n A.D. 381
the Council of Constantinople rejected the teaching of an elderly bishop from
Syria, named Apollinaris. Apollinaris had theorized that Jesus Christ’s divine
nature displaced Jesus’ human mind and will. To him, Jesus possessed only a
divine nature, and therefore did not truly take on the fallen nature of
humanity.
Controversy
about the relationship between the divine and human natures of Jesus continued
with Nestorius of Antioch, who was appointed bishop of Constantinople in 428.
Nestorius concluded that Jesus had two separate natures and two wills, making
him two persons—a double being—one divine and the other human, sharing one body.
Nestorius’ teaching was condemned by a church council at Ephesus in 431, but the
controversy did not end.
In the
440s, a respected monk from Constantinople, Eutyches, denied that Jesus was
truly human. He taught that Jesus did not exist in two natures because his human
nature was absorbed or swallowed up by his divine nature. Flavian, bishop of
Constantinople, convened a synod in 448, condemning Eutyches’ position, but
Eutyches appealed the decision. The fight took a nasty turn when Dioscorus,
Patriarch of Alexandria, became determined to reinstate Eutyches and his views.
Eastern emperor Theodosius II, also favoring Eutyches’ position, called another
church-wide council to meet at Ephesus in August 449. He appointed Dioscorus to
chair the proceedings and to silence any dissent.
Leo I,
bishop of Rome, sent delegates to the synod with his Tome, an exposition
of how the two natures, divine and human, are joined in Christ. Dioscorus
prevented the reading of Leo’s letter and rejected his position. Eutyches’
teaching was declared orthodox. Bishops who refused to accept the council’s
decision were deposed.
Council of Chalcedon
An
unexpected event dramatically changed the situation. On July 28, 450, while out
riding, Theodosius’ horse bolted. The emperor fell, broke his neck and died. His
sister Pulcheria became empress with her husband, Marcian, as co-emperor. They
were opposed to Eutyches’ teaching and eager to redress the wrongs perpetrated
by Dioscorus.
Emperor
Marcian called for a church council to meet at Chalcedon, on the outskirts of
Constantinople. More than 500 bishops attended—the largest church council
gathering to that time. All delegates were from the Eastern Church, except the
few papal representatives from Rome and two from Africa. Deliberations lasted
from October 8 to November 1, 451.
Leo again
sent representatives with his Tome, which was read and approved by the
council. Chalcedon reversed the “Robbers’ Council” decision and condemned
Eutyches’ teaching. It anathematized those who taught that Christ had only a
single, divine nature and those “who imagine a mixture or confusion between the
two natures of Christ.”
Definition of Faith
Marcian
urged the council to write a statement of faith to provide unity and
understanding for the Church. In response, the council produced the
“Chalcedonian Definition.”
The
Definition affirms that Christ is “complete in Godhead and complete in
humanness, truly God and truly human.” He is “of one substance (homoousios)
with the Father as regards his Godhead, and at the same time of one substance
with us as regards his humanity.”
Jesus
Christ is to be “recognized in two natures, without confusion, without change,
without division, without separation.” The “distinction of natures” is “in no
way annulled by the union.” “The characteristics of each nature” are to be
considered as “preserved and coming together to form one person and
subsistence.” They are not to be “separated into two persons.”
In summary,
the Definition confesses Jesus Christ is “one person, who is both
divine and human.” Though its wording has been criticized as inadequate,
it has helped the Church in “setting the limits beyond which error lies” in
speaking of the human and divine union in Christ.
The
Definition confesses the gospel message that Jesus Christ assumed our fallen
humanity in order to save us, for as early church father, Gregory of Nazianzus
(329-389), said, “That which he [Christ] has not assumed he has not healed; but
that which is united to his Godhead is also saved.”
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God....
And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:1, 14).
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