Graffiti emblazoned on walls, a vicious war of pamphlets, riots in
the streets, lawsuits, catchy songs of ridicule … It's hard for
modem Christians to imagine how such public turmoil could be created
by an argument between theologians—or how God could work through the
messiness of human conflict to bring the Church to an understanding
of truth.
To us, in retrospect, the Council of Nicaea is a veritable mountain
in the landscape of the early Church. For the protagonists
themselves, it was more in the nature of an emergency meeting forced
on hostile parties by imperial power and designed to stop an
internal row. After the council, many of the same bishops who had
signed its creed appeared at other councils, often reversing their
previous decisions according to the way the winds of preferment were
blowing. They found themselves less in a domain of monumental
clarity and more in a swamp of confusing arguments and controversies
that at times seemed to threaten the very continuity of the
Christian Church. To understand the significance of the Council of
Nicaea, we need to enter into the minds of the disputants and ask
why so much bitterness and confusion had been caused by one
apparently simple question: in what way is Jesus divine? Of course,
like many "simple" questions, this was a highly complex and
provocative issue. Theologians of that era were almost beside
themselves when they found that Scripture often gave very
different-sounding notes when they applied to it for guidance. The
disagreements this "simple" question provoked made many of the
greatest minds of the era wonder to what extent the Christian
doctrines of God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit were coherent, and
even to what extent Christians could trust in the canon of sacred
text (which had hitherto seemed to them sufficient as an exposition
of the faith).
In many ways, therefore, Nicaea reminds us of the present era.
Rather than being a symbol of clarity, peace, and order, it was a
call to a difficult focusing of mind across a Church that was often
as muddled and confused as ours seems still to be.
How does "one God" fit with "Lord Jesus"?
The argument began innocently enough with a regular seminar that
Alexander, the archbishop of Alexandria [see Saints
and Heretics], was accustomed to hold with his senior clergy.
Alexander was a follower of Origen [see Issue #80: The First Bible
Teachers] who, a century beforehand, had laid the basis for a vast
mystical understanding of the relationship of the divine Logos to
the Eternal Father. Logos was the word the Greek Bible had used to
translate "Divine Wisdom," and it was also widely used in Greek
philosophical circles to signify the divine power immanent within
the world. To many Christians, it seemed a marvelous way to talk
about the Eternal Son of God and became almost a synonym for the
Son.
Like Origen, Alexander saw the Logos as sharing the divine
attributes of the Father, especially that of eternity. The Logos, he
argued, had been "born of God before the ages." Since God the Father
had decided to use the Logos as the medium and agent of all creation
(e.g. John 1:1, Ephesians 1:4, Colossians 1:15-17), it followed that
the Son-Logos pre-existed creation. Since time was a consequence of
creation, the Son pre-existed all time and was thus eternal like the
Father, and indeed his timelessness was one of the attributes that
manifested him as the divine Son, worthy of the worship of the
Church. Since he was eternal there could be no "before" or "after"
in him. It was inappropriate, therefore, to suggest that there was
ever a time when the Son did not exist.
God was eternally a Father of a Son, Alexander argued, and just as
the Father had always existed, so too the Son had always existed and
was thus known to be "God from God." The Christological confessions
about the Son (later to be inserted into the creed of Nicaea),"Born
not created, God from God, Light from Light, True God from True
God," all made this clear. It was at once a high and refined
scholarly confession of the faith and a popular prayer that summed
up how Christians could be monotheists even as they worshipped the
Son along with the Father.
Alexander knew that he was pushing the envelope of the traditional
"high Christology" of his Church by explaining how Christ's divinity
could no longer be understood in the old simplistic ways of a
"lesser divinity" alongside a "greater divinity." Alexander wanted
to distinguish clearly between Christian and pagan theology by
arguing that divinity is an absolute term (like pregnancy) that
allows no degrees. One cannot say that the Son is "half God" or
"part God" without making the very notion of deity into a mythical
conception.
Given this development, many traditional Christian pieties would
need to be re-forged in the fourth century. People sensed that they
were on the cusp of a major new development—but they were not always
quite sure what was happening, and more to the point, they lacked a
precise or widely agreed-upon vocabulary to explain to themselves
(and others) what exactly was going on.
Theological niceties—or the essence of Christianity?
One of Alexander's senior priests, the presbyter Arius [see Saints
and Heretics], was scandalized at the direction in which his
bishop was taking theological language. Arius, who had charge of the
large parish of Baucalis in the city's dock- land, had also been an
intellectual disciple of Origen but had taken a different strand of
that early theologian's variegated legacy.
As was typical among third-century thinkers, Origen had a deeply
ingrained sense of the absolute primacy of God over all other
beings. This meant that the Father was superior to the Son in all
respects—in terms of essence, attributes, power, and quality. The
Son might be called divine in so far as he represented the Father to
the created world as the supreme agent of the creation (something
like one of the greatest of all angelic powers), but he was
decidedly inferior to the Father in all respects. This meant that
the Son did not possess absolute timelessness, which was a sole
attribute of God the Father.
Thinking that he was defending "traditional values," Arius pressed
that insight of Origen's even further. The Son-Logos, Arius allowed,
might well have pre-dated the rest of creation, but it was
inappropriate to imagine that he shared the divine pre-existence.
Thus, it was important to confess the principle that "there was a
time when he (the Logos) was not." Arius quickly put this axiom into
a rhyme, which he taught his parishioners and so made it into a
party cause. Soon slogans were ringing round the docklands, and the
diocese of Alexandria was in serious disarray. Arius' supporters
chanted, "Een pote hote ouk een," and wrote the slogan on the walls.
Overnight Alexander's camp added a Greek negative to the beginning:
"Ouk een pete ouk een": "There was never a time when he was not!"
Everyone, skilled theologian or not, seemed to have been caught by
surprise that a controversy over so basic a matter (was the Son of
God divine? And how?) could have arisen in the Church, and even more
surprised that recourse to Scripture was proving so problematic. For
every text that showed the divine status of the Son ("1 and the
Father are One," John 10:30; "And the Word was God," John 1:1),
another could be quoted back to suggest the subordinate, even the
created, status of the Son ("In the beginning he created me
(Wisdom)," Proverbs 8:22; "Why do you call me good? No one is good
but God alone," Mark 10:18). If Jesus was not fully God, he was not
really God at all, and thus to worship him was not piety but simply
idolatry.
Alexander (applying good pastoral sense) would not allow a
theologian's dispute to mushroom out publicly in this alarming way,
so he censured Arius for appearing to deny the Son's eternity and
true divinity and deposed him from his priestly office. Arius
immediately appealed against that disciplinary decision to one of
the most powerful bishops of the era, Eusebius of Nicomedia [see
Saints and Heretics], a kinsman by marriage to Constantine the
emperot Arius and Eusebius had been students together and shared a
common theological view. Eusebius, the court theologian at the
imperial capital, knew that if Arius was being attacked then so was
he. From that moment onwards he was determined to squash what he
regarded as a "foolish Egyptian piety." By elevating the Son of God
to the same status as God the Father, he argued, Christianity would
compromise its claim to be a monotheist religion. He marshaled many
supporters.
The Anniversary Council
The bitterness of the dispute seemed remarkable to many observers,
but what was at stake was no less than a major clash between two
confessional traditions that had been uneasy companions in the
Church for generations. In one, the subordination of the Son was
stressed (Christ the Servant of God). In the other, the salvific
triumph of the Saviour was tantamount (Christ the Lord of Glory in
his most intimate union with the Father).
So notorious had the falling out of Eastem bishops become over this
matter that it was brought to the attention of Emperor Constantine
[see Saints and Heretics] who, in 324, had defeated his last rival
to become sole monarch of all the Roman Empire. Constantine decided
to use the occasion of the 20th anniversary of his claiming of the
throne (an event that sparked a civil war), which would be
celebrated in 325, to help settle the embarrassing dispute among his
allies, the bishops. He felt (rightly) that their disarray was
compromising his desire to demonstrate that he had effectively
"brought peace" to the eastem territories.
So it was that he summoned bishops to his private lakeside palace at
Nicaea ("Victory City") in Asia Minor (now Iznik in Turkey),
offering to pay all their expenses, to supply them with the
traditional "gifts" that followed an invitation to the court, and
even to afford them the prestigious use of the official transport
system, a privilege which had always been strictly reserved for
officers of state. The buzz this created was all the more remarkable
among the bishops of the East, who only a year or so before had
lived under a persecutor's oppression. Though Constantine envisaged
a truly international meeting of minds, in fact very few Latin
bishops attended—only representative delegations from the leading
sees such as Rome.
The council opened on June 19. Tradition has it that 318 clergy were
in attendance (a Greek number-cipher for the cross), but many modern
historians think that 250 is a more accurate figure. As the meeting
opened, Constantine took his place on the imperial throne and
greeted his guests. He spent the opening session accepting scrolls
(secret petitions for favors and for redress) from the many bishops
in attendance, and then startled them all the next day by bringing
in a large brazier and burning the whole pile of scrolls before
them—saying enigmatically that in this way the debts of all had been
cancelled. By this he implied that most of the petitions from the
bishops had been aimed at one another, and rather than put many on
trial he had given a common amnesty.
The order of the day was to resolve the question about the eternity
and divine status of the Son of God. Many of the bishops were not
well educated, but a few of them were highly skilled rhetoricians
and theologians, and they were determined that if anything
theological was to be settled by the large council, it would be in
favor of the pro- Alexander lobby. So they pressed for a refinement
of the baptismal creed of Jerusalem, which had been submitted by
Eusebius of Caesarea as a blueprint for a "traditional statement of
faith." Eusebius [see Saints and Heretics] had been deposed at an
earlier synod for having publicly attacked Alexander's theology.
Under pressure from Constantine, the assembly at Nicaea pardoned him
and restored him to office after he offered the creed of his own
Church as evidence of his change of heart.
All the bishops recognized how unarguably "authentic" this statement
of faith was, but the Jerusalem creed did not really resolve the
precise issue under consideration, that is, how the Son of God
related to the divine Father. To this end, the bishops decided that
extra clauses would be interpolated into the old creed as
"commentary," in order to amplify the bare statements about the
mission of Christ and show how Jesus could be confessed as God.
Creed and Catchword
The origin of these "confessional acclamations" of Christ ("God from
God, Light from Light" etc.) was Alexander's party, but since it had
become clear in years of wrangling that even their opponents could
accept Christ's title as "god from God" (as meaning a nominal,
inferior deity from the superior, absolute deity), many of the
Alexandrians demanded a firmer test of faith.
It was possibly Ossius [see Saints
and Heretics], the theological adviser of the emperor, who
suggested that the magic word to nail the Arian party would be homoousios. The
term meant "of the same substance as," and when applied to the Logos
it proclaimed that the Logos was divine in the same way as God the
Father was divine (not in an inferior, different, or nominal sense).
In short, if the Logos was homoousios with
the Father, he was truly God alongside the Father. The word pleased
Constantine, who seems to have seen it as an ideal way to bring all
the bishops back on board for a common vote. It was broad enough to
suggest a vote for the traditional Christian belief that Christ was
divine, it was vague enough to mean that Christ was of the "same
stuff" as God (no further debate necessary), and it was bland enough
to be a reasonable basis for a majority vote.
It had everything going for it as far as the politically savvy
Constantine was concerned, but for the die-hard Arian party, it was
a word too far. They saw that it gave the Son equality with the
Father without explaining how this relationship worked. (In fact, it
would be another 60 years before anyone successfully articulated the
doctrine of the Trinity) Therefore they attacked it for undermining
the biblical sense of the Son's obedient mission. The intellectuals
among the group (chiefly Eusebius of Nicomedia) also attacked it for
its crassness—it attributed "substance" (or material stuff) to God,
who was beyond all materiality. Moreover, the term was unsuitable
because it was "not found in the Holy Scriptures," and indeed this
did disturb many of the bishops present for the occasion.
The great majority of bishops still endorsed the idea, however, and
so with Constantine pressing for a consensus vote the word entered
into the creed they published. It was not that the bishops at Nicaea
were themselves simply looking for a convenient consensus in the
synod's vote. Many synods had been held before this extraordinarily
large one at Nicaea, and ancient bishops predominantly worked on the
premise that decisions of the Church's leadership required
unanimity. Their task was to proclaim the ancient Christian faith
against all attacks, and this was not something they felt they had
to seek out or worry over—they simply had to state among themselves
a common and clear heritage, one that could be proclaimed by
universal acclamation. They believed that they were the direct
continuance of the first apostolic gathering at Jerusalem, when the
Holy Spirit led all the apostles to the realization of the gospel
truth.
Because of this, when a few bishops dissented and refused their
vote, the remaining bishops excommunicated and deposed them,
accusing them of having refused to be part of the family of faith.
Among this group was Eusebius of Nicomedia. All of the deposed
bishops received harsh sentences from the emperor (although Eusebius
was confident he could wiggle out of his disgrace, as soon he did).
The end? Not quite
Once the main item of controversy was settled (the acceptance of
Alexander's clauses and the admittance of the word homoousios),
the other items fell into place quickly. The newly amplified creed
was given a set of six legal "threats" attached to it (named anathemas)
which spelled out in great detail all the classic marks of "Arian"
philosophy and threatened with excommunication any who maintained
them thereafter.
The meeting then turned to what most bishops had originally wanted
to do anyway—set up reforms to consolidate a Church in the East that
had long been torn apart by oppressors and had not been able to
regulate its affairs on the larger front for many years. To resolve
such problems the bishops drew up a list of laws (named canons, from
the Greek word for "rule" or "normative measure"). These 20 canons
have never attracted as much attention as the doctrines of Nicaea
but actually had immense importance, as they were the reference
point around which all future collections of Church law were modeled
and collated.
After all doctrinal and canonical work was finished, the emperor
concluded the council with great festivities. Hardly was the council
closed when the old party factions broke out with as much rancor as
before. Even stalwart advocates of the Nicene Council—men like
Athanasius the Great, Eustathius of Antioch, and Ossius of Cordoba—
wondered, as the fourth century progressed, whether this had been a
good idea or not. Those who attended the Council of Nicaea might
well have felt that they had achieved a lasting settlement. As we
shall see, however, the controversy was far from over.
(*)
John Anthony Mcguckin is professor of early Church history at Union
Theological Seminary and Professor of Byzantine Christianity at
Columbia University in New York. He is a priest of the Orthodox
Church (Patriarchate of Romania).
Copyright © 2005 by the author or Christianity Today/Christian
History magazine.