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 Christian History, September 1, 2000
All Together Now
By Elesha Coffman, associate editor of CHRISTIAN HISTORY
As
a non-binding dialogue between representatives of completely unrelated faiths,
this week's Millennium World Peace Summit is by no stretch an ecumenical council.
However, it got me thinking, what exactly is an ecumenical council, and when
was the last one held? Not surprisingly, the answer to both questions depends
on one's perspective.
By way of definition, my
handy Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (which insists on "oecumenical")
says they are "assemblies of bishops and other ecclesiastical representatives
of the whole world whose decisions on doctrine, cultus, & discipline, are
considered binding on all Christians."
Key in on "whole world"
and "binding." At best, "whole world" meant whichever invited parties were willing
and able to make the trip; it later shrank to "whole Western world" (beginning
with the Fourth Council of Constantinople, 869) and "whole Roman Catholic world"
(beginning around the Council of Trent, 1545-1563). "Binding" is also slippery.
Protestants tend to consider the councils and their rulings binding only insofar
as they stick to Scripture. Some Catholics wouldn't be bound either: the 1409
Council of Pisa lost its bid to make the all-time list when neither of the men
claiming to be pope obeyed it.
Ecumenical councils trace
their lineage back to the First Council of Nicea (325), which is most famous
for giving us the Nicene Creed (which is considerably shorter than the version
we often recite), and being called by Emperor Constantine. Of the 1,800 or so
bishops he invited, fewer than 400 came; nonetheless, this was considered a
quorum, and the authority of the council has never been seriously questioned.
Oddly enough, one of the bishops who didn't make it was the bishop of Rome,
Sylvester I. In other words, this momentous council was held without the popethough
calling him the "pope" in 325 would have been premature, since many early senior
bishops were called by the same title, "papa," and the Roman see could not yet
claim primacy in the empire.
Dicier questions of authority
have been raised about the second ecumenical council, the First Council of Constantinople
(381). According to The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church,
edited by Henry R. Percival, Constantinople I was not intended to be an ecumenical
council at all, as only 150 bishops attended and neither Rome nor any other
Western see was represented. Regardless, it made the list, and its expansion
of the "Son" and "Holy Ghost" sections of the Nicene Creed remain with us. Divisions
mounted with the third ecumenical council, held in Ephesus in 431. Make that
"councils," because bishops representing two major schools of thought on the
nature of Christ (the Alexandrian and Antiochene, for those of you keeping score)
regarded each other with such animosity that they met separately. The two sides
excommunicated each other, and Emperor Theodosius II weighed in to pick the
winner. He sided with the Alexandrians, who chalked up an even more decisive
victory in the rematch, the 451 Council of Chalcedon.
So when was the last ecumenical
council? Protestants, who aren't your biggest fans of all-church councils to
begin with, often draw at least a dotted line after Chalcedon. The Church of
England, for example, stated in the sixteenth century that general councils
are regarded with honorthough they "may err, and sometimes have erred, even
in things pertaining unto God"and the first four councils in particular
are "accepted and received with great reverence." The Orthodox church draws
its line after the Second Council of Nicea (787), recognizing only the first
seven councils as truly ecumenical, even though Eastern and Western churches
weren't utterly split until 1054. Roman Catholics consider Vatican II (1962-1965)
the most recent, though not necessarily last, ecumenical council, bringing the
total to 21.
Constantine, opening the
Council of Nicea, offered this: "When I gained my victories over my enemies,
I thought nothing remained for me but to give thanks unto God and to rejoice
with those who have been delivered by me. But when I learned, contrary to all
expectations, that there were divisions among you, then I solemnly considered
them, and praying that these discords might also be healed with my assistance,
I summoned you here without delay. I rejoice to see you here, yet I should be
more pleased to see unity and affection among you. I entreat you, therefore,
beloved ministers of God, to remove the causes of dissension among you and to
establish peace." If only it were that easy.
* For a council-by-council
summary through Vatican I, see: www.newadvent.org/cathen/04423f.htm
* Documents from some early
councils are available at: www.fordham.edu/halsall/
* Find descriptions of
Nicea and other early councils in Christian History issue
51: Heresy in the Early Church
Elesha can be reached at
cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.
Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
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