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First Council of Nicaea

The First Council of Nicaea (/nˈsə/; Ancient Greek: Νίκαια [ˈnikεa]) was a council of Christian bishops convened in the Bithynian city of Nicaea (now İznik, Turkey) by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in AD 325.

First Council of Nicaea
DateMay to August AD 325
Accepted by
Next council
First Council of Constantinople
Convoked byEmperor Constantine I
PresidentHosius of Corduba and Pope Alexander I of Alexandria
Attendance
  • 318 (traditional number)
  • 250–318 (estimates) – only five from Western Church
TopicsArianism, the nature of Christ, celebration of Passover, ordination of eunuchs, prohibition of kneeling on Sundays and from Easter to Pentecost, validity of baptism by heretics, lapsed Christians, sundry other matters.[1]
Documents and statements
Original Nicene Creed,[2] 20 canons,[3] and a synodal epistle[1]
Chronological list of ecumenical councils

This ecumenical council was the first effort to attain consensus in the church through an assembly representing all Christendom. Hosius of Corduba may have presided over its deliberations.[4][5] Its main accomplishments were settlement of the Christological issue of the divine nature of God the Son and his relationship to God the Father,[2] the construction of the first part of the Nicene Creed, mandating uniform observance of the date of Easter,[6] and promulgation of early canon law.[3][7]

Overview

The First Council of Nicaea was the first ecumenical council of the church. Most significantly, it resulted in the first uniform Christian doctrine, called the Nicene Creed. With the creation of the creed, a precedent was established for subsequent local and regional councils of bishops (synods) to create statements of belief and canons of doctrinal orthodoxy—the intent being to define unity of beliefs for the whole of Christendom.[8]

Derived from Greek (Ancient Greek: οἰκουμένη, romanizedoikouménē, lit.'the inhabited one'), "ecumenical" means "worldwide" but generally is assumed to be limited to the known inhabited Earth,[9] and at this time in history is nearly synonymous with the Roman Empire; the earliest extant uses of the term for a council are Eusebius' Life of Constantine[10] around 338, which states "he convoked an ecumenical council" (σύνοδον οἰκουμενικὴν συνεκρότει, sýnodon oikoumenikḕn synekrótei)[11] and a letter in 382 to Pope Damasus I and the Latin bishops from the First Council of Constantinople.[12]

One purpose of the Council was to resolve disagreements arising from within the Church of Alexandria over the nature of Jesus in his relationship to the Father: in particular, whether the Son had been 'begotten' by the Father from his own being, and therefore having no beginning, or else created out of nothing, and therefore having a beginning.[13] St. Alexander of Alexandria and Athanasius took the first position; the popular presbyter Arius, from whom the term Arianism comes, took the second. The Council decided against the Arians overwhelmingly (of the estimated 250–318 attendees, all but two agreed to sign the creed, and these two, along with Arius, were banished to Illyria).[8][14]

Another result of the Council was an agreement on when to celebrate Easter, the most important feast of the ecclesiastical calendar, decreed in an epistle to the Church of Alexandria in which is simply stated:

We also send you the good news of the settlement concerning the holy pasch, namely that in answer to your prayers this question also has been resolved. All the brethren in the East who have hitherto followed the Jewish practice will henceforth observe the custom of the Romans and of yourselves and of all of us who from ancient times have kept Easter together with you.[15]

Historically significant as the first effort to attain consensus in the church through an assembly representing all of Christendom,[16] the Council was the first occasion where the technical aspects of Christology were discussed.[16] Through it a precedent was set for subsequent general councils to adopt creeds and canons. This Council is generally considered the beginning of the period of the First seven ecumenical councils in the history of Christianity.[17]

Character and purpose

 
Constantine the Great summoned the bishops of the Christian Church to Nicaea to address divisions in the Church (mosaic in Hagia Sophia, Constantinople (Istanbul), c. 1000).

The First Council of Nicaea, the first general council in the history of the Church, was convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great upon the recommendations of a synod led by Bishop Hosius of Corduba in the Eastertide of 325, or rather convened by Hosius and supported by Constantine.[18] This synod had been charged with investigation of the trouble brought about by the Arian controversy in the Greek-speaking east.[19] To most bishops, the teachings of Arius were heretical and dangerous to the salvation of souls.[20] In the summer of 325, the bishops of all provinces were summoned to Nicaea, a place reasonably accessible to many delegates. According to Warren H. Carroll, in the Council of Nicaea, "the Church had taken her first great step to define revealed doctrine more precisely in response to a challenge from a heretical theology."[21]

Attendees

Constantine had invited all 1,800 bishops of the Christian church within the Roman Empire (about 1,000 in the East and 800 in the West), but a smaller and unknown number attended. Eusebius of Caesarea counted more than 250,[22] Athanasius of Alexandria counted 318,[11] and Eustathius of Antioch estimated "about 270"[23] (all three were present at the Council). Later, Socrates Scholasticus recorded more than 300,[24] and Evagrius,[25] Hilary of Poitiers,[26] Jerome,[27] Dionysius Exiguus,[28] and Rufinus[29] each recorded 318. This number 318 is preserved in the liturgies of the Eastern Orthodox Church[30] and the Coptic Orthodox Church.[31] For some, the number is suspicious as it is the number of Abraham's servants in Genesis 14:14, and there was a polemical reason for the Nicene Fathers to imply that they were servants of Abraham, the father of the Faith.[32]

Delegates came from every region of the Roman Empire and from the Christian churches extant within the Sassanid Empire.[33] The participating bishops were given free travel to and from their episcopal sees to the Council, as well as lodging. These bishops did not travel alone; each one had permission to bring with him two priests and three deacons, so the total number of attendees could have been above 1,800. Eusebius speaks of an almost innumerable host of accompanying priests, deacons, and acolytes. A Syriac manuscript lists the names of the eastern bishops which included 22 from Coele-Syria, 19 from Syria Palaestina, 10 from Phoenicia, 6 from Arabia, others from Assyria, Mesopotamia, Persia, etc., but the distinction of bishops from presbyters had not yet formed.[34][35]

The Eastern bishops formed the great majority. Of these, the first rank was held by the patriarchs: Alexander of Alexandria and Eustathius of Antioch. Many of the assembled fathers—for instance, Paphnutius of Thebes, Potamon of Heraclea, and Paul of Neocaesarea—had stood forth as confessors of the faith and came to the Council with the marks of persecution on their faces. This position is supported by patristic scholar Timothy Barnes in his book Constantine and Eusebius.[36] Historically, the influence of these marred confessors has been seen as substantial, but recent scholarship has called this into question.[29]

Other remarkable attendees were Eusebius of Nicomedia; Eusebius of Caesarea, the purported first church historian; circumstances suggest that Nicholas of Myra attended (his life was the seed of the Santa Claus legends); Macarius of Jerusalem, later a staunch defender of Athanasius; Aristaces of Armenia (son of Saint Gregory the Illuminator); Leontius of Caesarea; Jacob of Nisibis, a former hermit; Hypatius of Gangra; Protogenes of Sardica; Melitius of Sebastopolis; Achilleus of Larissa (considered the Athanasius of Thessaly);[37] and Spyridon of Trimythous, who even while a bishop made his living as a shepherd.[38] From foreign places came John, bishop of Persia and India,[39] Theophilus, a Gothic bishop, and Stratophilus, bishop of Pitiunt in Georgia. The Latin-speaking provinces sent at least five representatives: Marcus of Calabria from Italia, Cecilian of Carthage from Africa, Hosius of Córdoba from Hispania, Nicasius of Die from Gaul,[37] and Domnus of Sirmium from the province of the Danube. Athanasius of Alexandria, a young deacon and companion of Bishop Alexander of Alexandria, was among the assistants. Athanasius eventually spent most of his life battling against Arianism. Alexander of Constantinople, then a presbyter, was also present as representative of his aged bishop.[37]

The supporters of Arius included Secundus of Ptolemais, Theonus of Marmarica, Zephyrius (or Zopyrus), and Dathes, all of whom hailed from the Libyan Pentapolis. Other supporters included Eusebius of Nicomedia, Paulinus of Tyrus, Actius of Lydda, Menophantus of Ephesus, and Theognus of Nicaea.[37][40]

"Resplendent in purple and gold, Constantine made a ceremonial entrance at the opening of the Council, probably in early June, but respectfully seated the bishops ahead of himself."[4] As Eusebius describes, Constantine "himself proceeded through the midst of the assembly, like some heavenly messenger of God, clothed in raiment which glittered as it were with rays of light, reflecting the glowing radiance of a purple robe, and adorned with the brilliant splendor of gold and precious stones."[41] The emperor was present as an overseer and presider but did not cast any official vote. Constantine organized the Council along the lines of the Roman Senate. Hosius of Cordoba may have presided over its deliberations; he was probably one of the papal legates.[4] Eusebius of Nicomedia probably gave the welcoming address.[4][42]

Agenda

The agenda of the synod included the following issues:

  1. With respect to the Arian question, the large portion of the Nicene Creed that is devoted to Christ (more than 80%) indicates that the main issue before the Council was about Jesus Christ; not about the Father or about the Holy Spirit. What the main issue was more exactly can be seen by comparing the condemnations at the end of the decree—reflecting Arius' views—with the council's affirmations as contained in the body of the creed:
    1. While Arius claimed that Jesus Christ was created, the Council concluded, since He was begotten, that He was not made.
    2. While Arius argued that Jesus Christ was created out of nothing or out of something else, the council affirmed that he was begotten out of the substance (essence) of the Father.
    3. Since the statement in the creed that Jesus Christ is homoousion with the Father (of the same substance)[43][44] does not counter any of Arius' claims, as reflected in the condemnation. The debate was not about what his substance is but out of what substance he was generated. The term homo-ousios was added only because Emperor Constantine proposed and insisted on its inclusion.[45][46][47] Both Fortman and Erickson mention that the main issue before the council was "not the unity of the Godhead" but the Son's "full divinity".[48][49]
  2. The date of celebration of Pascha/Easter
  3. The Meletian schism
  4. Various matters of church discipline, which resulted in twenty canons
    1. Organizational structure of the Church: focused on the ordering of the episcopacy
    2. Dignity standards for the clergy: issues of ordination at all levels and of suitability of behavior and background for clergy
    3. Reconciliation of the lapsed: establishing norms for public repentance and penance
    4. Readmission to the Church of heretics and schismatics: including issues of when reordination and/or rebaptism were to be required
    5. Liturgical practice: including the place of deacons and the practice of standing at prayer during liturgy[50]

Procedure

The Council was formally opened 20 May 325, in the central structure of the imperial palace at Nicaea, with preliminary discussions of the Arian question. Emperor Constantine arrived nearly a month later on 14 June.[51] In these discussions, some dominant figures were Arius, with several adherents. "Some 22 of the bishops at the Council, led by Eusebius of Nicomedia, came as supporters of Arius. But when some of the more shocking passages from his writings were read, they were almost universally seen as blasphemous."[4] Bishops Theognis of Nicaea and Maris of Chalcedon were among the initial supporters of Arius.

Eusebius of Caesarea called to mind the baptismal creed of his own diocese at Caesarea at Palestine, as a form of reconciliation. The majority of the bishops agreed. For some time, scholars thought that the original Nicene Creed was based on this statement of Eusebius. Today, most scholars think that the creed is derived from the baptismal creed of Jerusalem, as Hans Lietzmann proposes.[52]

The orthodox bishops won approval of every one of their proposals regarding the creed. After being in session for an entire month, the Council promulgated on 19 June the original Nicene Creed. This profession of faith was adopted by all the bishops "but two from Libya who had been closely associated with Arius from the beginning".[21] No explicit historical record of their dissent actually exists; the signatures of these bishops are simply absent from the creed. The sessions continued to deal with minor matters until 25 August.[51]

Arian controversy

 
The synod of Nicaea, Constantine and the condemnation and burning of Arian books, illustration from a northern Italian compendium of canon law, c. 825

The Arian controversy arose in Alexandria when the newly reinstated presbyter Arius[53] began to spread doctrinal views that were contrary to those of his bishop, Alexander of Alexandria. The disputed issues centered on the natures and relationship of God (the Father) and the Son of God (Jesus). The disagreements sprang from different ideas about the Godhead and what it meant for Jesus to be God's Son. Alexander maintained that the Son was divine in just the same sense that the Father is, coeternal with the Father, else he could not be a true Son.[13][54]

Arius emphasized the supremacy and uniqueness of God the Father, meaning that the Father alone is almighty and infinite, and that therefore the Father's divinity must be greater than the Son's. Arius taught that the Son had a beginning and that he possessed neither the eternity nor the true divinity of the Father, but was rather made "God" only by the Father's permission and power, and that the Son was rather the first and the most perfect of God's creatures.[13][54]

The Arian discussions and debates at the Council extended from about 20 May through about 19 June.[54] According to legendary accounts, debate became so heated that at one point, Arius was struck in the face by Nicholas of Myra, who would later be canonized.[55] This account is almost certainly apocryphal, as Arius would not have been present in the council chamber because he was not a bishop.[56]

Much of the debate hinged on the difference between being "born" or "created" and being "begotten". Arians saw these as essentially the same; followers of Alexander did not. The exact meaning of many of the words used in the debates at Nicaea were still unclear to speakers of other languages. Greek words like "essence" (ousia), "substance" (hypostasis), "nature" (physis), "person" (prosopon) bore a variety of meanings drawn from pre-Christian philosophers, which could not but entail misunderstandings until they were cleared up. The word homoousia, in particular, was initially disliked by many bishops because of its associations with Gnostics (who used it in their theology), and because their beliefs had been condemned at the 264–268 Synods of Antioch.

Arguments for Arianism

According to surviving accounts, the presbyter Arius argued for the supremacy of God the Father, and maintained that the Son of God was created as an act of the Father's will, and therefore that the Son was a creature made by God, begotten directly of the infinite eternal God. Arius's argument was that the Son was God's first production, before all ages, the position being that the Son had a beginning, and that only the Father has no beginning. Arius argued that everything else was created through the Son. Thus, said the Arians, only the Son was directly created and begotten of God; and therefore there was a time that he had no existence. Arius believed that the Son of God was capable of his own free will of right and wrong, and that "were He in the truest sense a son, He must have come after the Father, therefore the time obviously was when He was not, and hence He was a finite being",[57] and that he was under God the Father. Therefore, Arius insisted that the Father's divinity was greater than the Son's. The Arians appealed to Scripture, quoting biblical statements such as "the Father is greater than I" (John 14:28),[58] and also that the Son is "firstborn of all creation" (Colossians 1:15).[59]

Arguments against Arianism

 
The Council of Nicaea, with Arius depicted as defeated by the council, lying under the feet of Emperor Constantine

The opposing view stemmed from the idea that begetting the Son is itself in the nature of the Father, which is eternal. Thus, the Father was always a Father, and both Father and Son existed always together, eternally, coequally and consubstantially.[60] The anti-Arian argument thus stated that the Logos was "eternally begotten", therefore with no beginning. Those in opposition to Arius believed that to follow the Arian view destroyed the unity of the Godhead and made the Son unequal to the Father. They insisted that such a view was in contravention of such Scriptures as "I and the Father are one" (John 10:30)[61] and "the Word was God" (John 1:1).[62] They declared, as did Athanasius,[63] that the Son had no beginning but had an "eternal derivation" from the Father and therefore was coeternal with him and equal to God in all aspects.[64]

Result of the debate

The Council declared that the Son was true God, coeternal with the Father and begotten from his same substance, arguing that such a doctrine best codified the Scriptural presentation of the Son as well as traditional Christian belief about him handed down from the Apostles. This belief was expressed by the bishops in the Creed of Nicaea, which would form the basis of what has since been known as the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed.[65]

Nicene Creed

 
Icon depicting the Emperor Constantine and the bishops of the First Council of Nicaea (325) holding the Niceno–Constantinopolitan Creed of 381

One of the projects undertaken by the Council was the creation of a creed, a declaration and summary of the Christian faith. Several creeds were already in existence; many creeds were acceptable to the members of the Council, including Arius. From earliest times, various creeds served as a means of identification for Christians, as a means of inclusion and recognition, especially at baptism. In Rome, for example, the Apostles' Creed was popular, especially for use in Lent and the Easter season. In the Council of Nicaea, one specific creed was used to define the Church's faith clearly, to include those who professed it, and to exclude those who did not.

The original Nicene Creed read as follows:

We believe in one God, the Father almighty,
maker of all things visible and invisible;
And in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
begotten from the Father, only-begotten,
that is, from the substance of the Father,
God from God, light from light,
true God from true God, begotten not made,
of one substance with the Father,
through Whom all things came into being,
things in heaven and things on earth,
Who because of us men and because of our salvation came down,
and became incarnate and became man, and suffered,
and rose again on the third day, and ascended to the heavens,
and will come to judge the living and dead,
And in the Holy Spirit.
But as for those who say, There was when He was not,
and, Before being born He was not,
and that He came into existence out of nothing,
or who assert that the Son of God is of a different hypostasis or substance,
or created, or is subject to alteration or change
– these the Catholic and apostolic Church anathematizes.[66]

Some distinctive elements in the Nicene Creed, perhaps from the hand of Hosius of Cordova, were added, some specifically to counter the Arian point of view.[13][67]

  1. Jesus Christ is described as "Light from Light, true God from true God", proclaiming his divinity.
  2. Jesus Christ is said to be "begotten, not made", asserting that he was not a mere creature, brought into being out of nothing, but the true Son of God, brought into being "from the substance of the Father".
  3. He is said to be "of one substance with the Father", proclaiming that although Jesus Christ is "true God" and God the Father is also "true God", they are "of one substance". The Greek term homoousios, consubstantial (i.e. of the same substance) is ascribed by Eusebius of Caesarea to Constantine who, on this particular point, may have chosen to exercise his authority. The significance of this clause, however, is ambiguous as to the extent in which Jesus Christ and God the Father are "of one substance", and the issues it raised would be seriously controverted in the future.

At the end of the creed came a list of anathemas, designed to repudiate explicitly the Arians' stated claims.

  1. The view that "there was once when he was not" was rejected to maintain the coeternity of the Son with the Father.
  2. The view that he was "mutable or subject to change" was rejected to maintain that the Son just like the Father was beyond any form of weakness or corruptibility, and most importantly that he could not fall away from absolute moral perfection.

Thus, instead of a baptismal creed acceptable to both the Arians and their opponents, the Council promulgated one which was clearly opposed to Arianism and incompatible with the distinctive core of their beliefs. The text of this profession of faith is preserved in a letter of Eusebius to his congregation, in Athanasius' works, and elsewhere. The Homoousians (from the Koine Greek word translated as "of same substance" which was condemned at the Council of Antioch in 264–268) were the most vocal of anti-Arians and were able to advance the use of the term, thus the creed was accepted by the Council.

Bishop Hosius of Cordova, one of the firm Homoousians, may well have helped bring the Council to consensus. At the time of the Council, he was the confidant of the emperor in all Church matters. Hosius stands at the head of the lists of bishops, and Athanasius ascribes to him the actual formulation of the creed. Leaders such as Eustathius of Antioch, Alexander of Alexandria, Athanasius, and Marcellus of Ancyra all adhered to the Homoousian position.

In spite of his sympathy for Arius, Eusebius of Caesarea adhered to the decisions of the Council, accepting the entire creed. The initial number of bishops supporting Arius was small perhaps only around 18. After a month of discussion, on 19 June, there were only two left: Theonas of Marmarica in Libya and Secundus of Ptolemais. Maris of Chalcedon, who initially supported Arianism, agreed to the whole creed but not the anathemas.[68] Similarly, Eusebius of Nicomedia and Theognis of Nice also agreed, except for certain statements.

The emperor carried out his earlier statement: everybody who refused to endorse the creed would be exiled. Arius, Theonas, and Secundus refused to adhere to the creed and were thus exiled to Illyria, in addition to being excommunicated. The works of Arius were ordered to be confiscated and consigned to the flames,[8] while his supporters were considered as "enemies of Christianity".[69] Nevertheless, the controversy continued in various parts of the empire.[70]

The creed was amended by the First Council of Constantinople in 381.

Separation of Easter computation from Jewish calendar

The feast of Easter is linked to the Jewish Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread, as Christians believe that the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus occurred at the time of those observances. As early as Pope Sixtus I in the 2nd century, some Christians had set Easter to a Sunday in the lunar month of Nisan. To determine which lunar month was to be designated as Nisan, Christians relied on the Jewish community. By the late 3rd century some Christians began to express dissatisfaction with what they took to be the disorderly state of the Jewish calendar. They argued that contemporary Jews were identifying the wrong lunar month as the month of Nisan, choosing a month whose 14th day fell before the spring equinox.[71]

Christians, these thinkers argued, should abandon the custom of relying on Jewish informants and instead do their own computations to determine which month should be styled Nisan, setting Easter within this independently computed, Christian Nisan, which would always locate the festival after the equinox. They justified this break with tradition by arguing that it was in fact the contemporary Jewish calendar that had broken with tradition by ignoring the equinox and that in former times the 14th of Nisan had never preceded the equinox.[72] Others felt that the customary practice of reliance on the Jewish calendar should continue, even if the Jewish computations were in error from a Christian point of view.[73]

The controversy between those who argued for independent computations and those who argued for continued reliance on the Jewish calendar was formally resolved by the Council, which endorsed the independent procedure that had been in use for some time at Rome and Alexandria. Easter was henceforward to be a Sunday in a lunar month chosen according to Christian criteria—in effect, a Christian Nisan—not in the month of Nisan as defined by Jews.[6] Those who argued for continued reliance on the Jewish calendar (called "protopaschites" by later historians) were urged to come around to the majority position. That they did not all immediately do so is revealed by the existence of sermons,[74] canons,[75] and tracts[76] written against the protopaschite practice in the late 4th century.

These two rules—independence of the Jewish calendar and worldwide uniformity—were the only rules for Easter explicitly laid down by the Council. No details for the computation were specified; these were worked out in practice, a process that took centuries and generated numerous controversies, some of which remain unresolved. In particular, the Council did not seem to decree that Easter must fall on Sunday.[77]

Nor did the Council decree that Easter must never coincide with Nisan 14 (the first Day of Unleavened Bread, now commonly called "Passover") in the Hebrew calendar. By endorsing the move to independent computations, the Council had separated the Easter computation from all dependence, positive or negative, on the Jewish calendar. The "Zonaras proviso", the claim that Easter must always follow Nisan 14 in the Hebrew calendar, was not formulated until after some centuries. By that time, the accumulation of errors in the Julian solar and lunar calendars had made it the de facto state of affairs that Julian Easter always followed Hebrew Nisan 14.[78]

Melitian schism

The suppression of the Melitian schism, an early breakaway sect, was another important matter that came before the Council of Nicaea. Melitius, it was decided, should remain in his own city of Lycopolis in Egypt but without exercising authority or the power to ordain new clergy; he was forbidden to go into the environs of the town or to enter another diocese for the purpose of ordaining its subjects. Melitius retained his episcopal title, but the ecclesiastics ordained by him were to receive again the laying on of hands, the ordinations performed by Melitius being therefore regarded as invalid. Clergy ordained by Melitius were ordered to yield precedence to those ordained by Alexander, and they were not to do anything without the consent of Bishop Alexander.[79]

In the event of the death of a non-Melitian bishop or ecclesiastic, the vacant see might be given to a Melitian, provided he was worthy and the popular election were ratified by Alexander. Melitius' episcopal rights and prerogatives were taken from him. These mild measures, however, were in vain; the Melitians joined the Arians and caused more dissension than ever, being among the worst enemies of Athanasius. The Melitians ultimately died out around the middle of the 5th century.

Promulgation of canon law

The Council promulgated twenty new church laws, called canons (though the exact number is subject to debate), that is, rules of discipline. The twenty as listed in the works of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers are as follows:[80]

  1. prohibition of self-castration for clergy
  2. establishment of a minimum term for catechumens (persons studying for baptism)
  3. prohibition of a man and a woman who have both taken vows of chastity to live together in a chaste and non-legalized partnership (the so called virgines subintroductae, who practiced syneisaktism)
  4. ordination of a bishop in the presence of at least three provincial bishops[8] and confirmation by the metropolitan bishop
  5. provision for two provincial synods to be held annually
  6. confirmation of ancient customs giving jurisdiction over large regions to the bishops of Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch
  7. recognition of the honorary rights of the see of Jerusalem
  8. provision for agreement with the Novatianists, an early sect
  9. elders who had been ordained without sufficient examination were not to be recognized
  10. elders who had lapsed but had not been found out were to be deposed
  11. mercy was enjoined toward those who had lapsed without compulsion, even though it was recognized that they did not deserve it
  12. those who had left the military but later sought out to be restored to their military position were to be excommunicated; depending on the sincerity of their repentance, they could be readmitted to communion earlier
  13. those who were fulfilling penance could receive communion if they were dying, but if they got well again, they were to finish their penance
  14. catachumens who lapsed were to have three years as hearers before being allowed to become catechumens again
  15. bishops, presbyters, and deacons were not to wander into neighboring cities to officiate
  16. clergy who refused to return to their home church were to be excommunicated, and the ordinations of those who were ordained by these wandering clergy were to be considered null and void
  17. prohibition of usury among the clergy
  18. precedence of bishops and presbyters before deacons in receiving the Eucharist (Holy Communion)
  19. declaration of the invalidity of baptism by Paulian heretics
  20. prohibition of kneeling on Sundays and during the Pentecost (the fifty days commencing on Easter). Standing was the normative posture for prayer at this time, as it still is among the Eastern Christians. Kneeling was considered most appropriate to penitential prayer, as distinct from the festive nature of Eastertide and its remembrance every Sunday. The canon was designed only to ensure uniformity of practice at the designated times.

Effects

 
A fresco depicting the First Council of Nicaea at the Vatican's Sixtine Salon

In the short-term, the Council did not completely solve the problems it was convened to discuss, and a period of conflict and upheaval continued for some time. Constantine was succeeded by two Arian emperors in the Eastern Empire: his son, Constantius II, and Valens. Valens could not resolve the outstanding ecclesiastical issues and unsuccessfully confronted St. Basil over the Nicene Creed.[81]

Pagan powers within the empire sought to maintain and at times re-establish paganism into the seat of the emperor (see Arbogast and Julian the Apostate). Arians and Meletians soon regained nearly all of the rights they had lost, and consequently Arianism continued to spread and be a subject of debate within the Church during the remainder of the 4th century. Almost immediately, Eusebius of Nicomedia, an Arian bishop and cousin to Constantine I, used his influence at court to sway Constantine's favor from the proto-orthodox Nicene bishops to the Arians.[82]

Eustathius of Antioch was deposed and exiled in 330. Athanasius, who had succeeded Alexander as Bishop of Alexandria, was deposed by the First Synod of Tyre in 335, and Marcellus of Ancyra followed him in 336. Arius returned to Constantinople to be readmitted into the Church but died shortly before he could be received. Constantine died the next year, after finally receiving baptism from Arian Bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, and "with his passing the first round in the battle after the Council of Nicaea was ended".[82]

Role of Constantine

Christianity had only recently been legalised in the empire, the Diocletianic Persecution having ended in 311 under Galerius. Although Galerius stopped the Persecution, Christianity was not legally protected until 313, when the emperors Constantine and Licinius agreed to what became known as the Edict of Milan, guaranteeing Christians legal protection and tolerance. However, Nicene Christianity did not become the state religion of the Roman Empire until the Edict of Thessalonica in 380. In the meantime, paganism remained legal and present in public affairs. Constantine's coinage and other official motifs, until the Council of Nicaea, had affiliated him with the pagan cult of Sol Invictus. At first, Constantine encouraged the construction of new temples[83] and tolerated traditional sacrifices.[84] Later in his reign, he gave orders for the pillaging and the tearing down of Roman temples.[85][86][87]

Constantine's role regarding Nicaea was that of supreme civil leader and authority in the empire. As Emperor, the responsibility for maintaining civil order was his, and he sought that the Church be of one mind and at peace. When first informed of the unrest in Alexandria due to the Arian disputes, he was "greatly troubled" and, "rebuked" both Arius and Bishop Alexander for originating the disturbance and allowing it to become public.[88] Aware also of "the diversity of opinion" regarding the celebration of Easter and hoping to settle both issues, he sent the "honored" Bishop Hosius of Cordova (Hispania) to form a local church council and "reconcile those who were divided".[88] When that embassy failed, he turned to summoning a synod at Nicaea, inviting "the most eminent men of the churches in every country".[89]

Constantine assisted in assembling the Council by arranging that travel expenses to and from the bishops' episcopal sees, as well as lodging at Nicaea, be covered out of public funds.[90] He also provided and furnished a "great hall ... in the palace" as a place for discussion so that the attendees "should be treated with becoming dignity".[90] In addressing the opening of the Council, he "exhorted the Bishops to unanimity and concord" and called on them to follow the Holy Scriptures with: "Let, then, all contentious disputation be discarded; and let us seek in the divinely-inspired word the solution of the questions at issue."[90]

Thereupon, the debate about Arius and church doctrine began. "The emperor gave patient attention to the speeches of both parties" and "deferred" to the decision of the bishops.[91] The bishops first pronounced Arius' teachings to be anathema, formulating the creed as a statement of correct doctrine. When Arius and two followers refused to agree, the bishops pronounced clerical judgement by excommunicating them from the Church. Respecting the clerical decision, and seeing the threat of continued unrest, Constantine also pronounced civil judgement, banishing them into exile. This was the beginning of the practice of using secular power to establish doctrinal orthodoxy within Christianity, an example followed by all later Christian emperors, which led to a circle of Christian violence, and of Christian resistance couched in terms of martyrdom.[92]

Misconceptions

Biblical canon

There is no record of any discussion of the biblical canon at the council.[93] The development of the biblical canon was nearly complete (with exceptions known as the Antilegomena, written texts whose authenticity or value is disputed) by the time the Muratorian fragment was written.[94] The main source of the idea that the canon was created at the Council of Nicaea seems to be Voltaire, who popularised a story that the canon was determined by placing all the competing books on an altar during the Council and then keeping the ones that did not fall off. The original source of this "fictitious anecdote" is the Synodicon Vetus,[95] a pseudo-historical account of early Church councils from 887.[96]

In 331, Constantine commissioned fifty Bibles for the use of the Bishop of Constantinople, but little else is known (in fact, it is not even certain whether his request was for fifty copies of the entire Old and New Testaments, only the New Testament, or merely the Gospels). Some scholars believe that this request provided motivation for canon lists. In Jerome's Prologue to Judith, he claims that the Book of Judith was "found by the Nicene Council to have been counted among the number of the Sacred Scriptures".[97]

Trinity

The Council of Nicaea dealt primarily with the issue of the deity of Christ. The term "Trinity" was already in use, with the earliest existing reference being by Theophilus of Antioch (115-181 AD), referring to God, the Logos and Sophia[98] (Father, Son and Holy Spirit, as the Holy Spirit was referred to by several Church fathers back then), though many scholars believe that the way the term was used indicates it was known previously to his readers. Also, over a century earlier that Nicaesa, the term "Trinity" (Τριάς in Greek; trinitas in Latin) was used in the writings of Origen and Tertullian, and a general notion of a "divine three", in some sense, was expressed in the 2nd-century writings of Polycarp, Ignatius, and Justin Martyr. In Nicaea, questions regarding the Holy Spirit were left largely unaddressed until after the relationship between the Father and the Son was settled around the year 362.[99] The doctrine in a more full-fledged form was not formulated until the Council of Constantinople in 381[100] and a final form formulated primarily by Gregory of Nyssa.[101]

Constantine

While Constantine had sought a unified church after the Council, he did not force the homoousian view of Christ's nature on the council. Constantine did not commission any Bibles at the Council. Despite Constantine's sympathetic interest in the Church, he was not baptized until some 11 or 12 years after the council, putting off baptism as long as he did so as to be absolved from as much sin as possible.[102]

Disputed matters

According to Protestant theologian Philip Schaff: "The Nicene fathers passed this canon not as introducing anything new, but merely as confirming an existing relation on the basis of church tradition; and that, with special reference to Alexandria, on account of the troubles existing there. Rome was named only for illustration; and Antioch and all the other eparchies or provinces were secured their admitted rights. The bishoprics of Alexandria, Rome, and Antioch were placed substantially on equal footing." Thus, according to Schaff, the Bishop of Alexandria was to have jurisdiction over the provinces of Egypt, Libya and the Pentapolis, just as the Bishop of Rome had authority "with reference to his own diocese."[103]

However, according to Fr. James F. Loughlin, there is an alternative Catholic interpretation. It involves five different arguments "drawn respectively from the grammatical structure of the sentence, from the logical sequence of ideas, from Catholic analogy, from comparison with the process of formation of the Byzantine Patriarchate, and from the authority of the ancients"[104] in favor of an alternative understanding of the canon. According to this interpretation, the canon shows the role the Bishop of Rome had when he, by his authority, confirmed the jurisdiction of the other patriarchs—an interpretation which is in line with the Catholic understanding of the Pope. Thus, the Bishop of Alexandria presided over Egypt, Libya and the Pentapolis,[8] while the Bishop of Antioch "enjoyed a similar authority throughout the great diocese of Oriens," and all by the authority of the Bishop of Rome. To Loughlin, that was the only possible reason to invoke the custom of a Roman Bishop in a matter related to the two metropolitan bishops in Alexandria and Antioch.[104]

However, Protestant and Catholic interpretations have historically assumed that some or all of the bishops identified in the canon were presiding over their own dioceses at the time of the Council—the Bishop of Rome over the Diocese of Italy, as Schaff suggested, the Bishop of Antioch over the Diocese of Oriens, as Loughlin suggested, and the Bishop of Alexandria over the Diocese of Egypt, as suggested by Karl Josef von Hefele. According to Hefele, the Council had assigned to Alexandria, "the whole (civil) Diocese of Egypt."[105] Yet those assumptions have since been proven false. At the time of the Council, the Diocese of Egypt did exist but was known as the Diocese of Alexandria, so the Council could have assigned it to Alexandria. Antioch and Alexandria were both located within the civil Diocese of Oriens, Antioch being the chief metropolis, but neither administered the whole. Likewise, Rome and Milan were both located within the civil Diocese of Italy, Milan being the chief metropolis.[106][107]

This geographic issue related to Canon 6 was highlighted by Protestant writer Timothy F. Kauffman, as a correction to the anachronism created by the assumption that each bishop was already presiding over a whole diocese at the time of the Council.[108] According to Kauffman, since Milan and Rome were both located within the Diocese of Italy, and Antioch and Alexandria were both located within the Diocese of Oriens, a relevant and "structural congruency" between Rome and Alexandria was readily apparent to the gathered bishops: both had been made to share a diocese of which neither was the chief metropolis. Rome's jurisdiction within Italy had been defined in terms of several of the city's adjacent provinces since Diocletian's reordering of the empire in 293, as the earliest Latin version of the canon indicates.[109]

That provincial arrangement of Roman and Milanese jurisdiction within Italy therefore was a relevant precedent, and provided an administrative solution to the problem facing the Council—namely, how to define Alexandrian and Antiochian jurisdiction within the Diocese of Oriens. In canon 6, the Council left most of the diocese under Antioch's jurisdiction, and assigned a few provinces of the diocese to Alexandria, "since the like is customary for the Bishop of Rome also."[110]

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b SEC, p. 39
  3. ^ a b SEC, pp. 44–94
  4. ^ a b c d e Carroll 1987, p. 11
  5. ^ Vallaud 1995, pp. 234–235, 678.
  6. ^ a b On the Keeping of Easter
  7. ^ Leclercq 1911b
  8. ^ a b c d e Mirbt, Carl Theodor (1911). "Nicaea, Council of" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 640–642.
  9. ^ Danker, Frederick William (2000), "οἰκουμένη", A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (Third ed.), Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-03933-6, retrieved 24 February 2014
  10. ^ Vita Constantini, Book 3, Chapter 6
  11. ^ a b Ad Afros Epistola Synodica
  12. ^ SEC, pp. 292–294
  13. ^ a b c d Kelly 1978, Chapter 9
  14. ^ Schaff & Schaff 1910, Section 120
  15. ^ SEC, p. 114
  16. ^ a b Kieckhefer 1989
  17. ^ "The First Seven Ecumenical Councils - MOLL-Y - The Method of Loci Learning - York". Retrieved 10 July 2020.
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  19. ^ Carroll 1987, p. 10
  20. ^ Ware 1991, p. 28
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Further reading

  • Fernández, Samuel (2020). "Who convened the First Council of Nicaea: Constantine or Ossius?". The Journal of Theological Studies. 71: 196–211. doi:10.1093/jts/flaa036.
  • The Road to Nicaea A descriptive overview of the events of the Council, by John Anthony McGuckin.
  • "Council of Nicaea", Encyclopædia Britannica

External links

first, council, nicaea, ancient, greek, Νίκαια, ˈnikεa, council, christian, bishops, convened, bithynian, city, nicaea, iznik, turkey, roman, emperor, constantine, datemay, august, 325accepted, bycatholic, church, eastern, orthodox, church, oriental, orthodox,. The First Council of Nicaea n aɪ ˈ s iː e Ancient Greek Nikaia ˈnikea was a council of Christian bishops convened in the Bithynian city of Nicaea now Iznik Turkey by the Roman Emperor Constantine I in AD 325 First Council of NicaeaDateMay to August AD 325Accepted byCatholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church Oriental Orthodox Church Assyrian Church of the East Ancient Church of the East Anglican CommunionNext councilFirst Council of ConstantinopleConvoked byEmperor Constantine IPresidentHosius of Corduba and Pope Alexander I of AlexandriaAttendance318 traditional number 250 318 estimates only five from Western ChurchTopicsArianism the nature of Christ celebration of Passover ordination of eunuchs prohibition of kneeling on Sundays and from Easter to Pentecost validity of baptism by heretics lapsed Christians sundry other matters 1 Documents and statementsOriginal Nicene Creed 2 20 canons 3 and a synodal epistle 1 Chronological list of ecumenical councilsThis ecumenical council was the first effort to attain consensus in the church through an assembly representing all Christendom Hosius of Corduba may have presided over its deliberations 4 5 Its main accomplishments were settlement of the Christological issue of the divine nature of God the Son and his relationship to God the Father 2 the construction of the first part of the Nicene Creed mandating uniform observance of the date of Easter 6 and promulgation of early canon law 3 7 Contents 1 Overview 2 Character and purpose 3 Attendees 4 Agenda 5 Procedure 6 Arian controversy 6 1 Arguments for Arianism 6 2 Arguments against Arianism 6 3 Result of the debate 7 Nicene Creed 8 Separation of Easter computation from Jewish calendar 9 Melitian schism 10 Promulgation of canon law 11 Effects 12 Role of Constantine 13 Misconceptions 13 1 Biblical canon 13 2 Trinity 13 3 Constantine 14 Disputed matters 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography 17 1 Primary sources 17 2 Secondary sources 18 Further reading 19 External linksOverview EditThe First Council of Nicaea was the first ecumenical council of the church Most significantly it resulted in the first uniform Christian doctrine called the Nicene Creed With the creation of the creed a precedent was established for subsequent local and regional councils of bishops synods to create statements of belief and canons of doctrinal orthodoxy the intent being to define unity of beliefs for the whole of Christendom 8 Derived from Greek Ancient Greek oἰkoymenh romanized oikoumene lit the inhabited one ecumenical means worldwide but generally is assumed to be limited to the known inhabited Earth 9 and at this time in history is nearly synonymous with the Roman Empire the earliest extant uses of the term for a council are Eusebius Life of Constantine 10 around 338 which states he convoked an ecumenical council synodon oἰkoymenikὴn synekrotei synodon oikoumenikḕn synekrotei 11 and a letter in 382 to Pope Damasus I and the Latin bishops from the First Council of Constantinople 12 One purpose of the Council was to resolve disagreements arising from within the Church of Alexandria over the nature of Jesus in his relationship to the Father in particular whether the Son had been begotten by the Father from his own being and therefore having no beginning or else created out of nothing and therefore having a beginning 13 St Alexander of Alexandria and Athanasius took the first position the popular presbyter Arius from whom the term Arianism comes took the second The Council decided against the Arians overwhelmingly of the estimated 250 318 attendees all but two agreed to sign the creed and these two along with Arius were banished to Illyria 8 14 Another result of the Council was an agreement on when to celebrate Easter the most important feast of the ecclesiastical calendar decreed in an epistle to the Church of Alexandria in which is simply stated We also send you the good news of the settlement concerning the holy pasch namely that in answer to your prayers this question also has been resolved All the brethren in the East who have hitherto followed the Jewish practice will henceforth observe the custom of the Romans and of yourselves and of all of us who from ancient times have kept Easter together with you 15 Historically significant as the first effort to attain consensus in the church through an assembly representing all of Christendom 16 the Council was the first occasion where the technical aspects of Christology were discussed 16 Through it a precedent was set for subsequent general councils to adopt creeds and canons This Council is generally considered the beginning of the period of the First seven ecumenical councils in the history of Christianity 17 Character and purpose Edit Constantine the Great summoned the bishops of the Christian Church to Nicaea to address divisions in the Church mosaic in Hagia Sophia Constantinople Istanbul c 1000 The First Council of Nicaea the first general council in the history of the Church was convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great upon the recommendations of a synod led by Bishop Hosius of Corduba in the Eastertide of 325 or rather convened by Hosius and supported by Constantine 18 This synod had been charged with investigation of the trouble brought about by the Arian controversy in the Greek speaking east 19 To most bishops the teachings of Arius were heretical and dangerous to the salvation of souls 20 In the summer of 325 the bishops of all provinces were summoned to Nicaea a place reasonably accessible to many delegates According to Warren H Carroll in the Council of Nicaea the Church had taken her first great step to define revealed doctrine more precisely in response to a challenge from a heretical theology 21 Attendees EditConstantine had invited all 1 800 bishops of the Christian church within the Roman Empire about 1 000 in the East and 800 in the West but a smaller and unknown number attended Eusebius of Caesarea counted more than 250 22 Athanasius of Alexandria counted 318 11 and Eustathius of Antioch estimated about 270 23 all three were present at the Council Later Socrates Scholasticus recorded more than 300 24 and Evagrius 25 Hilary of Poitiers 26 Jerome 27 Dionysius Exiguus 28 and Rufinus 29 each recorded 318 This number 318 is preserved in the liturgies of the Eastern Orthodox Church 30 and the Coptic Orthodox Church 31 For some the number is suspicious as it is the number of Abraham s servants in Genesis 14 14 and there was a polemical reason for the Nicene Fathers to imply that they were servants of Abraham the father of the Faith 32 Delegates came from every region of the Roman Empire and from the Christian churches extant within the Sassanid Empire 33 The participating bishops were given free travel to and from their episcopal sees to the Council as well as lodging These bishops did not travel alone each one had permission to bring with him two priests and three deacons so the total number of attendees could have been above 1 800 Eusebius speaks of an almost innumerable host of accompanying priests deacons and acolytes A Syriac manuscript lists the names of the eastern bishops which included 22 from Coele Syria 19 from Syria Palaestina 10 from Phoenicia 6 from Arabia others from Assyria Mesopotamia Persia etc but the distinction of bishops from presbyters had not yet formed 34 35 The Eastern bishops formed the great majority Of these the first rank was held by the patriarchs Alexander of Alexandria and Eustathius of Antioch Many of the assembled fathers for instance Paphnutius of Thebes Potamon of Heraclea and Paul of Neocaesarea had stood forth as confessors of the faith and came to the Council with the marks of persecution on their faces This position is supported by patristic scholar Timothy Barnes in his book Constantine and Eusebius 36 Historically the influence of these marred confessors has been seen as substantial but recent scholarship has called this into question 29 Other remarkable attendees were Eusebius of Nicomedia Eusebius of Caesarea the purported first church historian circumstances suggest that Nicholas of Myra attended his life was the seed of the Santa Claus legends Macarius of Jerusalem later a staunch defender of Athanasius Aristaces of Armenia son of Saint Gregory the Illuminator Leontius of Caesarea Jacob of Nisibis a former hermit Hypatius of Gangra Protogenes of Sardica Melitius of Sebastopolis Achilleus of Larissa considered the Athanasius of Thessaly 37 and Spyridon of Trimythous who even while a bishop made his living as a shepherd 38 From foreign places came John bishop of Persia and India 39 Theophilus a Gothic bishop and Stratophilus bishop of Pitiunt in Georgia The Latin speaking provinces sent at least five representatives Marcus of Calabria from Italia Cecilian of Carthage from Africa Hosius of Cordoba from Hispania Nicasius of Die from Gaul 37 and Domnus of Sirmium from the province of the Danube Athanasius of Alexandria a young deacon and companion of Bishop Alexander of Alexandria was among the assistants Athanasius eventually spent most of his life battling against Arianism Alexander of Constantinople then a presbyter was also present as representative of his aged bishop 37 The supporters of Arius included Secundus of Ptolemais Theonus of Marmarica Zephyrius or Zopyrus and Dathes all of whom hailed from the Libyan Pentapolis Other supporters included Eusebius of Nicomedia Paulinus of Tyrus Actius of Lydda Menophantus of Ephesus and Theognus of Nicaea 37 40 Resplendent in purple and gold Constantine made a ceremonial entrance at the opening of the Council probably in early June but respectfully seated the bishops ahead of himself 4 As Eusebius describes Constantine himself proceeded through the midst of the assembly like some heavenly messenger of God clothed in raiment which glittered as it were with rays of light reflecting the glowing radiance of a purple robe and adorned with the brilliant splendor of gold and precious stones 41 The emperor was present as an overseer and presider but did not cast any official vote Constantine organized the Council along the lines of the Roman Senate Hosius of Cordoba may have presided over its deliberations he was probably one of the papal legates 4 Eusebius of Nicomedia probably gave the welcoming address 4 42 Agenda EditThe agenda of the synod included the following issues With respect to the Arian question the large portion of the Nicene Creed that is devoted to Christ more than 80 indicates that the main issue before the Council was about Jesus Christ not about the Father or about the Holy Spirit What the main issue was more exactly can be seen by comparing the condemnations at the end of the decree reflecting Arius views with the council s affirmations as contained in the body of the creed While Arius claimed that Jesus Christ was created the Council concluded since He was begotten that He was not made While Arius argued that Jesus Christ was created out of nothing or out of something else the council affirmed that he was begotten out of the substance essence of the Father Since the statement in the creed that Jesus Christ is homoousion with the Father of the same substance 43 44 does not counter any of Arius claims as reflected in the condemnation The debate was not about what his substance is but out of what substance he was generated The term homo ousios was added only because Emperor Constantine proposed and insisted on its inclusion 45 46 47 Both Fortman and Erickson mention that the main issue before the council was not the unity of the Godhead but the Son s full divinity 48 49 The date of celebration of Pascha Easter The Meletian schism Various matters of church discipline which resulted in twenty canons Organizational structure of the Church focused on the ordering of the episcopacy Dignity standards for the clergy issues of ordination at all levels and of suitability of behavior and background for clergy Reconciliation of the lapsed establishing norms for public repentance and penance Readmission to the Church of heretics and schismatics including issues of when reordination and or rebaptism were to be required Liturgical practice including the place of deacons and the practice of standing at prayer during liturgy 50 Procedure EditThe Council was formally opened 20 May 325 in the central structure of the imperial palace at Nicaea with preliminary discussions of the Arian question Emperor Constantine arrived nearly a month later on 14 June 51 In these discussions some dominant figures were Arius with several adherents Some 22 of the bishops at the Council led by Eusebius of Nicomedia came as supporters of Arius But when some of the more shocking passages from his writings were read they were almost universally seen as blasphemous 4 Bishops Theognis of Nicaea and Maris of Chalcedon were among the initial supporters of Arius Eusebius of Caesarea called to mind the baptismal creed of his own diocese at Caesarea at Palestine as a form of reconciliation The majority of the bishops agreed For some time scholars thought that the original Nicene Creed was based on this statement of Eusebius Today most scholars think that the creed is derived from the baptismal creed of Jerusalem as Hans Lietzmann proposes 52 The orthodox bishops won approval of every one of their proposals regarding the creed After being in session for an entire month the Council promulgated on 19 June the original Nicene Creed This profession of faith was adopted by all the bishops but two from Libya who had been closely associated with Arius from the beginning 21 No explicit historical record of their dissent actually exists the signatures of these bishops are simply absent from the creed The sessions continued to deal with minor matters until 25 August 51 Arian controversy EditMain articles Arius Arianism and Arian controversy The synod of Nicaea Constantine and the condemnation and burning of Arian books illustration from a northern Italian compendium of canon law c 825 The Arian controversy arose in Alexandria when the newly reinstated presbyter Arius 53 began to spread doctrinal views that were contrary to those of his bishop Alexander of Alexandria The disputed issues centered on the natures and relationship of God the Father and the Son of God Jesus The disagreements sprang from different ideas about the Godhead and what it meant for Jesus to be God s Son Alexander maintained that the Son was divine in just the same sense that the Father is coeternal with the Father else he could not be a true Son 13 54 Arius emphasized the supremacy and uniqueness of God the Father meaning that the Father alone is almighty and infinite and that therefore the Father s divinity must be greater than the Son s Arius taught that the Son had a beginning and that he possessed neither the eternity nor the true divinity of the Father but was rather made God only by the Father s permission and power and that the Son was rather the first and the most perfect of God s creatures 13 54 The Arian discussions and debates at the Council extended from about 20 May through about 19 June 54 According to legendary accounts debate became so heated that at one point Arius was struck in the face by Nicholas of Myra who would later be canonized 55 This account is almost certainly apocryphal as Arius would not have been present in the council chamber because he was not a bishop 56 Much of the debate hinged on the difference between being born or created and being begotten Arians saw these as essentially the same followers of Alexander did not The exact meaning of many of the words used in the debates at Nicaea were still unclear to speakers of other languages Greek words like essence ousia substance hypostasis nature physis person prosopon bore a variety of meanings drawn from pre Christian philosophers which could not but entail misunderstandings until they were cleared up The word homoousia in particular was initially disliked by many bishops because of its associations with Gnostics who used it in their theology and because their beliefs had been condemned at the 264 268 Synods of Antioch Arguments for Arianism Edit According to surviving accounts the presbyter Arius argued for the supremacy of God the Father and maintained that the Son of God was created as an act of the Father s will and therefore that the Son was a creature made by God begotten directly of the infinite eternal God Arius s argument was that the Son was God s first production before all ages the position being that the Son had a beginning and that only the Father has no beginning Arius argued that everything else was created through the Son Thus said the Arians only the Son was directly created and begotten of God and therefore there was a time that he had no existence Arius believed that the Son of God was capable of his own free will of right and wrong and that were He in the truest sense a son He must have come after the Father therefore the time obviously was when He was not and hence He was a finite being 57 and that he was under God the Father Therefore Arius insisted that the Father s divinity was greater than the Son s The Arians appealed to Scripture quoting biblical statements such as the Father is greater than I John 14 28 58 and also that the Son is firstborn of all creation Colossians 1 15 59 Arguments against Arianism Edit The Council of Nicaea with Arius depicted as defeated by the council lying under the feet of Emperor Constantine The opposing view stemmed from the idea that begetting the Son is itself in the nature of the Father which is eternal Thus the Father was always a Father and both Father and Son existed always together eternally coequally and consubstantially 60 The anti Arian argument thus stated that the Logos was eternally begotten therefore with no beginning Those in opposition to Arius believed that to follow the Arian view destroyed the unity of the Godhead and made the Son unequal to the Father They insisted that such a view was in contravention of such Scriptures as I and the Father are one John 10 30 61 and the Word was God John 1 1 62 They declared as did Athanasius 63 that the Son had no beginning but had an eternal derivation from the Father and therefore was coeternal with him and equal to God in all aspects 64 Result of the debate Edit The Council declared that the Son was true God coeternal with the Father and begotten from his same substance arguing that such a doctrine best codified the Scriptural presentation of the Son as well as traditional Christian belief about him handed down from the Apostles This belief was expressed by the bishops in the Creed of Nicaea which would form the basis of what has since been known as the Niceno Constantinopolitan Creed 65 Nicene Creed EditMain article Nicene Creed Icon depicting the Emperor Constantine and the bishops of the First Council of Nicaea 325 holding the Niceno Constantinopolitan Creed of 381 One of the projects undertaken by the Council was the creation of a creed a declaration and summary of the Christian faith Several creeds were already in existence many creeds were acceptable to the members of the Council including Arius From earliest times various creeds served as a means of identification for Christians as a means of inclusion and recognition especially at baptism In Rome for example the Apostles Creed was popular especially for use in Lent and the Easter season In the Council of Nicaea one specific creed was used to define the Church s faith clearly to include those who professed it and to exclude those who did not The original Nicene Creed read as follows We believe in one God the Father almighty maker of all things visible and invisible And in one Lord Jesus Christ the Son of God begotten from the Father only begotten that is from the substance of the Father God from God light from light true God from true God begotten not made of one substance with the Father through Whom all things came into being things in heaven and things on earth Who because of us men and because of our salvation came down and became incarnate and became man and suffered and rose again on the third day and ascended to the heavens and will come to judge the living and dead And in the Holy Spirit But as for those who say There was when He was not and Before being born He was not and that He came into existence out of nothing or who assert that the Son of God is of a different hypostasis or substance or created or is subject to alteration or change these the Catholic and apostolic Church anathematizes 66 Some distinctive elements in the Nicene Creed perhaps from the hand of Hosius of Cordova were added some specifically to counter the Arian point of view 13 67 Jesus Christ is described as Light from Light true God from true God proclaiming his divinity Jesus Christ is said to be begotten not made asserting that he was not a mere creature brought into being out of nothing but the true Son of God brought into being from the substance of the Father He is said to be of one substance with the Father proclaiming that although Jesus Christ is true God and God the Father is also true God they are of one substance The Greek term homoousios consubstantial i e of the same substance is ascribed by Eusebius of Caesarea to Constantine who on this particular point may have chosen to exercise his authority The significance of this clause however is ambiguous as to the extent in which Jesus Christ and God the Father are of one substance and the issues it raised would be seriously controverted in the future At the end of the creed came a list of anathemas designed to repudiate explicitly the Arians stated claims The view that there was once when he was not was rejected to maintain the coeternity of the Son with the Father The view that he was mutable or subject to change was rejected to maintain that the Son just like the Father was beyond any form of weakness or corruptibility and most importantly that he could not fall away from absolute moral perfection Thus instead of a baptismal creed acceptable to both the Arians and their opponents the Council promulgated one which was clearly opposed to Arianism and incompatible with the distinctive core of their beliefs The text of this profession of faith is preserved in a letter of Eusebius to his congregation in Athanasius works and elsewhere The Homoousians from the Koine Greek word translated as of same substance which was condemned at the Council of Antioch in 264 268 were the most vocal of anti Arians and were able to advance the use of the term thus the creed was accepted by the Council Bishop Hosius of Cordova one of the firm Homoousians may well have helped bring the Council to consensus At the time of the Council he was the confidant of the emperor in all Church matters Hosius stands at the head of the lists of bishops and Athanasius ascribes to him the actual formulation of the creed Leaders such as Eustathius of Antioch Alexander of Alexandria Athanasius and Marcellus of Ancyra all adhered to the Homoousian position In spite of his sympathy for Arius Eusebius of Caesarea adhered to the decisions of the Council accepting the entire creed The initial number of bishops supporting Arius was small perhaps only around 18 After a month of discussion on 19 June there were only two left Theonas of Marmarica in Libya and Secundus of Ptolemais Maris of Chalcedon who initially supported Arianism agreed to the whole creed but not the anathemas 68 Similarly Eusebius of Nicomedia and Theognis of Nice also agreed except for certain statements The emperor carried out his earlier statement everybody who refused to endorse the creed would be exiled Arius Theonas and Secundus refused to adhere to the creed and were thus exiled to Illyria in addition to being excommunicated The works of Arius were ordered to be confiscated and consigned to the flames 8 while his supporters were considered as enemies of Christianity 69 Nevertheless the controversy continued in various parts of the empire 70 The creed was amended by the First Council of Constantinople in 381 Separation of Easter computation from Jewish calendar EditThe feast of Easter is linked to the Jewish Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread as Christians believe that the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus occurred at the time of those observances As early as Pope Sixtus I in the 2nd century some Christians had set Easter to a Sunday in the lunar month of Nisan To determine which lunar month was to be designated as Nisan Christians relied on the Jewish community By the late 3rd century some Christians began to express dissatisfaction with what they took to be the disorderly state of the Jewish calendar They argued that contemporary Jews were identifying the wrong lunar month as the month of Nisan choosing a month whose 14th day fell before the spring equinox 71 Christians these thinkers argued should abandon the custom of relying on Jewish informants and instead do their own computations to determine which month should be styled Nisan setting Easter within this independently computed Christian Nisan which would always locate the festival after the equinox They justified this break with tradition by arguing that it was in fact the contemporary Jewish calendar that had broken with tradition by ignoring the equinox and that in former times the 14th of Nisan had never preceded the equinox 72 Others felt that the customary practice of reliance on the Jewish calendar should continue even if the Jewish computations were in error from a Christian point of view 73 The controversy between those who argued for independent computations and those who argued for continued reliance on the Jewish calendar was formally resolved by the Council which endorsed the independent procedure that had been in use for some time at Rome and Alexandria Easter was henceforward to be a Sunday in a lunar month chosen according to Christian criteria in effect a Christian Nisan not in the month of Nisan as defined by Jews 6 Those who argued for continued reliance on the Jewish calendar called protopaschites by later historians were urged to come around to the majority position That they did not all immediately do so is revealed by the existence of sermons 74 canons 75 and tracts 76 written against the protopaschite practice in the late 4th century These two rules independence of the Jewish calendar and worldwide uniformity were the only rules for Easter explicitly laid down by the Council No details for the computation were specified these were worked out in practice a process that took centuries and generated numerous controversies some of which remain unresolved In particular the Council did not seem to decree that Easter must fall on Sunday 77 Nor did the Council decree that Easter must never coincide with Nisan 14 the first Day of Unleavened Bread now commonly called Passover in the Hebrew calendar By endorsing the move to independent computations the Council had separated the Easter computation from all dependence positive or negative on the Jewish calendar The Zonaras proviso the claim that Easter must always follow Nisan 14 in the Hebrew calendar was not formulated until after some centuries By that time the accumulation of errors in the Julian solar and lunar calendars had made it the de facto state of affairs that Julian Easter always followed Hebrew Nisan 14 78 Melitian schism EditMain article Melitians The suppression of the Melitian schism an early breakaway sect was another important matter that came before the Council of Nicaea Melitius it was decided should remain in his own city of Lycopolis in Egypt but without exercising authority or the power to ordain new clergy he was forbidden to go into the environs of the town or to enter another diocese for the purpose of ordaining its subjects Melitius retained his episcopal title but the ecclesiastics ordained by him were to receive again the laying on of hands the ordinations performed by Melitius being therefore regarded as invalid Clergy ordained by Melitius were ordered to yield precedence to those ordained by Alexander and they were not to do anything without the consent of Bishop Alexander 79 In the event of the death of a non Melitian bishop or ecclesiastic the vacant see might be given to a Melitian provided he was worthy and the popular election were ratified by Alexander Melitius episcopal rights and prerogatives were taken from him These mild measures however were in vain the Melitians joined the Arians and caused more dissension than ever being among the worst enemies of Athanasius The Melitians ultimately died out around the middle of the 5th century Promulgation of canon law EditMain articles Canon law Collections of ancient canons and Promulgation Catholic canon law The Council promulgated twenty new church laws called canons though the exact number is subject to debate that is rules of discipline The twenty as listed in the works of Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers are as follows 80 prohibition of self castration for clergy establishment of a minimum term for catechumens persons studying for baptism prohibition of a man and a woman who have both taken vows of chastity to live together in a chaste and non legalized partnership the so called virgines subintroductae who practiced syneisaktism ordination of a bishop in the presence of at least three provincial bishops 8 and confirmation by the metropolitan bishop provision for two provincial synods to be held annually confirmation of ancient customs giving jurisdiction over large regions to the bishops of Alexandria Rome and Antioch recognition of the honorary rights of the see of Jerusalem provision for agreement with the Novatianists an early sect elders who had been ordained without sufficient examination were not to be recognized elders who had lapsed but had not been found out were to be deposed mercy was enjoined toward those who had lapsed without compulsion even though it was recognized that they did not deserve it those who had left the military but later sought out to be restored to their military position were to be excommunicated depending on the sincerity of their repentance they could be readmitted to communion earlier those who were fulfilling penance could receive communion if they were dying but if they got well again they were to finish their penance catachumens who lapsed were to have three years as hearers before being allowed to become catechumens again bishops presbyters and deacons were not to wander into neighboring cities to officiate clergy who refused to return to their home church were to be excommunicated and the ordinations of those who were ordained by these wandering clergy were to be considered null and void prohibition of usury among the clergy precedence of bishops and presbyters before deacons in receiving the Eucharist Holy Communion declaration of the invalidity of baptism by Paulian heretics prohibition of kneeling on Sundays and during the Pentecost the fifty days commencing on Easter Standing was the normative posture for prayer at this time as it still is among the Eastern Christians Kneeling was considered most appropriate to penitential prayer as distinct from the festive nature of Eastertide and its remembrance every Sunday The canon was designed only to ensure uniformity of practice at the designated times Effects Edit A fresco depicting the First Council of Nicaea at the Vatican s Sixtine Salon In the short term the Council did not completely solve the problems it was convened to discuss and a period of conflict and upheaval continued for some time Constantine was succeeded by two Arian emperors in the Eastern Empire his son Constantius II and Valens Valens could not resolve the outstanding ecclesiastical issues and unsuccessfully confronted St Basil over the Nicene Creed 81 Pagan powers within the empire sought to maintain and at times re establish paganism into the seat of the emperor see Arbogast and Julian the Apostate Arians and Meletians soon regained nearly all of the rights they had lost and consequently Arianism continued to spread and be a subject of debate within the Church during the remainder of the 4th century Almost immediately Eusebius of Nicomedia an Arian bishop and cousin to Constantine I used his influence at court to sway Constantine s favor from the proto orthodox Nicene bishops to the Arians 82 Eustathius of Antioch was deposed and exiled in 330 Athanasius who had succeeded Alexander as Bishop of Alexandria was deposed by the First Synod of Tyre in 335 and Marcellus of Ancyra followed him in 336 Arius returned to Constantinople to be readmitted into the Church but died shortly before he could be received Constantine died the next year after finally receiving baptism from Arian Bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia and with his passing the first round in the battle after the Council of Nicaea was ended 82 Role of Constantine EditSee also Constantine the Great and Christianity Christianity had only recently been legalised in the empire the Diocletianic Persecution having ended in 311 under Galerius Although Galerius stopped the Persecution Christianity was not legally protected until 313 when the emperors Constantine and Licinius agreed to what became known as the Edict of Milan guaranteeing Christians legal protection and tolerance However Nicene Christianity did not become the state religion of the Roman Empire until the Edict of Thessalonica in 380 In the meantime paganism remained legal and present in public affairs Constantine s coinage and other official motifs until the Council of Nicaea had affiliated him with the pagan cult of Sol Invictus At first Constantine encouraged the construction of new temples 83 and tolerated traditional sacrifices 84 Later in his reign he gave orders for the pillaging and the tearing down of Roman temples 85 86 87 Constantine s role regarding Nicaea was that of supreme civil leader and authority in the empire As Emperor the responsibility for maintaining civil order was his and he sought that the Church be of one mind and at peace When first informed of the unrest in Alexandria due to the Arian disputes he was greatly troubled and rebuked both Arius and Bishop Alexander for originating the disturbance and allowing it to become public 88 Aware also of the diversity of opinion regarding the celebration of Easter and hoping to settle both issues he sent the honored Bishop Hosius of Cordova Hispania to form a local church council and reconcile those who were divided 88 When that embassy failed he turned to summoning a synod at Nicaea inviting the most eminent men of the churches in every country 89 Constantine assisted in assembling the Council by arranging that travel expenses to and from the bishops episcopal sees as well as lodging at Nicaea be covered out of public funds 90 He also provided and furnished a great hall in the palace as a place for discussion so that the attendees should be treated with becoming dignity 90 In addressing the opening of the Council he exhorted the Bishops to unanimity and concord and called on them to follow the Holy Scriptures with Let then all contentious disputation be discarded and let us seek in the divinely inspired word the solution of the questions at issue 90 Thereupon the debate about Arius and church doctrine began The emperor gave patient attention to the speeches of both parties and deferred to the decision of the bishops 91 The bishops first pronounced Arius teachings to be anathema formulating the creed as a statement of correct doctrine When Arius and two followers refused to agree the bishops pronounced clerical judgement by excommunicating them from the Church Respecting the clerical decision and seeing the threat of continued unrest Constantine also pronounced civil judgement banishing them into exile This was the beginning of the practice of using secular power to establish doctrinal orthodoxy within Christianity an example followed by all later Christian emperors which led to a circle of Christian violence and of Christian resistance couched in terms of martyrdom 92 Misconceptions EditBiblical canon Edit Main article Development of the Christian Biblical canon There is no record of any discussion of the biblical canon at the council 93 The development of the biblical canon was nearly complete with exceptions known as the Antilegomena written texts whose authenticity or value is disputed by the time the Muratorian fragment was written 94 The main source of the idea that the canon was created at the Council of Nicaea seems to be Voltaire who popularised a story that the canon was determined by placing all the competing books on an altar during the Council and then keeping the ones that did not fall off The original source of this fictitious anecdote is the Synodicon Vetus 95 a pseudo historical account of early Church councils from 887 96 In 331 Constantine commissioned fifty Bibles for the use of the Bishop of Constantinople but little else is known in fact it is not even certain whether his request was for fifty copies of the entire Old and New Testaments only the New Testament or merely the Gospels Some scholars believe that this request provided motivation for canon lists In Jerome s Prologue to Judith he claims that the Book of Judith was found by the Nicene Council to have been counted among the number of the Sacred Scriptures 97 Trinity Edit The Council of Nicaea dealt primarily with the issue of the deity of Christ The term Trinity was already in use with the earliest existing reference being by Theophilus of Antioch 115 181 AD referring to God the Logos and Sophia 98 Father Son and Holy Spirit as the Holy Spirit was referred to by several Church fathers back then though many scholars believe that the way the term was used indicates it was known previously to his readers Also over a century earlier that Nicaesa the term Trinity Trias in Greek trinitas in Latin was used in the writings of Origen and Tertullian and a general notion of a divine three in some sense was expressed in the 2nd century writings of Polycarp Ignatius and Justin Martyr In Nicaea questions regarding the Holy Spirit were left largely unaddressed until after the relationship between the Father and the Son was settled around the year 362 99 The doctrine in a more full fledged form was not formulated until the Council of Constantinople in 381 100 and a final form formulated primarily by Gregory of Nyssa 101 Constantine Edit While Constantine had sought a unified church after the Council he did not force the homoousian view of Christ s nature on the council Constantine did not commission any Bibles at the Council Despite Constantine s sympathetic interest in the Church he was not baptized until some 11 or 12 years after the council putting off baptism as long as he did so as to be absolved from as much sin as possible 102 Disputed matters EditSee also Primacy of the Roman pontiff and East West Schism According to Protestant theologian Philip Schaff The Nicene fathers passed this canon not as introducing anything new but merely as confirming an existing relation on the basis of church tradition and that with special reference to Alexandria on account of the troubles existing there Rome was named only for illustration and Antioch and all the other eparchies or provinces were secured their admitted rights The bishoprics of Alexandria Rome and Antioch were placed substantially on equal footing Thus according to Schaff the Bishop of Alexandria was to have jurisdiction over the provinces of Egypt Libya and the Pentapolis just as the Bishop of Rome had authority with reference to his own diocese 103 However according to Fr James F Loughlin there is an alternative Catholic interpretation It involves five different arguments drawn respectively from the grammatical structure of the sentence from the logical sequence of ideas from Catholic analogy from comparison with the process of formation of the Byzantine Patriarchate and from the authority of the ancients 104 in favor of an alternative understanding of the canon According to this interpretation the canon shows the role the Bishop of Rome had when he by his authority confirmed the jurisdiction of the other patriarchs an interpretation which is in line with the Catholic understanding of the Pope Thus the Bishop of Alexandria presided over Egypt Libya and the Pentapolis 8 while the Bishop of Antioch enjoyed a similar authority throughout the great diocese of Oriens and all by the authority of the Bishop of Rome To Loughlin that was the only possible reason to invoke the custom of a Roman Bishop in a matter related to the two metropolitan bishops in Alexandria and Antioch 104 However Protestant and Catholic interpretations have historically assumed that some or all of the bishops identified in the canon were presiding over their own dioceses at the time of the Council the Bishop of Rome over the Diocese of Italy as Schaff suggested the Bishop of Antioch over the Diocese of Oriens as Loughlin suggested and the Bishop of Alexandria over the Diocese of Egypt as suggested by Karl Josef von Hefele According to Hefele the Council had assigned to Alexandria the whole civil Diocese of Egypt 105 Yet those assumptions have since been proven false At the time of the Council the Diocese of Egypt did exist but was known as the Diocese of Alexandria so the Council could have assigned it to Alexandria Antioch and Alexandria were both located within the civil Diocese of Oriens Antioch being the chief metropolis but neither administered the whole Likewise Rome and Milan were both located within the civil Diocese of Italy Milan being the chief metropolis 106 107 This geographic issue related to Canon 6 was highlighted by Protestant writer Timothy F Kauffman as a correction to the anachronism created by the assumption that each bishop was already presiding over a whole diocese at the time of the Council 108 According to Kauffman since Milan and Rome were both located within the Diocese of Italy and Antioch and Alexandria were both located within the Diocese of Oriens a relevant and structural congruency between Rome and Alexandria was readily apparent to the gathered bishops both had been made to share a diocese of which neither was the chief metropolis Rome s jurisdiction within Italy had been defined in terms of several of the city s adjacent provinces since Diocletian s reordering of the empire in 293 as the earliest Latin version of the canon indicates 109 That provincial arrangement of Roman and Milanese jurisdiction within Italy therefore was a relevant precedent and provided an administrative solution to the problem facing the Council namely how to define Alexandrian and Antiochian jurisdiction within the Diocese of Oriens In canon 6 the Council left most of the diocese under Antioch s jurisdiction and assigned a few provinces of the diocese to Alexandria since the like is customary for the Bishop of Rome also 110 See also Edit Wikiversity has learning resources about Council of Nicea 325 A D Ancient church councils pre ecumenical church councils before the First Council of NicaeaReferences Edit a b SEC pp 112 114 a b SEC p 39 a b SEC pp 44 94 a b c d e Carroll 1987 p 11 Vallaud 1995 pp 234 235 678 a b On the Keeping of Easter Leclercq 1911b a b c d e Mirbt Carl Theodor 1911 Nicaea Council of In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 640 642 Danker Frederick William 2000 oἰkoymenh A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature Third ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 03933 6 retrieved 24 February 2014 Vita Constantini Book 3 Chapter 6 a b Ad Afros Epistola Synodica SEC pp 292 294 a b c d Kelly 1978 Chapter 9 Schaff amp Schaff 1910 Section 120 SEC p 114 a b Kieckhefer 1989 The First Seven Ecumenical Councils MOLL Y The Method of Loci Learning York Retrieved 10 July 2020 Fernandez Samuel April 2020 Who Convened the First Council of Nicaea Constantine or Ossius The Journal of Theological Studies 71 1 196 211 doi 10 1093 jts flaa036 Carroll 1987 p 10 Ware 1991 p 28 a b Carroll 1987 p 12 Vita Constantini iii 7 Theodoret Book 1 Chapter 7 Theodoret Book 1 Chapter 8 Theodoret Book 3 Chapter 31 Contra Constantium Augustum Liber Temporum Liber Teres 1984 p 177 a b Kelhoffer 2011 Pentecostarion 3 St Basil Anaphora أنافورا القديس باسيليوس The Commemoration of the Saints مجمع القديسين tasbeha org Retrieved 12 October 2022 Smelova N S 2009 Pravila Pervogo Vselenskogo Nikejskogo sobora po rukopisi Sir 34 iz sobraniya IVR RAN PDF archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2022 retrieved 20 July 2022 Ancient See of York New Advent 2007 Retrieved 25 October 2007 Hitti Philip K 1951 History of Syria including Lebanon and Palestine New York The Macmillan Company p 363 fn Cowper B H 1861 Syriac Miscellanies London Williams and Norgate pp 9 10 Preterist Archive website Archived 7 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2 April 2018 Barnes 1981 pp 214 215 a b c d Atiya 1991 Vailhe 1912 Valley Marthoma Church of Silicon History of Marthoma Church Marthoma Church of Silicon Valley Retrieved 3 September 2020 Photius I Book 1 Chapter 9 Vita Constantini Book 3 Chapter 10 Original lists of attendees can be found in Patrum nicaenorum Homoousion The Free Dictionary retrieved 29 September 2021 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon ὁmo oysios www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 29 September 2021 Cheryl Graham University of Glasgow Assess the role of Constantine at the council of Nicaea Trinity The role of Constantine in the Nicene creed www bible ca Retrieved 29 September 2021 Jorg Ulrich Nicaea and the West Vigiliae Christianae 51 no 1 1997 p 15 Millard J Erickson God in Three Persons pp 82 85 Edmund J Fortman The Triune God pp 66 70 Davis 1983 pp 63 67 a b The First Council of Nicaea New Advent Retrieved 12 October 2017 Gollahon Mickey 2018 Moses the ten commandments amp the council of nicaea lulu com p 24 ISBN 978 0 359 05203 5 OCLC 1057650590 self published source Anatolios 2011 p 44 a b c Davis 1983 pp 52 54 OCA 2014 Gonzalez 1984 p 164 M Clintock amp Strong 1890 p 45 John 14 28 Colossians 1 15 Davis 1983 p 60 John 10 30 John 1 1 On the Incarnation ch 2 section 9 yet He Himself as the Word being immortal and the Father s Son Athanasius amp Newman 1920 p 51 Gonzalez 1984 p 165 Creed of Nicaea 325 Greek and Latin Text with English translation earlychurchtexts com Loyn 1991 p 240 Davis Leo The First Seven Ecumenical Councils 325 787 Their History and Theology p 63 Schaff amp Schaff 1910 Section 120 Lutz von Padberg 1998 p 26 Anatolius Book 7 Chapter 33 Chronicon Paschale Panarion Book 3 Chapter 1 Section 10 Chrysostom p 47 SEC p 594 Panarion Book 3 Chapter 1 Sozomen Book 7 Chapter 18 L Huillier 1996 p 25 Leclercq 1911a Canons Heroes of the Fourth Century Word Magazine Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America February 1968 pp 15 19 a b Davis 1983 p 77 Gerberding R and J H Moran Cruz Medieval Worlds New York Houghton Mifflin Company 2004 p 28 Peter Brown The Rise of Christendom 2nd edition Oxford Blackwell Publishing 2003 p 60 R MacMullen Christianizing The Roman Empire A D 100 400 Yale University Press 1984 ISBN 0 300 03642 6 A History of the Church Philip Hughes Sheed amp Ward rev ed 1949 vol I chapter 6 1 Eusebius Pamphilius and Schaff Philip Editor and McGiffert Rev Arthur Cushman PhD Translator NPNF2 01 Eusebius Pamphilius Church History Life of Constantine Oration in Praise of Constantine Archived 17 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine quote he razed to their foundations those of them which had been the chief objects of superstitious reverence a b Sozomen Book 1 Chapter 16 Sozomen Book 1 Chapter 17 a b c Theodoret Book 1 Chapter 6 Sozomen Book 1 Chapter 20 There is no crime for those who have Christ religious violence in the Roman Empire Michael Gaddis University of California Press 2005 p 340 ISBN 978 0 520 24104 6 John Meade The Council of Nicaea and the Biblical Canon and Ehrman 2004 pp 15 16 23 93 McDonald amp Sanders 2002 Apendex D2 Note 19 Paul T d Holbach 1995 Andrew Hunwick ed Ecce homo An Eighteenth Century Life of Jesus Critical Edition and Revision of George Houston s Translation from the French Berlin New York Walter de Gruyter amp Co pp 48 49 ISBN 978 3 11 081141 4 A summary of the case can be found at The Council of Nicaea and the Bible Preface to Tobit and Judith Philip Schaff Fathers of the Second Century 0107 101 Christian Classics Ethereal Library ccel org Retrieved 27 April 2023 Fairbairn 2009 pp 46 47 Socrates Book 2 Chapter 41 Schaff Philip Wace Henry 1893 A Select Library of Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church Gregory of Nyssa Dogmatic treatises etc 1893 Christian literature Company Marilena Amerise Il battesimo di Costantino il Grande Schaff amp Schaff 1910 pp 275 276 a b Loughlin 1880 von Hefele Karl 1855 Conciliengeschichte v 1 Freiburg im Breisgau Baden Wurttemberg Germany Herder p 373 Athanasius of Alexandria Historia Arianorum Part IV chapter 36 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Athanasius of Alexandria Apologia de Fuga chapter 4 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Kauffman Timothy F May June 2016 Nicaea and the Roman Precedent PDF The Trinity Review 334 335 Archived PDF from the original on 12 August 2016 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Turner Cuthberthus Hamilton 1899 Ecclesiae Occidentalis monumenta iuris antiquissima vol 1 Oxonii E Typographeo Clarendoniano p 120 First Council of Nicaea Canon 6 The First Council of Nicaea Retrieved 22 June 2016 Bibliography EditPrimary sources Edit Note NPNF2 Schaff Philip Wace Henry eds Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Second Series Christian Classics Ethereal Library see also Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers Eusebius Pamphilius Church History Life of Constantine Oration in Praise of Constantine NPNF2 vol 1 retrieved 24 February 2014 Anatolius of Laodicea Paschal Canons quoted by Eusebius The Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius Eusebius Pamphilius The Life of Constantine Vita Constantini Socrates and Sozomenus Ecclesiastical Histories NPNF2 vol 2 Socrates of Constantinople The Ecclesiastical History of Socrates Scholasticus retrieved 24 February 2014 Sozomen The Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen Theodoret Jerome Gennadius and Rufinus Historical Writings NPNF2 vol 3 retrieved 24 February 2014 Constantine the Great Constantinus Augustus to the Churches quoted by Theodoret The Ecclesiastical History of Theodoret retrieved 24 February 2014 Eustathius of Antioch A Letter to the African Bishops quoted by Theodoret The Ecclesiastical History of Theodoret retrieved 24 February 2014 Theodoret of Cyrus The Ecclesiastical History of Theodoret Athanasius Select Works and Letters NPNF2 vol 4 retrieved 24 February 2014 Athanasius of Alexandria De Decretis Defence of the Nicene Definition retrieved 24 February 2014 Athanasius of Alexandria Ad Afros Epistola Synodica Synodal Letter to the Bishops of Africa Eusebius Pamphilus Letter of Eusebius of Caesarea to the people of his Diocese retrieved 24 February 2014 Jerome The Principal Works of St Jerome NPNF2 vol 6 retrieved 24 February 2014 Jerome Prefaces to the Books of Tobit and Judith The Seven Ecumenical Councils NPNF2 vol 14 The Nicene Creed retrieved 24 February 2014 The Canons of the 318 Holy Fathers Assembled in the City of Nice in Bithynia Athanasius of Alexandria The Synodal Letter retrieved 24 February 2014 Constantine the Great On the Keeping of Easter quoted by Eusebius The Life of Constantine Chronicon Paschale Paschal Chronicle Pentecostarion Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain 3 November 2008 archived from the original on 30 April 2016 retrieved 22 February 2014 Chrysostom John Harkins Paul W trans 1 April 2010 Discourses Against Judaizing Christians The Fathers of the Church vol 68 Catholic University of America Press ISBN 978 0 8132 1168 8 Epiphanius of Salamis Williams Frank trans 1994 The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 09898 4 Hilary of Poitiers Contra Constantium Augustum Liber A Book Against the Emperor Constantine Jerome Temporum Liber The Book of Times Photios I of Constantinople Walford Edward trans Epitome of the Ecclesiastical History of Philostorgius Compiled by Photius Patriarch of ConstantinopleSecondary sources Edit Anatolios Khaled 2011 Retrieving Nicaea The Development and Meaning of Trinitarian Doctrine Grand Rapids Baker Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8010 3132 8 Athanasius Patriarch of Alexandria 1920 Select treatises of St Athanasius in controversy with the Arians Volume 3 Translator and Editor John Henry Newman Longmans Green and co Atiya Aziz S 1991 The Coptic Encyclopedia New York Macmillan Publishing Company ISBN 0 02 897025 X Ayers Lewis 2006 Nicaea and Its Legacy New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 875505 0 retrieved 24 February 2014 Barnes Timothy David 1981 Constantine and Eusebius Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 16530 4 retrieved 24 February 2014 Carroll Warren 1987 The Building of Christendom Front Royal Christendom College Press ISBN 978 0 931888 24 3 retrieved 24 February 2014 Danker Frederick William 2000 oἰkoymenh A Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature Third ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 03933 6 retrieved 24 February 2014 Davis Leo Donald 1983 The First Seven Ecumenical Councils 325 787 Collegeville Liturgical Press ISBN 978 0 8146 5616 7 retrieved 24 February 2014 Edwards Mark 2009 Catholicity and Heresy in the Early Church Ashgate ISBN 978 0754662914 Ehrman Bart 2004 Truth and Fiction in the Da Vinci Code Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 280 84545 1 Fairbairn Donald 2009 Life in the Trinity Downers Grove InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 3873 8 retrieved 24 February 2014 Gelzer Heinrich Hilgenfeld Henricus Cuntz Otto eds 1995 Patrum nicaenorum nomina Latine Graece Coptice Syriace Arabice Armeniace The names of the Fathers at Nicaea in Latin in Greek Coptic Syriac Arabic Armenian 2nd ed Stuttgart Teubner Gonzalez Justo L 1984 The Story of Christianity vol 1 Peabody Prince Press ISBN 978 1 56563 522 7 retrieved 24 February 2014 Kelhoffer James A 2011 The Search for Confessors at the Council of Nicaea Journal of Early Christian Studies 19 4 589 599 doi 10 1353 earl 2011 0053 ISSN 1086 3184 S2CID 159876770 Kelly J N D 1978 Early Christian Doctrine San Francisco HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 064334 8 retrieved 24 February 2014 Kelly J N D 1981 Early Christian Creeds Harlow Addison Wesley Longman Limited ISBN 978 0 582 49219 6 retrieved 24 February 2014 Kieckhefer Richard 1989 Papacy in Strayer Joseph Reese ed Dictionary of the Middle Ages vol 9 Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 18278 0 retrieved 24 February 2014 L Huillier Peter 1996 The Church of the Ancient Councils The Disciplinary Work of the First Four Ecumenical Councils Crestwood St Vladimir s Seminary Press ISBN 978 0 88141 007 5 retrieved 24 February 2014 Leclercq Henri 1911 Meletius of Lycopolis The Catholic Encyclopedia vol 10 New York Robert Appleton Company retrieved 19 February 2014 Leclercq Henri 1911 The First Council of Nicaea The Catholic Encyclopedia vol 11 New York Robert Appleton Company retrieved 19 February 2014 Loughlin James F 1880 The Sixth Nicene Canon and the Papacy The American Catholic Quarterly Review 5 220 239 Loyn Henry Royston 1991 The Middle Ages New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27645 7 retrieved 24 February 2014 M Clintock John Strong James 1890 Cyclopaedia of Biblical Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature vol 6 Harper amp Brothers retrieved 24 February 2014 MacMullen Ramsay 2006 Voting About God in Early Church Councils New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11596 3 retrieved 24 February 2014 McDonald Lee Martin Sanders James A eds 2002 The Canon Debate Peabody Hendrickson Publishers ISBN 978 1 56563 517 3 Newman Albert Henry 1899 A Manual of Church History vol 1 Philadelphia American Baptist Publication Society OCLC 853516 retrieved 24 February 2014 Newman John Henry Williams Rowan 2001 The Arians of the Fourth Century Notre Dame University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 02012 5 retrieved 24 February 2014 Norris Richard Alfred trans 1980 The Christological Controversy Sources of Early Christian Thought Minneapolis Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 1411 9 retrieved 24 February 2014 St Nicholas the Wonderworker and Archbishop of Myra in Lycia retrieved 22 February 2014 Lutz von Padberg 1998 Die Christianisierung Europas im Mittelalter The Christianization of Europe in the Middle Ages P Reclam ISBN 978 3 15 017015 1 retrieved 24 February 2014 Rubenstein Richard E 1999 When Jesus became God New York Harcourt Brace amp Co ISBN 978 0 15 100368 6 retrieved 24 February 2014 Rusch William G trans 1980 The Trinitarian Controversy Sources of Early Christian Thought Minneapolis Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 1410 2 retrieved 24 February 2014 Schaff Philip Schaff David Schley 1910 History of the Christian Church Vol 3 New York C Scribner s Sons Tanner Norman P 2001 The Councils of the Church New York Crossroad ISBN 978 0 8245 1904 9 retrieved 24 February 2014 Teres Gustav October 1984 Time Computations and Dionysius Exiguus Journal for the History of Astronomy 15 3 177 Bibcode 1984JHA 15 177T doi 10 1177 002182868401500302 S2CID 117094612 Vailhe Simeon 1912 Tremithus The Catholic Encyclopedia vol 15 New York Robert Appleton Company retrieved 24 February 2014 Vallaud Dominique 1995 Dictionnaire Historique in French Fayard ISBN 978 2 2135 9322 7 Ware Timothy 1991 The Orthodox Church Penguin Adult Williams Rowan 1987 Arius London Darton Logman amp Todd ISBN 978 0 232 51692 0 retrieved 24 February 2014Further reading EditFernandez Samuel 2020 Who convened the First Council of Nicaea Constantine or Ossius The Journal of Theological Studies 71 196 211 doi 10 1093 jts flaa036 The Road to Nicaea A descriptive overview of the events of the Council by John Anthony McGuckin Council of Nicaea Encyclopaedia BritannicaExternal links EditCanons of the Council of Nicaea Wisconsin Lutheran College Updated English Translations of the Creed Rulings Canons and Letters Connected to the Council Portals Christianity History Religion Turkey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Council of Nicaea amp oldid 1153930836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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