Council of Chalcedon
The Fourth Ecumenical Council, held in 451, from 8 October until 1 November
inclusive, at Chalcedon, a city of Bithynia in Asia Minor. Its principal purpose
was to assert the orthodox Catholic doctrine against the heresy of Eutyches
and the Monophysites, although ecclesiastical discipline and jurisdiction also
occupied the council's attention. Scarcely had the heresy of Nestorius concerning
the two persons in Christ been condemned by the Council of Ephesus, in 431,
when the opposite error of the Nestorian heresy arose. Since Nestorius so fully
divided the Divine and the human in Christ that he taught a double personality
or a twofold being in Christ, it became incumbent on his opponents to emphasize
the unity in Christ and to exhibit the God-man, not as two beings but as one.
Some of these opponents in their efforts to maintain a physical unity in Christ
held that the two natures in Christ, the Divine and the human, were so intimately
united that they became physically one, inasmuch as the human nature was completely
absorbed by the Divine. Thus resulted one Christ not only with one personality
but also with one nature. After the Incarnation, they said, no distinction could
be made in Christ between the Divine and the human. The principal representatives
of this teaching were Dioscurus, Patriarch of Alexandria, and Eutyches, an archimandrite
or president of a monastery outside Constantinople. The Monophysitic error,
as the new error was called (Gr. mone physis, one nature), claimed the
authority of St. Cyril, but only through a misinterpretation of some expressions
of the great Alexandrine teacher.
The error of Eutyches was first detected by Domnus, Patriarch of Antioch.
a formal accusation was preferred against the former by Eusebius, Bishop of
Dorylaeum (Phrygia), at a synod of Constantinople in November of that year.
This synod declared it a matter of faith that after the Incarnation, Christ
consisted of two natures (united) in one hypostasis or person; hence there was
one Christ, one Son, one Lord. Eutyches, who appeared before this synod, protested,
on the contrary, that before the Incarnation there were two natures, but after
the union there was only one nature in Christ; and the humanity of Christ was
not of the same essence as ours. These statements were found contrary to Christian
orthodoxy; Eutyches was deposed, excommunicated, and deprived of his station
in the monastery. He protested, and appealed for redress to Pope Leo I (440-61),
to other distinguished bishops, and also to Theodosius II. Bishop Flavian of
Constantinople informed Pope Leo and other bishops of what had occurred in his
city. Eutyches won the sympathy of the emperor; through the monk's representations
and those of Dioscurus, Patriarch of Alexandria, the emperor was induced to
invoke a new council, to be held at Ephesus. Pope Leo, Dioscurus, and a number
of bishops and monks were invited to attend and investigate anew the orthodoxy
of Eutyches. The pope was unable to go, but sent three delegates as his representatives
and bearers of letters to prominent personages of the East and to the impending
synod. Among these letters, all of which bear the date of 13 June, 449, is one
known as the "Epistola Dogmatica", or dogmatic letter, of Leo I, in which the
pope explains the mystery of the Incarnation with special reference to the questions
raised by Eutyches. Thus, he declares that after the Incarnation what was proper
to each nature and substance in Christ remained intact and both were united
in one person, but so that each nature acted according to its own qualities
and characteristics. As to Eutyches himself, the pope did not hesitate to condemn
him. The council was held at Ephesus, in August, 449. Only the friends and partisans
of Dioscurus and Eutyches were allowed to have a voice. The Alexandrine patriarch
presided; he ignored the papal delegates, would not permit the letters of Pope
Leo, including the "Epistola Dogmatica", to be read in the assembly. Eutyches
was declared orthodox and reinstated in his priestly and monastic office. On
the other hand, Flavian of Constantinople and Eusebius of Dorylaeum were deposed.
The former was banished, and died shortly afterwards in consequence of ill-treatment;
he was succeeded by the deacon Anatolius, a partisan of Dioscurus. Owing to
the gross violence of Dioscurus and his partisans, this assembly was called
by Leo I the "Latrocinium", or Robber Council, of Ephesus, a name that has since
clung to it.
Theodosius II, who sympathized with Eutyches, approved these violent deeds;
Leo I, on the other hand, when fully informed of the occurrences at Ephesus,
condemned, in a Roman synod and in several letters, all the Acts of the so-called
council. He refused also to recognize Anatolius as lawful Bishop of Constantinople,
at least until the latter would give satisfaction concerning his belief. At
the same time he requested the emperor to order the holding of a new council
in Italy, to right the wrongs committed at Ephesus. As a special reason for
the opportuneness, and even necessity, of the new council, he alleged the appeal
of the deposed Flavian of Constantinople. Theodosius, however, positively declined
to meet the wishes of the pope. At this stage the sudden death of the emperor
(28 July, 450) changed at once the religious situation in the East. Theodosius
was succeeded by his sister, Pulcheria, who offered her hand, and with it the
imperial throne, to a brave general named Marcian (450-57). Both Marcian and
Pulcheria were opposed to the new teaching of Dioscurus and Eutyches; and Marcian
at once informed Leo I of his willingness to call a new council according to
the previous desire of the pope. In the meantime conditions had changed. Anatolius
of Constantinople, and with him many other bishops, condemned the teaching of
Eutyches and accepted the dogmatic epistle of Pope Leo. Any new discussions
concerning the Christian Faith seemed therefore superfluous. Western Europe,
moreover, was in a state of turmoil owing to the invasion of the Huns under
Attila, for which reason most of the Western bishops could not attend a council
to be held in the East. Leo I therefore protested repeatedly against a council
and wrote in this sense to the Emperor Marcian, the Empress Pulcheria, Anatolius
of Constantinople, and Julian of Cos; all these letters bear the date of 9 June,
451. Meanwhile, 17 May, 451, a decree was issued by Marcian -- in the name also
of the Western Emperor Valentinian III (425-55) -- ordering all metropolitan
bishops with a number of their suffragan bishops to assemble the following September
at Nicaea in Bithynia, there to hold a general council for the purpose of settling
the questions of faith recently called in doubt.
Though displeased with this action, the pope nevertheless agreed to send his
representatives to Nicaea. He appointed as legates Paschasinus, Bishop of Lilybaeum
(Marsala) in Sicily, Lucentius, also a bishop, Julian, Bishop of Cos, and two
priests, comma, Boniface and Basil; Paschasinus was to preside over the coming
council in the pope's place. On 24 and 26 June, 451, Leo I wrote letters to
the Emperor Marcian, to his legate Paschasinus, to Anatolius of Constantinople,
to Julian of Cos, and to the synod itself, in which he expressed the desire
that the decrees of the synod should be in conformity with his teaching as contained
in the aforesaid dogmatic epistle. A detailed instruction was also given to
the papal legates, which contained directions for their guidance in the council;
this document, however, has perished, with the exception of two fragments preserved
in the Acts of the council. In July the papal legates departed for their destination.
Many bishops arrived at Nicaea during the summer, but the opening of the council
was postponed owing to the emperor's inability to be present. Finally, at the
complaint of the bishops, who grew weary of waiting, Marcian requested them
to come to Chalcedon, in the near vicinity of Constantinople. This was done,
and the council opened at Chalcedon on 8 October.
In all likelihood an official record of the proceedings was made either during
the council itself or shortly afterwards. The assembled bishops informed the
pope that a copy of all the "Acta" would be transmitted to him; in March, 453,
Pope Leo commissioned Julian of Cos, then at Constantinople, to make a collection
of all the Acts and translate them into Latin. Very ancient versions of the
Acts, both in Greek and Latin, are still extant. Most of the documents, chiefly
the minutes of the sessions, were written in Greek; others, e.g. the imperial
letters, were issued in both languages; others, again, e.g. the papal letters,
were written in Latin. Eventually nearly all of them were translated into both
languages. The Latin version, known as the "versio antiqua", was probably made
about 500, perhaps by Dionysius Exiguus. About the middle of the sixth century
the Roman deacon Rusticus then in Constantinople with Pope Vigilius (537-55),
made numerous corrections in the "versio antiqua", after comparison with Greek
manuscripts of the Acts, chiefly with those of the "Acoemetae" monastery either
at Constantinople or at Chalcedon. As to the number of sessions held by the
Council of Chalcedon there is a great discrepancy in the various texts of the
Acts, also in the ancient historians of the council. Either the respective manuscripts
must have been incomplete; or the historians passed over in silence several
sessions held for secondary purposes. According to the deacon Rusticus, there
were in all sixteen sessions; this division is commonly accepted by scholars,
including Bishop Hefele, the learned historian of the councils. If all the separate
meetings were counted, there would be twenty-one sessions; several of these
meetings, however, are considered as supplementary to preceding sessions. all
the sessions were held in the church of St. Euphemia, Martyr, outside the city
and directly opposite Constantinople. The exact number of bishops present is
not known. The synod itself, in a letter to Pope Leo, speaks of 520, while Pope
Leo says there were 600; according to the general estimate there were 630, including
the representatives of absent bishops. No previous council could boast of so
large a gathering of bishops, while the attendance at later councils seldom
surpassed or even equalled that number. The council, however, was not equally
representative as to the countries whence came so many bishops. Apart from the
papal legates and two African bishops, practically all the bishops belonged
to the Eastern Church. This, however, was well represented; the two great civil
divisions (prefectures), of the Orient and of Illyricum, comprising Egypt, the
Orient (including Palestine), Pontus, Asia, Thrace, Dacia, and Macedonia, sent
their contingents. The more prominent among the Eastern bishops were Anatolius
of Constantinople, Maximus of Antioch, Dioscurus of Alexandria, Juvenal of Jerusalem,
Thalassius of Caesarea in Cappadocia, Stephen of Ephesus, Quintillus of Heraclea,
and Peter of Corinth. The honour of presiding over this venerable assembly was
reserved to Paschasinus, Bishop of Lilybaeum, the first of the papal legates,
according to the intention of Pope Leo I, expressed in his letter to Emperor
Marcian (24 June, 451). Shortly after the council, writing to the bishops of
Gaul, he mentions that his legates presided in his stead over the Eastern synod.
Moreover, Paschasinus proclaimed openly in presence of the council that he was
presiding over it in the name and in the place of pope Leo. The members of the
council recognized this prerogative of the papal legates. When writing to the
pope they professed that, through his representatives, he presided over them
in the council. In the interest of order and a regular procedure the Emperor
Marcian appointed a number of commissioners, men of high rank, who received
the place of honour in the council. Their jurisdiction, however, did not cover
the ecclesiastical or religious questions under discussion. The commissioners
simply directed the order of business during the sessions; they opened the meetings,
laid before the council the matters to be discussed, demanded the votes of the
bishops on the various subjects, and closed the sessions. Besides these there
were present several members of the Senate, who shared the place of honour with
the imperial commissioners.
At the very beginning of the first session, the papal legates, Paschasinus
at their head, protested against the presence of Dioscurus of Alexandria. Formal
accusations of heresy and of unjust actions committed in the Robber Council
of Ephesus were preferred against him by Eusebius of Dorylaeum; and at the suggestion
of the imperial commissioners he was removed from his seat among the bishops
and deprived of his vote. In order to make a full investigation of his case
the Acts of the Robber Council, with those of the synod held in 448 by Flavian
of Constantinople, were read in full; this occupied the whole first session.
At the end the imperial commissioners declared that since Flavian of Constantinople
and other bishops had been unjustly deposed by the Robber Council it would be
just that Dioscurus and the leaders in that synod should now suffer the same
punishment. A number of bishops agreed, but finally all declared themselves
satisfied with the deposition of Dioscurus alone. The second session (10 October)
was occupied with the reading of testimonia bearing on questions of faith,
chiefly those under discussion. Among them were the symbols or creeds of the
Councils of Nicaea (325) and of Constantinople (381); two letters of St. Cyril
of Alexandria, viz. his second letter to Nestorius and the letter written to
the Antiochene bishops in 433 after his reconciliation with them; finally the
dogmatic epistle of Pope Leo I. All these documents were approved by the council.
When the pope's famous epistle was read the members of the council exclaimed
that the faith contained therein was the faith of the Fathers and of the Apostles;
that through Leo, Peter had spoken.
The third session was held 13 October; the imperial commissioners and a number
of bishops were absent. Eusebius of Dorylaeum presented a new accusation against
Dioscurus of Alexandria in which the charges of heresy and of injustice committed
in the Robber Council of Ephesus were repeated. Three ecclesiastics and a layman
from Alexandria likewise presented accusations against their bishop; he was
declared guilty of many acts of injustice and of personal misconduct. At the
end of the session the papal legates declared that Dioscurus should be deprived
of his bishopric and of all ecclesiastical dignities for having supported the
heretic Eutyches, for having excommunicated Pope Leo, and for having refused
to answer the charges made against him. All the members present agreed to this
proposition; and the decree of deposition was communicated to Dioscurus himself,
to the Alexandrine ecclesiastics with him at Chalcedon, to the Emperors Marcian
and Valentinian III, and to the Empress Pulcheria. The fourth session, which
comprised two meetings, was held on 17 and 20 October. At the request of the
imperial commissioners the bishops again approved the dogmatic epistle of Pope
Leo I; Juvenal of Jerusalem, Thalassius of Caesarea in Cappadocia, Eusebius
of Ancyra, Eustathius of Berytus, and Basil of Seleucia in Cicilia, former partisans
of Dioscurus in the Robber Council of Ephesus, were pardoned and admitted to
the sessions; an investigation was made into the orthodoxy of a number of bishops
from Egypt, and of a number of monks and archimandrites suspected of Eutychianism;
finally a dispute between Photius of Tyre and Eustathius of Berytus concerning
the territorial extent of their respective jurisdiction was adjudicated.
The most important of all the sessions was the fifth, held 22 October; in
this the bishops published a decree concerning the Christian Faith, which must
be considered as the specific dogmatic decree of the Fourth General Council.
A special commission, consisting of the papal legates, of Anatolius of Constantinople,
Maximus of Antioch, Juvenal of Jerusalem, and several others, was appointed
to draw up this creed or symbol. After again approving the decrees and symbols
of the Councils of Nicaea (325), Constantinople (381), and Ephesus (431), as
well as the teaching of St. Cyril against Nestorius and the dogmatic epistle
of Pope Leo I, the document in question declares:
We teach . . . one and the same Christ, Son, Lord, Only-begotten, known
in two natures, without confusion, without change, without division, without
separation.
After the recitation of the decree all the bishops exclaimed that such was
the true faith, and that all should at once sign their names to it. The imperial
commissioners announced that they would communicate to the emperor the decree
as approved by all the bishops. The sixth session (25 October) was celebrated
with special solemnities; Marcian and Pulcheria were present with a great attendance,
with all the imperial commissioners and the Senate. The emperor made an appropriate
address; the decree of faith made in the preceding session was read again and
approved by the emperor; and with joyful acclamations to the emperor and to
the empress, in which they were compared to Constantine and Helena, the proceedings
were closed.
The object of the council was attained in the sixth session, and only secondary
matters were transacted in the remaining sessions. the seventh and eighth sessions
were both held 26 October. In the seventh an agreement between Maximus of Antioch
and Juvenal of Jerusalem was approved, according to which the territory of the
Patriarchate of Jerusalem was restricted to the three provinces of Palestine.
in the eighth session Theodoret of Cyrus, a former partisan of Nestorius, was
compelled to condemn the name of his friend under threats of expulsion from
the council. He was then reinstated in his bishopric. The ninth and tenth sessions
(27 and 28 October) dealt with the case of Ibas, Bishop of Edessa, who had been
deposed on charges made by some of his ecclesiastics. The accusation proved
to be unfounded and Ibas was reinstated in his office. A decision was also given
to the effect that a pension should be paid by Maximus of Antioch to his deposed
predecessor Domnus. The eleventh and twelfth sessions (29 and 30 October) dealt
with a conflict between Bassianus and Stephen, both raised successively but
irregularly to the See of Ephesus. The council declared that a new bishop should
be chosen for Ephesus, but the two aforesaid should retain their episcopal dignity
and receive a pension from the church revenues of Ephesus. The thirteenth session
(30 October) decided a case of conflicting jurisdiction. Eunomius of Nicomedia
and Anastasius of Nicaea both claimed metropolitan rights, at least for a part
of Bithynia. The council decreed that in a province there could be only one
metropolitan bishop, and in favour of the Bishop of Nicomedia.
The fourteenth session (31 October) decided the rival claims of Sabinian and
Athanasius to the See of Perrha in Syria. Sabinian had been chosen in place
of Athanasius deposed by an Antiochene synod in 445; later Athanasius was reinstated
by the Robber Council of Ephesus. The council decreed that further investigation
should be made into the charges against Athanasius, Sabinian meanwhile holding
the see. If the charges should prove untrue, Athanasius should be reinstated
and Sabinian receive a pension from the diocese. In the same session a letter
of Pope Leo was read, and the council approved the decisions in regard to Maximus
of Antioch in his conflict with Juvenal of Jerusalem, and his obligation of
providing for his predecessor Domnus. in the fifteenth session (31 October)
the council adopted and approved twenty-eight disciplinary canons. The papal
legates, however, as well as the imperial commissioners departed at the beginning
of the session, probably foreseeing that the hierarchical status of the Bishop
of Constantinople would be defined, as really occurred in canon 28.
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The first canon approved the canons passed in previous synods.
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The second established severe penalties against those who conferred ecclesiastical
orders or positions for money, or received such orders or positions for
money, and acted as intermediaries in such transactions.
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The third forbade secular traffic to all ecclesiastics, except in the
interest of minors, orphans, or other needy persons.
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The fourth forbade the erection of a monastery or an oratory without the
permission of the proper bishop; recommended to the monks a life of retirement,
mortification, and prayer; and forbade the reception of a slave in a monastery
without the permission of his master.
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The fifth inculcated the canons of previous synods concerning the transfer
of bishops and clerics from one city to another.
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The sixth recommended that no one should be ordained except he were assigned
to some ecclesiastical office. Those ordained contrary to this provision
were not to exercise their order.
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The seventh forbade ecclesiastics to exercise the military art or to hold
a secular office.
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The eighth decreed that the clerics of charitable homes, monasteries,
or oratories of martyrs should be subject to the bishop of the territory.
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The ninth ordained that ecclesiastics should conduct their lawsuits only
before the bishop, the synod of the province, the exarch, or the Bishop
of Constantinople.
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The tenth forbade ecclesiastics to be enrolled in the church-registers
of different cities.
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The eleventh ordained that the poor and needy, when travelling, should
be provided with letters of recommendation (litterae pacificae) from
the churches.
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The twelfth forbade the bishops to obtain from the emperors the title
of metropolitans to the prejudice of the real metropolitan of their province.
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The thirteenth forbade to strange clerics the exercise of their office
unless provided with letters of recommendation from their bishop.
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The fourteenth forbade minor clerics to marry heretical women, or to give
their children in marriage to heretics.
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The fifteenth decreed that no deaconess should be ordained below the age
of forty; and no person once ordained a deaconess was allowed to leave that
state and marry.
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The sixteenth forbade the marriage of virgins or monks consecrated to
God.
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The seventeenth ordained that the parishes in rural districts should remain
under the jurisdiction of their respective bishops; but if a new city were
built by the emperor, its ecclesiastical organization should be modelled
on that of the State.
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The eighteenth forbade secret organizations in the Church, chiefly among
clerics and monks.
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The nineteenth ordained that the bishops of the province should assemble
twice a year for the regular synod.
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The twentieth forbade again the transfer of an ecclesiastic from one city
to another, except in the case of grave necessity.
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The twenty-first ordained that complaints against bishops or clerics should
not be heard except after an investigation into the character of the accuser.
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The twenty-second forbade ecclesiastics to appropriate the goods of their
deceased bishop.
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The twenty-third forbade clerics or monks to sojourn in Constantinople
without the permission of their bishop.
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The twenty-fourth ordained that monasteries once established, together
with the property assigned to them, should not be converted to other purposes.
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The twenty-fifth ordained that the metropolitan should ordain the bishops
of his province within three months (from election).
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The twenty-sixth ordained that ecclesiastical property should not be administered
by the bishop alone, but by a special procurator.
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The twenty-seventh decreed severe penalties against the abduction of women.
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The twenty-eighth ratified the third canon of the Council of Constantinople
(381), and decreed that since the city of Constantinople was honoured with
the privilege of having the emperor and the Senate within its walls, its
bishop should also have special prerogatives and be second in rank, after
the Bishop of Rome. In consequence thereof he should consecrate the metropolitan
bishops of the three civil Dioceses of Pontus, Asia, and Cappadocia.
This last canon provoked another session of the council, the sixteenth, held
on 1 November. The papal legates protested therein against this canon, alleging
that they had special instructions from Pope Leo on that subject, that the canon
violated the prerogatives of the Patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem,
and was contrary to the canons (vi, vii) of the Council of Nicaea. Their protests,
however, were not listened to; and the council persisted in retaining this canon
in its Acts. With this incident the Council of Chalcedon was closed.
At the closing of the sessions the council wrote a letter to Pope Leo I, in
which the Fathers informed him of what had been done; thanked him for the exposition
of Christian Faith contained in his dogmatic epistle; spoke of his legates as
having presided over them in his name; and asked for the ratification of the
disciplinary matters enacted, particularly canon 28. This letter was handed
to the papal legates, who departed for Rome soon after the last session of the
council. Similar letters were written to Pope Leo in December by Emperor Marcian
and Anatolius of Constantinople. In reply Pope Leo protested most energetically
against canon xxviii and declared it null and void as being against the prerogatives
of Bishops of Alexandria and Antioch, and against the decrees of the Council
of Nicaea. Like protests were contained in the letters written 22 May, 452,
to Emperor Marcian, Empress Pulcheria, and Anatolius of Constantinople. Otherwise
the pope ratified the Acts of the Council of Chalcedon, but only inasmuch as
they referred to matters of faith. This approval was contained in letters written
21 March, 453, to the bishops who took part in the council; hence the Council
of Chalcedon, at least as to the first six sessions, became an ecumenical synod,
and was considered as such by all Christians, both in the time of Poe Leo and
after him. The Emperor Marcian issued several edicts (7 February, 13 March,
and 28 July, 452) in which he approved the decrees of the Council of Chalcedon,
forbade all discussions on questions of faith, forbade the Eutychians to have
priests, to live in monasteries, to hold meetings, to inherit anything, to bequeath
anything to their partisans, or to join the army. The clerics among the followers
of Eutyches, hitherto orthodox, and the monks of his monastery, were to be expelled
from Roman territory, as once the Manichaeans were. The writings of the Eutychians
were to be burned; their authors, or those who spread them, were to be punished
with confiscation and banishment. Finally Eutyches and Dioscurus were both banished.
The former died about that time, while the latter lived to the year 454 in Gangra
in Paphlagonia.
The Council of Chalcedon with its dogmatic definition did not put an end to
the controversy concerning the natures of Christ and their relation to each
other. Many people in the East disliked the term person used by the council
to signify the union of, or the means of uniting, the two natures in Christ.
They believed that Nestorianism was thereby renewed; or at least they thought
the definition less satisfactory than St. Cyril's concept of the union of the
two natures in Christ (Bardenhewer, Patrologie, 2nd ed., 321-22). In Palestine,
Syria, Armenia, Egypt, and other countries, many monks and ecclesiastics refused
to accept the definition of Chalcedon; and Monophysites are found there to this
day. (See DIOSCURUS; JACOBITES; EUTYCHIANISM; MONOPHYSITISM.)
From the Catholic Encyclopedia