First Council of Constantinople
(SECOND GENERAL COUNCIL.)
This council was called in May, 381, by Emperor Theodosius, to
provide for a Catholic succession in the patriarchal See of Constantinople,
to confirm the Nicene Faith, to reconcile the semi-Arians with the Church,
and to put an end to the Macedonian heresy.
Originally it was only a council of the Orient; the arguments of Baronius
(ad an. 381, nos. 19, 20) to prove that it was called by Pope Damasus
are invalid (Hefele-Leclercq, Hist. des Conciles, Paris, 1908, II, 4).
It was attended by 150 Catholic and 36 heretical (Semi-Arian,
Macedonian) bishops, and was presided over by Meletius of Antioch;
after his death, by the successive Patriarchs of Constantinople,
St. Gregory Nazianzen and Nectarius.
Its first measure was to confirm St. Gregory Nazianzen
as Bishop of Constantinople. The Acts of the council have almost
entirely disappeared, and its proceedings are known chiefly through the
accounts of the ecclesiastical historians Socrates, Sozomen, and
Theodoret. There is good reason to believe that it drew up a formal
treatise (tomos) on the Catholic doctrine of the Trinity,
also against Apollinarianism; this important document has been lost,
with the exception of the first canon of the council and its famous creed
(Nicaeano-Constantinopolitanum). The latter is traditionally held to be
an enlargement of the Nicene Creed, with emphasis on the Divinity of
the Holy Spirit. It seems, however, to be of earlier origin, and was
probably composed (369-73) by St. Cyril of Jerusalem as an expression
of the faith of that Church (Bois), though its adoption by this council
gave it special authority, both as a baptismal creed and as a
theological formula. Recently Harnack (Realencyklopadie fur prot.
Theol. und Kirche, 3rd ed., XI, 12-28) has maintained, on apparently
inconclusive grounds, that not till after the Council of Chalcedon
(451) was this creed (a Jerusalem formula with Nicene additions)
attributed to the Fathers of this council. At Chalcedon, indeed, it was
twice recited and appears twice in the Acts of that council; it was
also read and accepted at the Sixth General Council, held at
Constantinople in 680. The very ancient Latin version of its text
(Mansi, Coll. Conc., III, 567) is by Dionysius Exiguus.
The Greeks recognize seven canons, but the oldest Latin versions
have only four; the other three are very probably (Hefele) later additions.
- The first canon is an important dogmatic condemnation of all shades
of Arianism, also of Macedonianism and Apollinarianism.
- The second canon renews the Nicene legislation imposing upon
the bishops the observance of diocesan and patriarchal limits.
- The fourth canon declares invalid the consecration of Maximus,
the Cynic philosopher and rival of St. Gregory of Nazianzus, as
Bishop of Constantinople.
- The famous third canon declares that because Constantinople
is New Rome the bishop of that city should have a pre-eminence of
honour after the Bishop of Old Rome. Baronius wrongly maintained
the non-authenticity of this canon, while some medieval
Greeks maintained (an equally erroneous thesis) that it declared the
bishop of the royal city in all things the equal of the pope. The
purely human reason of Rome's ancient authority, suggested by this
canon, was never admitted by the Apostolic See, which always based its
claim to supremacy on the succession of St. Peter. Nor did Rome easily
acknowledge this unjustifiable reordering of rank among the ancient
patriarchates of the East. It was rejected by the papal legates at
Chalcedon. St. Leo the Great
(Ep. cvi in P.L., LIV, 1003, 1005) declared that this canon has never
been submitted to the Apostolic See and that it was a violation of the
Nicene order. At the Eighth General Council in 869 the Roman legates
(Mansi, XVI, 174) acknowledged Constantinople as second in patriarchal
rank. In 1215, at the Fourth Lateran Council (op. cit., XXII, 991),
this was formally admitted for the new Latin patriarch, and in 1439, at
the Council of Florence, for the Greek patriarch (Hefele-Leclercq,
Hist. des Conciles, II, 25-27). The Roman correctores of
Gratian (1582), at dist. xxii, c. 3, insert the words: "canon hic ex
iis est quos apostolica Romana sedes a principio et longo post tempore
non recipit."
At the close of this council Emperor
Theodosius issued an imperial decree (30 July) declaring that the
churches should be restored to those bishops who confessed the equal
Divinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and who held
communion with Nectarius of Constantinople and other important Oriental
prelates whom he named. The ecumenical character of this council seems
to date, among the Greeks, from the Council of Chalcedon (451).
According to Photius (Mansi, III, 596) Pope Damasus approved it, but if
any part of the council were approved by this pope it could have been
only the aforesaid creed. In the latter half of the fifth century the
successors of Leo the Great
are silent as to this council. Its mention in the so-called "Decretum
Gelasii", towards the end of the fifth century, is not original but a
later insertion in that text (Hefele). Gregory the Great, following
the example of Vigilius and Pelagius II, recognized it as one of
the four general councils, but only in its dogmatic utterances
P.G., LXXVII, 468, 893).