia, collected by the
Iconoclasts, there was one of an obvious "platonic" inspiration and of an
undoubtedly heretical origin. It was a quotation from the Acts of St.
John. It was an exact parallel to the story told of Plotinus by Porphyrius.
A picture was taken of St. John, without his knowledge. He did not approve of
it, nor could he recognize at once that it was really his picture, as he had
never seen his face in the mirror. After all, it was but a "picture of his
body." But man had to be the painter of his soul and to adorn it with faith and
other virtues. "This, however, which thou hast made, is childish and imperfect;
thou hast painted a dead picture of a dead thing."49
It has been usual
to interpret the Iconoclastic movement as an Oriental or Semitic reaction and
resistance to an excessive Hellenization of Christian art and devotion, to the
Hellenistic involvement of the Byzantine Church. But, we find nothing
specifically "Semitic" in Iconoclastic theology; both the arguments and the
proofs seem to be rather Hellenistic. The Iconodules were Platonic to be sure.
But was not the Iconoclastic attitude also rather Platonic? And are we not to
interpret the whole conflict rather as an inner split within Hellenistic
Christianity? Iconoclasm was, of course, a very complex movement and its various
components are to be carefully analyzed. But the main inspiration of
Iconoclastic thought was Hellenistic. We must reverse the current
interpretation. It was Iconoclasm that was a return to the pre-Christian
Hellenism. The whole conflict can be interpreted as a new phase of an age-long
process. Sometimes it has been styled as an Hellenization of Christianity. It
should be described rather as a Christianization of Hellenism. The main feature
of the process was obviously the split in Hellenism or its polarization. In the
Iconoclastic controversy, — at least, on its theological level — the two
Hellenisms, as several times before, met again in a heated fight. The main issue
was between symbolism and history. The Iconoclasts represented in the conflict
an un-reformed and uncompromising Hellenic position, of an Origenistic and
Platonic trend. It was not an immediate continuation of the Monophysite
tradition. Yet, Monophysitism itself, as far as its theology was concerned, was
a kind of Hellenism, and its roots go back to the early Alexandrian tradition,
and therefore it could be easily amalgamated with Neoplatonism. The Iconodules,
on the contrary, stood definitely for the "Historic Christianity." A particular
topic was under discussion, but the major issues were at stake. This accounts
for the bitterness and violence of the whole struggle. Not only the destiny of
Christian Art .was at stake, but "Orthodoxy" itself. In any case, the struggle
can be understood only in the perspective of an age-long
Auseinandersetzung between Christianity and Hellenism. Both parties were
"Hellenistically-minded." Yet there was a conflict between a Christian Hellenism
and an Hellenized Christianity, or possibly between Orthodoxy and
Syncretism.50
The only contention
of this brief essay is to raise the question. More study will be required before
an ultimate answer can be given.51
Notes.
1. K. N. Ouspensky, Sketches on Byzantine
History, Part I, Moskow 1917 (Russian), p. 237 ff. Ouspensky's book on the
history of the Iconoclasm, to which he refers, seems never to have been
published.
2. Henri Gregoire, in Byzantium, edited by
Norman H. Baynes and H. St. L. B. Moss (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1948), p. 105.
All articles in this volume were written before the war.
3. E. J. Martin, A History of the Iconoclastic
Controversy (London: S.P.C.K., s.d.), pp. 3-4.
4. Gregoire, Byzantium (1948), p.
105.
5. G. Ostrogorsky, Studien zur Geschichte des
byzantinischen Bilderstreites, (Breslau, 1929) [Historische Untersuchungen, Hf.
5]; "Connection of the question of the Holy Icons with the Christological
dogma," Seminarium Kondakovianum, I (1927); "Gnoseological presuppositions of
the Byzantine controversy about the Holy Icons," Ibidem, II (1928) — both
articles in Russian; "Les debuts de la Querelle des Images," Melanges Diehl,
vol. I, Paris, 1930; G. Ladner, "Der Bilderstreit und die Kunstlehren der
byzantinischen und abendlandischen Theologie," Zeitschrift fur die
Kirchengeschichte, B. 50 (1931); "Origin and Significance of the Byzantine
Iconoclastic Controversy," Mediaeval Studies, II (1940); P. Lucas Koch, "Zur
Theologie der Christus-ikone," in "Benediktinische Monatschrift," Beuron, XIX
(1937); 11/12; XX (1928), 1/2, 5/6, 7/8; "Christusbild-Kaiserbild," Ibidem, XXI
(1939), 3/4.
6. A brief note on Andreev's unpublished work
has been given in the Russian Historical Journal (probably by V. Beneshevich),
VII (Petrograd, 1921), 215-218 (in Russian).
7. This is the title of an admirable booklet by
Eric Peterson, Der Monotheismus als politisches Problem
(1935).
8. Cf. Lucas Koch, Christusbild, etc. — The
author uses extensively the book of Andre Grabar, L'Empereur dans l'art Byzantin
(Paris, 1936).
9. The best presentation of the Orthodox theory
of icons is in the articles of P. Lucas Koch.
10. See B. M. Melioransky, Georgij Kyprianin i
loann Jerusalimskij, dva maloizviestnykh borza za pravoslavie v 8 vickie [два
малоизвестных борца за православие в 8 веке] (St. Petersbourg, 1901); and
Ostrogorsky, Studien.
11. Cf., e.g., A. Vasiliev, Histoire de
I'Empire Byzantine (Paris: Picard, 1932), I, 379: "Quant au parti de la cour et
an haut elerge', on peut dire que ces fonctionnaires du gouvernement et eveques
n'obeirent pas pour la plupart aux ordres de leur conscience, mais qu'ils
professerent les doctrines qui s'harmonisaient avec leurs crainte et leur
ambitions." This view is widespread in the literature.
12. This point has been emphasized by H.
Gregoire in his review of Ostrogorsky's "Studien," in Byzantion, IV,
765-771.
13. Cf. F. Vernet, "Juifs (Controverses avec
les)," in D. T. C., VIII. 2, c. 1878 s.; and Sirarpie der Nersessian, "Une
Apologie des images du septieme siecle," in Byzantion, XVII (1944-1945). See
also J. B. Frey, "La question des images chez les Juifs," in Biblica, XV
(1934).
14. It is a commonplace in the literature. See,
in recent times, Christopher Dawson, The Making of Europe (London: Sheed &
Ward, 1946 (1932), p. 136: "It has behind it, not the explicit doctrines of a
theological school but the vague and formless spirit of an oriental sectarianism
which rejected the whole system of Hellenic dogma." Cf. George Every, The
Byzantine Patriarchate, 451-1204 (London: S.P.C.K., 1946), p. 105: "The
Iconoclastic schisms of 730-86 and 815-43 were not the schisms between East and
West, but between an Asiatic party at Constantinople and the Greek and Latin
party in Greece, Italy and Rome."
15. Cf. Ostrogorsky, Melanges Diehl, p. 236:
"Le role, joue' au debut de la querelle des images par le clerge iconoclaste d'
Asie Mineure, tombe dans I' oublie dans les siecles suivants." See also
Meliqransky, Georgij Kyprianin.
16. Cf. J. M. Sweetman, Islam and Christian
Theology, P. I, v. I, (Lutterworth Press, London & Redhill, 1945), p. 63.:
"One would rather see in this movement something parallel to Islam"
etc.
17. Cf. Vasiliev, Histoire,
380.
18. Karl Schwartzlose, Der Bilderstreit (Gotha,
1890), pp. 77-78.
19. In any case Paulicians were invoked in
vain, for it is most doubtful whether they had any iconoclastic tendencies, as
much as would have agreed with their dualistic presuppositions. See Henri
Gregoire, in Atti del V Congresso internazionale di Studi Bizantini (Roma,
1939), 177; and recently D. Obolensky, The Bogomils (Cambridge, 1949), p.
53.
20. See Karl Holl, ''Die Schrijten des
Epiphanius gegen die Bilderverehrung" (1916), in his Gesammelte Aufsdtze zur
Kirchengeschichte (Tubingen: Mohr, 1928), II, 351-387, and Ostrogorsky, Studien,
61 ff.
21. Holl, 387, n. I. "An der Echtheit des
Briefes hat nur Befangenschaft zweifeln konnen. Sprache, Standpunkt, Auffassung
stimmen ganz mit dem unangefochtenen Eusebius iiberein. Ware das Schreiben in
einem spateren
Jahrhundert gefälscht, so müsste die
dogmatische Begründung schärfer gefasst sein."
22. Excerpts from the Letter of Eusebius read
at the Nicaenum II (787): Mansi, XIII, c. 314 or Harduin IV, 406; an enlarged
text (following cod. Reg. 1980) was published by Boivin (Nie. Gregoras, Hist.
Byz. XIX, 3, 4 (reprinted in Migne, S.Gr. CXLIX and in C. S. H. B., Bd. XIX. 2);
Card. Pitra, Sptcilegium Solesmense, I, 383-386 (as cap. 9 of Nicephorus
Antirrheticus contra Eusebium) ; see also inter opera Eusebii — Migne, S. Gr.
XX, c. 1545-1549, and in Kirsch, Enchiridion, n. 471. Cf. Hugo Koch, Die alt
christliche Bilderfrage nach den literarischen Quellen (Göttingen 1917;
F.R.L.A.N.T., Neue Folge 10); W. Elliger, Die Stellung der alten Christen zu den
Bildern in den ersten vier Jahrhunderten (Picker's Studien über Christliche
Denkmäler, Hf. 20; Leipzig 1930).
23.See H. Berkhof, Die Theologie des Eusebius
von Caesarea (Amsterdam, 1939).
24.The theology of St. Maximus was intensively
discussed by scholars in recent years. The following studies should be listed:
Hans Urs von Balthasar, Kosmische Liturgie. Maximus der Bekenner: Höhe und Krise
des griechischen Weltbilds (1941; 2nd edition, revised and amplified, 196l);
Polycarp Sherwood, O.S.B., The Earlier Ambigua of St. Maximus the Confessor,
"Studia Anselmiana," fasc. XXXVI (Romae, 1955); Lars Thun-berg, Microcosm and
Mediator. The Theological Anthropology of Maximus the Confessor (Lund, 1965);
Walter Völker, Maximus Confessor als Meister des geistlichen Lebens (1965). The
earlier monograph of S.L. Epifano-vich, St. Maximus the Confessor and Byzantine
Theology (Kiev, 1915 [in Russian]) is still to be
consulted.
25. Antirrheticus Liber adversus Eusebium et
Epiphanidem by St. Nicephorus was published by Cardinal J.B. Pitra in his
Specilegium Solesmense, Vol. I (1852), p. 371-504; Vol. IV (1858), p. 292-380.
Unfortunately the major theological treatise of St. Nicephorus, Elenchos kai
Anatrope, is still unpublished. Recent studies on St. Nicephorus: A.J. Visser,
Nikephoros und der Bilderstreit (1952); PJ. Alexander, The Patriarch Nikephorus
of Constantinople (1958).
26. Charles Bigg, The Christian Platonists of
Alexandria (2nd revised edition, Oxford, 1913), p. 254.
27. Origen, Commentary in Joannem, I. 9 and 10,
Migne PG, XIV, c. 35-40. Origen sharply distinguishes and contrasts the somatic
(or "historical") Gospel and the spiritual (and "eternal"). Before His bodily
coming Christ was already appearing to the advanced or "perfect" individuals
under the Old Dispensation, like Moses and prophets, to whom His glory was
revealed, in an intellectual (or "noetic") manner. Comparing, or rather
contrasting, the two Dispensations, Origen uses the same term epidemia: a visit
or appearance, coming among people, and a sojourn. Thus the noetic vision is put
on the same level as historic encounter, and, in fact, much higher. Cf. II. 3,
c. 113: The prophets, like Isaiah, Hosea, Jeremiah, encountered the Logos. The
majority of Christians, however, do not know but Christ, and Him crucified,
"considering that the Word made flesh is the whole Word, and knowing only Christ
after the flesh." On many occasions Origen used the terms Logos and Christ as
synonyms.
28. In Joannem, VI. 2, Migne, PG, XIV, c. 201
ss. Cf. I. 23, c. 60: "And happy indeed are those who in their need for the Son
of God have yet become such persons as not to need Him in his character as a
physician healing the sick, nor in that of a shepherd, nor in that of
redemption, but only in His character as Wisdom, as the Word and righteousness,
or if there be any other title suitable for those who are so perfect as to
receive Him in His fairest characters."
29. Contra Celsum, II. 69: "The truth of the
events recorded to have happened to Jesus cannot be seen fully in the mere text
and historical narrative, for each event to those who read the Bible more
intelligently is clearly a symbol of something as well." In fact Origen was
prepared to go much further. There are in the Scriptures obvious contradictions
and certain historical statements cannot be historically true. Yet, "the
spiritual truth was often preserved, as one might say in the material
falsehood." Origen would not condemn the writers, "if they even sometimes dealt
freely with things which to the eye of history happened differently, and changed
them so as to subserve the mystical aims they had in view." "Spiritual" must be
put above "material." Cf. In Joannem, X. 3 and 4, Migne PG, XIV, c. 312-313.
Ultimately the Bible was for Origen not so much a book of Sacred History, as an
enormous Allegory to be understood by intuition.
30. " Joannem, XIX. I, Migne PG XIX, c. 524
ss.
31. Contra Celsum, III. 41: "We affirm that his
mortal body and the human soul in him received the greatest elevation not only
by communion but by union and intermingling, so that by sharing in his divinity
he was transformed into God" and his body acquired "an ethereal and divine
quality."
32. Contra Celsum, II. 64; Commentary in
Mattheum, XII. 30 and 36, Migne PG, XII, c. 1050 and 1066.
33. Contra Celsum, VI. 77; cf. IV. 16 and
18.
34. St. Maximus, Capita theologica, II. 13,
MPG, XC, c. 1129-1132.
35. Contra Celsum, I. 33: "Why then should
there not be a certain soul that takes a body which is entirely miraculous," or
paradoxical?
36. Contra Celsum, II. 9; cf. In Joannem,
XXXII. 17, MPG, XIV, c. 812-818.
37. Commentaria in epistolam ad Romanos, I. 7,
MPG, XIV, c. 852.
38. In Jeremiam homilia XV. 6, MPG, XII, c.
436-437.
39. In Lucam homilia XXIX, MPG, XIII, c. 1876:
qui tune homo fuit, nunc autem esse cessavit.
40. See especially C. Cels. VIII. 17 and 18:
"in all those, then, who plant and cultivate within their souls, according to
the divine word, temperance, justice, wisdom, piety, and other virtues, these
excellences are the statues they raise, in which we are persuaded that it is
becoming for us to honour the model and the prototype of all statues: 'the image
of the invisible God.' God the Only-begotten . . . And everyone who imitates Him
according to his ability, does by this very endeavour raise a statue according
to the image of the Creator, for in the contemplation of God with a pure heart
they become imitators of Him. And in general, we see that all Christians strive
to raise altars and statues as we have described them, and these not of a
lifeless and senseless kind," etc.; cf. VII. 66: "All those who look at the evil
productions of painters and sculptors and imagemakers sit in darkness and are
settled in it, since they do not wish to look up and ascend in their mind from
all visible and sensible things to the Creator of all who is Light." See
Elliger, op. cit., s. II ff. and Hugo Koch, op. cit., p. 19
ff.
41. St. John of Damascus, De imaginibus,
III.
42. The Acts of the Iconoclastic conciliabulum
of 753 were read at the Nicene Ecumenical Council of 787, Mansi, vol. XII, c.
276.
43. "La Querelle des Images," in Fliche-Martin,
Histoire de l'Eglise, vol. V (Paris 1947).
44. The horos of the Nicaenum II in Mansi t v.
XIII, c. 373 ss.
45. Ralle and Potle, Syntagma ton theion kai
hieron Canonon, vol. II (Athens), pp. 492-495.
46. Porphyrios, Vita Plotini,
I.
47. Plotinus, Enneades, V, 8.
8.
48. Enneades, II. 9- 11.
49Acta Joannis, chapters 26-29, Bonnet, Acta
Apostolorum Apocrypha, ILI (Leipzig 1898, reprinted in 1959); English
translation in The Apocryphal New Testament, edited by M. R. James (Oxford,
1924). The document is not later than the middle 2nd century. The Acta were
quoted at the iconoclastic conciliabulum of 753: Mansi, XIII, c. 168 ss.
Patriarch Photius refers to the use of the document by the iconoclasts,
Bibliotheca, CIV.
50. Cf. the stimulating book of Endra Ivanka,
Hellenisches und Christliches im Frühbyzantinischen Geistesleben (Wien, 1948).
On Iconoclasm see p. 105 ff.
51. Origen is still a controversial figure. It
was beyond the purpose of this essay to give a comprehensive picture of his
theological thought. The only point which it was intended to make was to suggest
that certain aspects of his thought could have influenced the growth and
formulation of the iconoclastic position. The texts of Origen quoted in this
paper were selected for this purpose. The findings of this paper were supported
by Professor P.J. Alexander in his article: The Iconoclastic Council of St.
Sophia (815) and its definition (Horos), in "Dumbarton Oaks Papers," VII, p.
37-66.