Fourth Council of Constantinople
(EIGHTH GENERAL COUNCIL.)
The Eighth General Council was opened, 5 October, 869, in the Cathedral of
Saint Sophia, under the presidency of the legates of Adrian II. During the preceding
decade grave irregularities had occurred at Constantinople, among them the deposition
of the Patriarch Ignatius and the intrusion of Photius, whose violent measures
against the Roman Church culminated in the attempted deposition (867) of Nicholas
I. The accession that year of a new emperor, Basil the Macedonian, changed the
situation, political and ecclesiastical. Photius was interned in a monastery;
Ignatius was recalled, and friendly relations were resumed with the Apostolic
See. Both Ignatius and Basil sent representatives to Rome asking for a general
council. After holding a Roman synod (June, 869) in which Photius was again
condemned, the pope sent to Constantinople three legates to preside in his name
over the council. Besides the Patriarch of Constantinople there were present
the representatives of the Patriarchs of Antioch and Jerusalem and, towards
the end, also the representatives of the Patriarch of Alexandria. The attendance
of Ignatian bishops was small enough in the beginning; indeed there were never
more than 102 bishops present.
The legates were asked to exhibit their commission, which they did; then they
presented to the members of the council the famous formula (libellus)
of Pope Hormisdas (514-23), binding its signatories "to follow in everything
the Apostolic See of Rome and teach all its laws . . . in which communion is
the whole, real, and perfect solidity of the Christian religion". The Fathers
of the council were required to sign this document, which had originally been
drawn up to close the Acacian schism. The earlier sessions were occupied with
the reading of important documents, the reconciliation of Ignatain bishops who
had fallen away to Photius, the exclusion of some Photian prelates, and the
refutation of the false statements of two former envoys of Photius to Rome.
In the fifth session Photius himself unwillingly appeared, but when questioned
observed a deep silence or answered only in a few brief words, pretending blasphemously
to imitate the attitude and speech of Christ before Caiphas and Pilate. Through
his representatives he was given another hearing in the next session; they appealed
to the canons as above the pope. In the seventh session he appeared again, this
time with his consecrator George Asbestas. They appealed, as before, to the
ancient canons, refused to recognize the presence or authority of the Roman
legates, and rejected the authority of the Roman Church, though they offered
to render an account to the emperor. As Photius would not renounce his usurped
claim and recognize the rightful patriarch Ignatius, the former Roman excommunications
of him were renewed by the council, and he was banished to a monastery on the
Bosporus, whence he did not cease to denounce the council as a triumph of lying
and impiety, and by a very active correspondence kept up the courage of his
followers, until in 877 the death of Ignatius opened the way for his return
to power. Iconoclasm, in its last remnants, and the interference of the civil
authority in ecclesiastical affairs were denounced by the council. The tenth
and last session was held in the presence of the emperor, his son Constantine,
the Bulgarian king, Michael, and the ambassadors of Emperor Louis II.
The twenty-seven canons of this council deal partly with the situation created
by Photius and partly with general points of discipline or abuses. The decrees
of Nicholas I and Adrian II against Photius and in favour of Ignatius were read
and confirmed, the Photian clerics deposed, and those ordained by Photius reduced
to lay communion. The council issued an Encyclical to all the faithful, and
wrote to the pope requesting his confirmation of its Acts. The papal legates
signed its decrees, but with reservation of the papal action. Here, for the
first time, Rome recognized the ancient claim of Constantinople to the second
place among the five great patriarchates. Greek pride, however, was offended
by the compulsory signature of the aforesaid Roman formulary of reconciliation,
and in a subsequent conference of Greek ecclesiastical and civil authorities
the newly-converted Bulgarians were declared subject to the Patriarchate of
Constantinople and not to Rome. Though restored by the Apostolic See, Ignatius
proved ungrateful, and in this important matter sided with the other Eastern
patriarchs in consummating, for political reasons, a notable injustice; the
territory henceforth known as Bulgaria was in reality part of the ancient Illyria
that had always belonged to the Roman patriarchate until the Iconoclast Leo
III (718-41) violently withdrew it and made it subject to Constantinople. Ignatius
very soon consecrated an archbishop for the Bulgarians and sent thither many
Greek missionaries, whereupon the Latin bishops and priests were obliged to
retire. On their way home the papal legates were plundered and imprisoned; they
had, however, given to the care of Anastasius, Librarian of the Roman Church
(present as a member of the Frankish embassy) most of the submission-signatures
of the Greek bishops. We owe to him the Latin version of these documents and
a copy of the Greek Acts of the council which he also translated and to which
is due most of our documentary knowledge of the proceedings. It was in vain
that Adrian II and his successor threatened Ignatius with severe penalties if
he did not withdraw from Bulgaria his Greek bishops and priests. The Roman Church
never regained the vast regions she then lost. (See PHOTIUS; IGNATIUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE;
NICHOLAS I.)
From the Catholic Encyclopedia