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Second Council of Constantinople

The Second Council of Constantinople is the fifth of the first seven ecumenical councils recognized by both the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church. It is also recognized by the Old Catholics and others. Protestant opinions and recognition of it are varied. Some Protestants, such as Calvinists, recognize the first four councils,[2] whereas Lutherans and most Anglo-Catholics accept all seven. Constantinople II was convoked by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I under the presidency of Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople. It was held from 5 May to 2 June 553. Participants were overwhelmingly Eastern bishops—only sixteen Western bishops were present, including nine from Illyricum and seven from Africa, but none from Italy—out of the 152 total.[1][3]

Second Council of Constantinople
Artistic rendition of Second Council of Constantinople by Vasily Surikov
Date553
Accepted by
Previous council
Council of Chalcedon
Next council
Third Council of Constantinople
Convoked byEmperor Justinian I
PresidentEutychius of Constantinople
Attendance152[1]
TopicsNestorianism
Origenism
Documents and statements
14 canons on Christology and against the Three Chapters. 15 canons condemning the teaching of Origen and Evagrius.
Chronological list of ecumenical councils

The main work of the council was to confirm the condemnation issued by edict in 551 by the Emperor Justinian against the Three Chapters. These were the Christological writings and ultimately the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia (died 428), certain writings against Cyril of Alexandria's Twelve Anathemas accepted at the Council of Ephesus, written by Theodoret of Cyrrhus (died c. 466), and a letter written against Cyrillianism and the Ephesian Council by Ibas of Edessa (died 457).[4]

The purpose of the condemnation was to make plain that the Great Church, which followed a Chalcedonian creed, was firmly opposed to Nestorianism as supported by the Antiochene school which had either assisted Nestorius, the eponymous heresiarch, or had inspired the teaching for which he was anathematized and exiled. The council also condemned the teaching that Mary could not be rightly called the Mother of God (Greek: Theotokos) but only the mother of the man (anthropotokos) or the mother of Christ (Christotokos).[4]

The Second Council of Constantinople is also considered as one of the many attempts by Byzantine Emperors to bring peace in the empire between the Chalcedonian and Monophysite fractions of the church which had been in continuous conflict since the times of the Council of Ephesus in AD 431.

Proceedings

The council was presided over by Eutychius, Patriarch of Constantinople, assisted by the other three eastern patriarchs or their representatives.[5] Pope Vigilius was also invited; but even though he was at this period resident in Constantinople (to avoid the perils of life in Italy, convulsed by the war against the Ostrogoths), he declined to attend, and even issued a document forbidding the council from proceeding without him (his 'First Constitutum'). For more details see Pope Vigilius.[6]

The council, however, proceeded without the pope to condemn the Three Chapters. And during the seventh session of the council, the bishops had Vigilius stricken from the diptychs for his refusal to appear at the council and approve its proceedings, effectively excommunicating him personally but not the rest of the Western Church. Vigilius was then imprisoned in Constantinople by the emperor and his advisors were exiled. After six months, in December 553, he agreed, however, to condemn the Three Chapters, claiming that his hesitation was due to being misled by his advisors.[4] His approval of the council was expressed in two documents, (a letter to Eutychius of Constantinople on 8 December 553, and a second "Constitutum" of 23 February 554, probably addressed to the Western episcopate), condemning the Three Chapters,[7] on his own authority and without mention of the council.[3]

In Northern Italy the ecclesiastical provinces of Milan and Aquileia broke communion with Rome. Milan accepted the condemnation only toward the end of the sixth century, whereas Aquileia did not do so until about 700.[3][8] The rest of the Western Church accepted the decrees of the council, though without great enthusiasm. Though ranked as one of the ecumenical councils, it never attained in the West the status of either Nicaea or Chalcedon.

In Visigothic Spain (Reccared having converted a short time prior) the churches never accepted the council;[9] when news of the later Third Council of Constantinople was communicated to them by Rome it was received as the fifth ecumenical council,[10] not the sixth. Isidore of Seville, in his Chronicle and De Viris Illustribus, judged Justinian a tyrant and persecutor of the orthodox[11] and an admirer of heresy,[12] contrasting him with Facundus of Hermiane and Victor of Tunnuna, who was considered a martyr.[13]

Despite the conflict between the council and the pope, and the inability to reconcile Chalcedonians and non-Chalcedonians, the council still made a significant theological contribution. The canons condemning the Three Chapters were preceded by ten dogmatic canons which defined Chalcedonian Christology with a new precision, bringing out that Christ has two natures, the human and the divine, in one person. The 'two natures' defined at Chalcedon were now clearly interpreted as two sets of attributes possessed by a single person, Christ God, the Second Person of the Trinity.[14] Later Byzantine Christology, as found in Maximus the Confessor and John of Damascus, was built upon this basis. It might have proved sufficient, moreover, to bring about the reunion of Chalcedonians and non-Chalcedonians, had it not been for the severance of connections between the two groups that resulted from the Muslim conquests of the next century.[citation needed]

Acts

The original Greek acts of the council are lost,[15] but an old Latin version exists, possibly made for Vigilius, of which there is a critical edition[16] and of which there is now an English translation and commentary,[17] and a modern Greek translation and commentary.[18] It has been alleged (probably falsely) that the original Acts of the Fifth Council had been tampered with[19] in favour of Monothelitism.[3] It used to be argued that the extant acts are incomplete, since they make no mention of the debate over Origenism. However, the solution generally accepted today is that the bishops signed the canons condemning Origenism before the council formally opened.[20] This condemnation was confirmed by Pope Vigilius and the subsequent ecumenical council (third Council of Constantinople) gave its "assent" in its Definition of Faith to the five previous synods, including "... the last, that is the Fifth holy Synod assembled in this place, against Theodore of Mopsuestia, Origen, Didymus, and Evagrius ...";[21] its full conciliar authority has only been questioned in modern times.[22]

There is a Syriac account of the council in the Melkite Chronicle of 641.[23]

Also, one of the Acts of the Council at Constantinople, were the Anathemas issued against those who rejected the Perpetual Virginity of Mary.[24]

Aftermath

Justinian hoped that this would contribute to a reunion between the Chalcedonians and Monophysites in the eastern provinces of the Empire. Various attempts at reconciliation between these parties within the Byzantine Empire were made by many emperors over the four centuries following the Council of Ephesus, none of them successful. Some attempts at reconciliation, such as this one, the condemnation of the Three Chapters and the unprecedented posthumous anathematization of Theodore—who had once been widely esteemed as a pillar of orthodoxy—causing further schisms and heresies to arise in the process, such as the aforementioned schism of the Three Chapters and the emergent semi-monophysite compromises of monoenergism and monotheletism. These propositions assert, respectively, that Christ possessed no human energy but only a divine function or principle of operation (purposefully formulated in an equivocal and vague manner, and promulgated between 610 and 622 by the Emperor Heraclius under the advice of Patriarch Sergius I of Constantinople) and that Christ possessed no human will but only a divine will, "will" being understood to mean the desires and appetites in accord with the nature (promulgated in 638 by the same and opposed most notably by Maximus the Confessor).[4]

Notes

  1. ^ a b "NPNF2–14. The Seven Ecumenical Councils, Introduction". CCEL. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
    • (3 names, 3 bishops and 145 other, plus 1 pope, total 152)
  2. ^ See, e.g. Lutheran–Orthodox Joint Commission, Seventh Meeting, The Ecumenical Councils, Common Statement, 1993, available at (B. I. 5a. "We agree on the doctrine of God, the Holy Trinity, as formulated by the Ecumenical Councils of Nicaea and Constantinople and on the doctrine of the person of Christ as formulated by the first four Ecumenical Councils.").
  3. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainThomas J. Shahan (1913). "Councils of Constantinople". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ a b c d Leo Donald Davis (1983), "Chapter 6 Council of Constantinople II, 553", The First Seven Ecumenical Councils (325–787): Their History and Theology, Collegeville, Minnesota: The Liturgical Press, pp. 242–248, ISBN 978-0814656167, retrieved 2014-08-23
  5. ^ Meyendorff 1989, pp. 241–243.
  6. ^ "Vigilius | pope | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-06-15.
  7. ^ Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, vol. IX, p. 414–420, 457–488; cf. Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, vol. II, pp. 905–911.
  8. ^ Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, vol. II, pp. 911–927. (For an equitable appreciation of the conduct of Vigilius see, besides the article VIGILIUS, the judgment of Bois, in Diet. de theol. cath., II, 1238–39.)
  9. ^ Herrin (1989) pp. 240–241
  10. ^ Herrin (1989) p. 244
  11. ^ Herrin (1989) p. 241 and the references therein
  12. ^ Isidore of Seville, Chronica Maiora, no. 397a
  13. ^ Herrin (1989) p. 241
  14. ^ Price (2009) vol. I, p. 73–75
  15. ^ "NPNF2–14. The Seven Ecumenical Councils, Excursus on the Genuineness of the Acts of the Fifth Council". Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 1 June 2005. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
  16. ^ Straub, Johannes (1971), Acta Conciliorum Oecumenicorum. Tomus IV, volumen I, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter
  17. ^ Price (2009)
  18. ^ Kalamaras, Meletios (1985), The 5th Ecumenical Council [in Greek], Athens, Greece: Holy Diocese of Nicopolis
  19. ^ Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, vol. II, pp. 855–858
  20. ^ Price (2009) vol. 2, pp. 270-86.
  21. ^ "NPNF2–14. The Seven Ecumenical Councils, The Definition of Faith". Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 1 June 2005. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
  22. ^ Price (2009) vol. 2, pp. 270ff.
  23. ^ Hubert Kaufhold (2012), "Sources of Canon Law in the Eastern Churches", in Wilfried Hartmann; Kenneth Pennington (eds.), The History of Byzantine and Eastern Canon Law to 1500, Catholic University of America Press, p. 223.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-04-19.

Bibliography

  • Herrin, Judith (1989). The Formation of Christendom, revised, illustrated paperback edition. London: Princeton University Press and Fontana.
  • Meyendorff, John (1989). Imperial unity and Christian divisions: The Church 450–680 A.D. The Church in history. Vol. 2. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. ISBN 978-0-88-141056-3.
  • Price, Richard (2009). The Acts of the Council of Constantinople of 553 – 2 Vol Set: With Related Texts on the Three Chapters Controversy. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press (published Aug 1, 2009). pp. 270–286. ISBN 978-1846311789.
  • Hefele, Karl Josef von (2014) [The seven volumes of this work were first published between 1855 and 1874]. A History of the Councils of the Church: To the Close of the Council of Nicea, A.D. 325 (original, "Conciliengeschichte"). Vol. 2. Translated and edited by Edward Hayes Plumptre, Henry Nutcombe Oxenham, William Robinson Clark. Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A.: Nabu Press. ISBN 9781293802021.

External links

  • Second Council of Constantinople

second, council, constantinople, fifth, first, seven, ecumenical, councils, recognized, both, eastern, orthodox, church, catholic, church, also, recognized, catholics, others, protestant, opinions, recognition, varied, some, protestants, such, calvinists, reco. The Second Council of Constantinople is the fifth of the first seven ecumenical councils recognized by both the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church It is also recognized by the Old Catholics and others Protestant opinions and recognition of it are varied Some Protestants such as Calvinists recognize the first four councils 2 whereas Lutherans and most Anglo Catholics accept all seven Constantinople II was convoked by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I under the presidency of Patriarch Eutychius of Constantinople It was held from 5 May to 2 June 553 Participants were overwhelmingly Eastern bishops only sixteen Western bishops were present including nine from Illyricum and seven from Africa but none from Italy out of the 152 total 1 3 Second Council of ConstantinopleArtistic rendition of Second Council of Constantinople by Vasily SurikovDate553Accepted byCatholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church Anglican Communion Old Catholic Church Lutheran Church Some other Protestant churchesPrevious councilCouncil of ChalcedonNext councilThird Council of ConstantinopleConvoked byEmperor Justinian IPresidentEutychius of ConstantinopleAttendance152 1 TopicsNestorianism OrigenismDocuments and statements14 canons on Christology and against the Three Chapters 15 canons condemning the teaching of Origen and Evagrius Chronological list of ecumenical councilsThe main work of the council was to confirm the condemnation issued by edict in 551 by the Emperor Justinian against the Three Chapters These were the Christological writings and ultimately the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia died 428 certain writings against Cyril of Alexandria s Twelve Anathemas accepted at the Council of Ephesus written by Theodoret of Cyrrhus died c 466 and a letter written against Cyrillianism and the Ephesian Council by Ibas of Edessa died 457 4 The purpose of the condemnation was to make plain that the Great Church which followed a Chalcedonian creed was firmly opposed to Nestorianism as supported by the Antiochene school which had either assisted Nestorius the eponymous heresiarch or had inspired the teaching for which he was anathematized and exiled The council also condemned the teaching that Mary could not be rightly called the Mother of God Greek Theotokos but only the mother of the man anthropotokos or the mother of Christ Christotokos 4 The Second Council of Constantinople is also considered as one of the many attempts by Byzantine Emperors to bring peace in the empire between the Chalcedonian and Monophysite fractions of the church which had been in continuous conflict since the times of the Council of Ephesus in AD 431 Contents 1 Proceedings 2 Acts 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 Bibliography 6 External linksProceedings EditFurther information Three Chapter Controversy The council was presided over by Eutychius Patriarch of Constantinople assisted by the other three eastern patriarchs or their representatives 5 Pope Vigilius was also invited but even though he was at this period resident in Constantinople to avoid the perils of life in Italy convulsed by the war against the Ostrogoths he declined to attend and even issued a document forbidding the council from proceeding without him his First Constitutum For more details see Pope Vigilius 6 The council however proceeded without the pope to condemn the Three Chapters And during the seventh session of the council the bishops had Vigilius stricken from the diptychs for his refusal to appear at the council and approve its proceedings effectively excommunicating him personally but not the rest of the Western Church Vigilius was then imprisoned in Constantinople by the emperor and his advisors were exiled After six months in December 553 he agreed however to condemn the Three Chapters claiming that his hesitation was due to being misled by his advisors 4 His approval of the council was expressed in two documents a letter to Eutychius of Constantinople on 8 December 553 and a second Constitutum of 23 February 554 probably addressed to the Western episcopate condemning the Three Chapters 7 on his own authority and without mention of the council 3 In Northern Italy the ecclesiastical provinces of Milan and Aquileia broke communion with Rome Milan accepted the condemnation only toward the end of the sixth century whereas Aquileia did not do so until about 700 3 8 The rest of the Western Church accepted the decrees of the council though without great enthusiasm Though ranked as one of the ecumenical councils it never attained in the West the status of either Nicaea or Chalcedon In Visigothic Spain Reccared having converted a short time prior the churches never accepted the council 9 when news of the later Third Council of Constantinople was communicated to them by Rome it was received as the fifth ecumenical council 10 not the sixth Isidore of Seville in his Chronicle and De Viris Illustribus judged Justinian a tyrant and persecutor of the orthodox 11 and an admirer of heresy 12 contrasting him with Facundus of Hermiane and Victor of Tunnuna who was considered a martyr 13 Despite the conflict between the council and the pope and the inability to reconcile Chalcedonians and non Chalcedonians the council still made a significant theological contribution The canons condemning the Three Chapters were preceded by ten dogmatic canons which defined Chalcedonian Christology with a new precision bringing out that Christ has two natures the human and the divine in one person The two natures defined at Chalcedon were now clearly interpreted as two sets of attributes possessed by a single person Christ God the Second Person of the Trinity 14 Later Byzantine Christology as found in Maximus the Confessor and John of Damascus was built upon this basis It might have proved sufficient moreover to bring about the reunion of Chalcedonians and non Chalcedonians had it not been for the severance of connections between the two groups that resulted from the Muslim conquests of the next century citation needed Acts EditThe original Greek acts of the council are lost 15 but an old Latin version exists possibly made for Vigilius of which there is a critical edition 16 and of which there is now an English translation and commentary 17 and a modern Greek translation and commentary 18 It has been alleged probably falsely that the original Acts of the Fifth Council had been tampered with 19 in favour of Monothelitism 3 It used to be argued that the extant acts are incomplete since they make no mention of the debate over Origenism However the solution generally accepted today is that the bishops signed the canons condemning Origenism before the council formally opened 20 This condemnation was confirmed by Pope Vigilius and the subsequent ecumenical council third Council of Constantinople gave its assent in its Definition of Faith to the five previous synods including the last that is the Fifth holy Synod assembled in this place against Theodore of Mopsuestia Origen Didymus and Evagrius 21 its full conciliar authority has only been questioned in modern times 22 There is a Syriac account of the council in the Melkite Chronicle of 641 23 Also one of the Acts of the Council at Constantinople were the Anathemas issued against those who rejected the Perpetual Virginity of Mary 24 Aftermath EditJustinian hoped that this would contribute to a reunion between the Chalcedonians and Monophysites in the eastern provinces of the Empire Various attempts at reconciliation between these parties within the Byzantine Empire were made by many emperors over the four centuries following the Council of Ephesus none of them successful Some attempts at reconciliation such as this one the condemnation of the Three Chapters and the unprecedented posthumous anathematization of Theodore who had once been widely esteemed as a pillar of orthodoxy causing further schisms and heresies to arise in the process such as the aforementioned schism of the Three Chapters and the emergent semi monophysite compromises of monoenergism and monotheletism These propositions assert respectively that Christ possessed no human energy but only a divine function or principle of operation purposefully formulated in an equivocal and vague manner and promulgated between 610 and 622 by the Emperor Heraclius under the advice of Patriarch Sergius I of Constantinople and that Christ possessed no human will but only a divine will will being understood to mean the desires and appetites in accord with the nature promulgated in 638 by the same and opposed most notably by Maximus the Confessor 4 Notes Edit a b NPNF2 14 The Seven Ecumenical Councils Introduction CCEL Retrieved 2014 08 23 3 names 3 bishops and 145 other plus 1 pope total 152 See e g Lutheran Orthodox Joint Commission Seventh Meeting The Ecumenical Councils Common Statement 1993 available at Lutheran Orthodox Joint Commission B I 5a We agree on the doctrine of God the Holy Trinity as formulated by the Ecumenical Councils of Nicaea and Constantinople and on the doctrine of the person of Christ as formulated by the first four Ecumenical Councils a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Thomas J Shahan 1913 Councils of Constantinople In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d Leo Donald Davis 1983 Chapter 6 Council of Constantinople II 553 The First Seven Ecumenical Councils 325 787 Their History and Theology Collegeville Minnesota The Liturgical Press pp 242 248 ISBN 978 0814656167 retrieved 2014 08 23 Meyendorff 1989 pp 241 243 Vigilius pope Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 06 15 Mansi Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio vol IX p 414 420 457 488 cf Hefele Conciliengeschichte vol II pp 905 911 Hefele Conciliengeschichte vol II pp 911 927 For an equitable appreciation of the conduct of Vigilius see besides the article VIGILIUS the judgment of Bois in Diet de theol cath II 1238 39 Herrin 1989 pp 240 241 Herrin 1989 p 244 Herrin 1989 p 241 and the references therein Isidore of Seville Chronica Maiora no 397a Herrin 1989 p 241 Price 2009 vol I p 73 75 NPNF2 14 The Seven Ecumenical Councils Excursus on the Genuineness of the Acts of the Fifth Council Christian Classics Ethereal Library 1 June 2005 Retrieved 2014 08 23 Straub Johannes 1971 Acta Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Tomus IV volumen I Berlin Walter de Gruyter Price 2009 Kalamaras Meletios 1985 The 5th Ecumenical Council in Greek Athens Greece Holy Diocese of Nicopolis Hefele Conciliengeschichte vol II pp 855 858 Price 2009 vol 2 pp 270 86 NPNF2 14 The Seven Ecumenical Councils The Definition of Faith Christian Classics Ethereal Library 1 June 2005 Retrieved 2014 08 23 Price 2009 vol 2 pp 270ff Hubert Kaufhold 2012 Sources of Canon Law in the Eastern Churches in Wilfried Hartmann Kenneth Pennington eds The History of Byzantine and Eastern Canon Law to 1500 Catholic University of America Press p 223 Perpetual Virginity Dogmatic Status and Meaning University of Dayton Ohio Archived from the original on 2021 04 19 Bibliography EditHerrin Judith 1989 The Formation of Christendom revised illustrated paperback edition London Princeton University Press and Fontana Meyendorff John 1989 Imperial unity and Christian divisions The Church 450 680 A D The Church in history Vol 2 Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press ISBN 978 0 88 141056 3 Price Richard 2009 The Acts of the Council of Constantinople of 553 2 Vol Set With Related Texts on the Three Chapters Controversy Liverpool Liverpool University Press published Aug 1 2009 pp 270 286 ISBN 978 1846311789 Hefele Karl Josef von 2014 The seven volumes of this work were first published between 1855 and 1874 A History of the Councils of the Church To the Close of the Council of Nicea A D 325 original Conciliengeschichte Vol 2 Translated and edited by Edward Hayes Plumptre Henry Nutcombe Oxenham William Robinson Clark Charleston South Carolina U S A Nabu Press ISBN 9781293802021 External links EditSecond Council of Constantinople Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Council of Constantinople amp oldid 1150878450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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