The First Council of Nicaea
First Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church, held in 325 on the occasion
of the heresy of Arius (Arianism). As early as 320
or 321 St. Alexander, Bishop of Alexandria, convoked a council at Alexandria
at which more than one hundred bishops from Egypt and Libya anathematized
Arius. The latter continued to officiate in his church and to recruit followers.
Being finally driven out, he went to Palestine and from there to Nicomedia.
During this time St. Alexander published his "Epistola encyclicato which Arius
repliedbut henceforth it was evident that the quarrel had gone beyond possibility
of human control. Sozomen even speaks of a Council of Bithynia which addressed
an encyclical to all the bishops asking them to receive the Arians into the
communion of the Church. This discord, and the war which soon broke out between
Constantine and Licinius, added to the disorder and partly explains the progress
of the religious conflict during the years 322-3. Finally Constantine, having
conquered Licinius and become sole emperor, concerned himself with the re-establishment
of religious peace as well as of civil order. He addressed letters to St.
Alexander and to Arius deprecating these heated controversies regarding questions
of no practical importance, and advising the adversaries to agree without
delay. It was evident that the emperor did not then grasp the significance
of the Arian controversy. Hosius of Cordova, his counsellor in religious matters,
bore the imperial letter to Alexandria, but failed in his conciliatory mission.
Seeing this, the emperor, perhaps advised by Hosius, judged no remedy more
apt to restore peace in the Church than the convocation of an oecumenical
council.
The emperor himself, in very respectful letters, begged the bishops of every
country to come promptly to Nicaea. Several bishops from outside the Roman Empire
(e.g., from Persia) came to the Council. It is not historically known whether
the emperor in convoking the Council acted solely in his own name or in concert
with the pope; however, it is probable that Constantine and Sylvester came to
an agreement (see POPE ST. SYLVESTER I). In order to expedite the assembling
of the Council, the emperor placed at the disposal of the bishops the public
conveyances and posts of the empire; moreover, while the Council lasted he provided
abundantly for the maintenance of the members. The choice of Nicaea was favourable
to the assembling of a large number of bishops. It was easily accessible to
the bishops of nearly all the provinces, but especially to those of Asia, Syria,
Palestine, Egypt, Greece, and Thrace. The sessions were held in the principal
church, and in the central hall of the imperial palace. A large place was indeed
necessary to receive such an assembly, though the exact number is not known
with certainty. Eusebius speaks of more than 250 bishops, and later Arabic manuscripts
raise the figure to 2000 - an evident exaggeration in which, however, it is
impossible to discover the approximate total number of bishops, as well as of
the priests, deacons, and acolytes, of whom it is said that a great number were
also present. St. Athanasius, a member of the council speaks of 300, and in
his letter "Ad Afros" he says explicitly 318. This figure is almost universally
adopted, and there seems to be no good reason for rejecting it. Most of the
bishops present were Greeks; among the Latins we know only Hosius of Cordova,
Cecilian of Carthage, Mark of Calabria, Nicasius of Dijon, Donnus of Stridon
in Pannonia, and the two Roman priests, Victor and Vincentius, representing
the pope. The assembly numbered among its most famous members St. Alexander
of Alexandria, Eustathius of Antioch, Macarius of Jerusalem, Eusebius of Nicomedia,
Eusebius of Caesarea, and Nicholas of Myra. Some had suffered during the last
persecution; others were poorly enough acquainted with Christian theology. Among
the members was a young deacon, Athanasius of Alexandria, for whom this Council
was to be the prelude to a life of conflict and of glory (see ST. ATHANASIUS).
The year 325 is accepted without hesitation as that of the First Council of
Nicaea. There is less agreement among our early authorities as to the month
and day of the opening. In order to reconcile the indications furnished by Socrates
and by the Acts of the Council of Chalcedon, this date may, perhaps, be taken
as 20 May, and that of the drawing up of the symbol as 19 June. It may be assumed
without too great hardihood that the synod, having been convoked for 20 May,
in the absence of the emperor held meetings of a less solemn character until
14 June, when after the emperor's arrival, the sessions properly so called began,
the symbol being formulated on 19 June, after which various matters - the paschal
controversy, etc. - were dealt with, and the sessions came to an end 25 August.
The Council was opened by Constantine with the greatest solemnity. The emperor
waited until all the bishops had taken their seats before making his entry.
He was clad in gold and covered with precious stones in the fashion of an Oriental
sovereign. A chair of gold had been made ready for him, and when he had taken
his place the bishops seated themselves. After he had been addressed in a hurried
allocution, the emperor made an address in Latin, expressing his will that religious
peace should be re-established. He had opened the session as honorary president,
and he had assisted at the subsequent sessions, but the direction of the theological
discussions was abandoned, as was fitting, to the ecclesiastical leaders of
the council. The actual president seems to have been Hosius of Cordova, assisted
by the pope's legates, Victor and Vincentius.
The emperor began by making the bishops understand that they had a greater
and better business in hand than personal quarrels and interminable recriminations.
Nevertheless, he had to submit to the infliction of hearing the last words
of debates which had been going on previous to his arrival. Eusebius of Caesarea
and his two abbreviators, Socrates and Sozomen, as well as Rufinus and Gelasius
of Cyzicus, report no details of the theological discussions. Rufinus tells
us only that daily sessions were held and that Arius was often summoned before
the assembly; his opinions were seriously discussed and the opposing arguments
attentively considered. The majority, especially those who were confessors
of the Faith, energetically declared themselves against the impious doctrines
of Arius. (For the part played by the Eusebian third party, see EUSEBIUS OF
NICOMEDIA. For the Creed of Eusebius, see EUSEBIUS OF CAESAREA, Life.)
St. Athanasius assures us that the activities of the Council were nowise hampered
by Constantine's presence. The emperor had by this time escaped from the influence
of Eusebius of Nicomedia, and was under that of Hosius, to whom, as well as
to St. Athanasius, may be attributed a preponderant influence in the formulation
of the symbol of the First Ecumenical Council, of which the following is a
literal translation:
We believe in on God the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and
invisible; and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten of the Father,
that is, of the substance [ek tes ousias] of the Father, God of God,
light of light, true God of true God, begotten not made, of the same substance
with the Father [homoousion to patri],
through whom all things were made both in heaven and on earth; who for us
men and our salvation descended, was incarnate, and was made man, suffered
and rose again the third day, ascended into heaven and cometh to judge the
living and the dead. And in the Holy Ghost. Those who say: There was a time
when He was not, and He was not before He was begotten; and that He was
made our of nothing (ex ouk onton); or who maintain that He is of
another hypostasis or another substance [than the Father], or that the Son
of God is created, or mutable, or subject to change, [them] the Catholic
Church anathematizes.
The adhesion was general and enthusiastic. All the bishops save five declared
themselves ready to subscribe to this formula, convince that it contained the
ancient faith of the Apostolic Church. The opponents were soon reduced to two,
Theonas of Marmarica and Secundus of Ptolemais, who were exiled and anathematized.
Arius and his writings were also branded with anathema, his books were cast
into the fire, and he was exiled to Illyria. The lists of the signers have reached
us in a mutilated condition, disfigured by faults of the copyists. Nevertheless,
these lists may be regarded as authentic. Their study is a problem which has
been repeatedly dealt with in modern times, in Germany and England, in the critical
editions of H. Gelzer, H. Hilgenfeld, and O. Contz on the one hand, and C. H.
Turner on the other. The lists thus constructed give respectively 220 and 218
names. With information derived from one source or another, a list of 232 or
237 fathers known to have been present may be constructed.
Other matters dealt with by this council were the controversy as to the time
of celebrating Easter and the Meletian schism. The former of these two will
be found treated under EASTER, Easter Controversy; the latter under MELETIUS
OF LYCOPOLIS.
Of all the Acts of this Council, which, it has been maintained, were numerous,
only three fragments have reached us: the creed, or symbol, given above (see
also NICENE CREED); the canons; the synodal decree. In reality there never
were any official acts besides these. But the accounts of Eusebius, Socrates,
Sozomen, Theodoret, and Rufinus may be considered as very important sources
of historical information, as well as some data preserved by St. Athanasius,
and a history of the Council of Nicaea written in Greek in the fifth century
by Gelasius of Cyzicus. There has long existed a dispute as to the number
of the canons of First Nicaea. All the collections of canons, whether in Latin
or Greek, composed in the fourth and fifth centuries agree in attributing
to this Council only the twenty canons, which we possess today. Of these the
following is a brief résumé:
-
Canon 1: On the admission, or support, or expulsion of clerics mutilated
by choice or by violence.
-
Canon 2: Rules to be observed for ordination, the avoidance of undue haste,
the deposition of those guilty of a grave fault.
-
Canon 3: All members of the clergy are forbidden to dwell with any woman,
except a mother, sister, or aunt.
-
Canon 4: Concerning episcopal elections.
-
Canon 5: Concerning the excommunicate.
-
Canon 6: Concerning patriarchs and their jurisdiction.
-
Canon 7: confirms the right of the bishops of Jerusalem to enjoy certain
honours.
-
Canon 8: concerns the Novatians.
-
Canon 9: Certain sins known after ordination involve invalidation.
-
Canon 10: Lapsi who have been ordained knowingly or surreptitiously
must be excluded as soon as their irregularity is known.
-
Canon 11: Penance to be imposed on apostates of the persecution of Licinius.
-
Canon 12: Penance to be imposed on those who upheld Licinius in his war
on the Christians.
-
Canon 13: Indulgence to be granted to excommunicated persons in danger
of death.
-
Canon 14: Penance to be imposed on catechumens who had weakened under
persecution.
-
Canon 15: Bishops, priests, and deacons are not to pass from one church
to another.
-
Canon 16: All clerics are forbidden to leave their church. Formal prohibition
for bishops to ordain for their diocese a cleric belonging to another diocese.
-
Canon 17: Clerics are forbidden to lend at interest.
-
Canon 18: recalls to deacons their subordinate position with regard to
priests.
-
Canon 19: Rules to be observed with regard to adherents of Paul of Samosata
who wished to return to the Church.
-
Canon 20: On Sundays and during the Paschal season prayers should be said
standing.
The business of the Council having been finished Constantine celebrated the
twentieth anniversary of his accession to the empire, and invited the bishops
to a splendid repast, at the end of which each of them received rich presents.
Several days later the emperor commanded that a final session should be held,
at which he assisted in order to exhort the bishops to work for the maintenance
of peace; he commended himself to their prayers, and authorized the fathers
to return to their dioceses. The greater number hastened to take advantage of
this and to bring the resolutions of the council to the knowledge of their provinces.
From the Catholic Encyclopedia