Second Council of Constantinople
(FIFTH GENERAL COUNCIL).
This council was held at Constantinople (5 May-2 June, 553), having been called
by Emperor Justinian. It was attended mostly by Oriental bishops; only six Western
(African) bishops were present. The president was Eutychius, Patriarch of Constantinople.
This assembly was in reality only the last phase of the long and violent conflict
inaugurated by the edict of Justinian in 543 against Origenism (P.G., LXXXVI,
945-90). The emperor was persuaded that Nestorianism continued to draw its strength
from the writings of Theodore of Mopsuestia (d. 428), Theodoret of Cyrus (d.
457), and Ibas of Edessa (d. 457), also from the personal esteem in which the
first two of these ecclesiastical writers were yet held by many. The events
which led to this council will be narrated more fully in the articles POPE VIGILIUS
and in THREE CHAPTERS; only a brief account will be given here.
From 25 January, 547, Pope Vigilius was forcibly detained in the royal city;
he had originally refused to participate in the condemnation of the Three Chapters
(i.e. a brief statement of anathema upon Theodore of Mopsuestia and his writings,
upon Theodoret of Cyrus and his writings, against St. Cyril of Alexandria and
the Council of Ephesus, and upon the letter written by Ibas of Edessa to Maris,
Bishop of Hardaschir in Persia). Later (by his "Judicatum", 11 April, 548) Vigilius
had condemned the Three Chapters (the doctrine in question being really censurable),
but he expressly maintained the authority of the Council of Chalcedon (451)
wherein Theodoret and Ibas- but after the condemnation of Nestorius- had been
restored to their places; in the West much discontent was called forth by this
step which seemed a weakening before the civil power in purely ecclesiastical
matters and an injustice to men long dead and judged by God; it was all the
more objectionable as the Western mind had no accurate knowledge of the theological
situation among the Greeks of that day. In consequence of this Vigilius had
persuaded Justinian to return the aforesaid papal document and to proclaim a
truce on all sides until a general council could be called to decide these controversies.
Both the emperor and the Greek bishops violated this promise of neutrality;
the former, in particular, publishing (551) his famous edict, Homologia tes
pisteos, condemning anew the Three Chapters, and refusing to withdraw the
same.
For his dignified protest Vigilius thereupon suffered various personal indignities
at the hands of the civil authority and nearly lost his life; he retired finally
to Chalcedon, in the very church of St. Euphemia where the great council had
been held, whence he informed the Christian world of the state of affairs. Soon
the Oriental bishops sought reconciliation with him, induced him to return to
the city, and withdrew all that had hitherto been done against the Three Chapters;
the new patriarch, Eutychius, successor to Mennas, whose weakness and subserviency
were the immediate cause of all this violence and confusion, presented (6 Jan.,
5530 his professor of faith to Vigilius and, in union with other Oriental bishops,
urged the calling of a general council under the presidency of the pope. Vigilius
was willing, but proposed that it should be held either in Italy or in Sicily,
in order to secure the attendance of Western bishops. To this Justinian would
not agree, but proposed, instead, a kind of commission made up of delegates
from each of the great patriarchates; Vigilius suggested that an equal number
be chosen from the East and the West; but this was not acceptable to the emperor,
who thereupon opened the council by his own authority on the date and in the
manner mentioned above. Vigilius refused to participate, not only on account
of the overwhelming proportion of Oriental bishops, but also from fear of violence;
moreover, none of his predecessors had ever taken part personally in an Oriental
council. To this decision he was faithful, though he expressed his willingness
to give an independent judgment on the matters at issue. Eight sessions were
held, the result of which was the final condemnation of the Three Chapters by
the 165 bishops present at the last session (2 June, 553), in fourteen anathematisms
similar to the thirteen previously issued by Justinian.
In the meantime Vigilius had sent to the emperor (14 May) a document known
as the first "Constitutum" (Mansi, IX, 61-106), signed by himself and sixteen,
mostly Western, bishops, in which sixteen heretical propositions of Theodore
of Mopsuestia were condemned, and, in five anathematisms, his Christological
teachings repudiated; it was forbidden, however, to condemn his person, or to
proceed further in condemnation of the writings or the person of Theodoret,
or of the letter of Ibas. It seemed indeed, under the circumstances, no easy
task to denounce fittingly the certain errors of the great Antiochene theologian
and his followers and yet uphold the reputation and authority of the Council
of Chalcedon, which had been content with obtaining the essentials of submission
from all sympathizers with Nestorius, but for that very reason had never been
forgiven by the Monophysite opponents of Nestorius and his heresy, who were
now in league with the numerous enemies of Origen, and until the death (548)
of Theodora had enjoyed the support of that influential empress.
The decisions of the council were executed with a violence in keeping with
its conduct, though the ardently hoped-for reconciliation of the Monophysites
did not follow. Vigilius, together with other opponents of the imperial will,
as registered by the subservient court-prelates, seems to have been banished
(Hefele, II, 905), together with the faithful bishops and ecclesiastics of his
suite, either to Upper Egypt or to an island in the Propontis. Already in the
seventh session of the council Justinian caused the name of Vigilius to be stricken
from the diptychs, without prejudice, however, it was said, to communion with
the Apostolic See. Soon the Roman clergy and people, now freed by Narses from
the Gothic yoke, requested the emperor to permit the return of the pope, which
Justinian agreed to on condition that Vigilius would recognize the late council.
This Vigilius finally agreed to do, and in two documents (a letter to Eutychius
of Constantinople, 8 Dec., 553, and a second "Constitutum" of 23 Feb., 554,
probably addressed to the Western episcopate) condemned, at last, the Three
Chapters (Mansi, IX, 424-20, 457-88; cf. Hefele, II, 905-11), independently,
however, and without mention of the council. His opposition had never been based
on doctrinal grounds but on the decency and opportuneness of the measures proposed,
the wrongful imperial violence, and a delicate fear of injury to the authority
of the Council of Chalcedon, especially in the West. Here, indeed, despite the
additional recognition of it by Pelagius I (555-60), the Fifth General Council
only gradually acquired in public opinion an ecumenical character. In Northern
Italy the ecclesiastical provinces of Milan and Aquileia broke off communion
with the Apostolic See; the former yielding only towards the end of the sixth
century, whereas the latter (Aquileia-Grado) protracted its resistance to about
700 (Hefele, op. cit., II, 911-27). (For an equitable appreciation of the conduct
of Vigilius see, besides the article VIGILIUS, the judgment of Bois, in Dict.
de théol. cath., II, 1238-39.) The pope was always correct as to the
doctrine involved, and yielded, for the sake of peace, only when he was satisfied
that there was no fear for the authority of Chalcedon, which he at first, with
the entire West, deemed in peril from the machinations of the Monophysites.
The original Greek Acts of the council are lost, but there is extant a very
old Latin version, probably contemporary and made for the use of Vigilius, certainly
quoted by his successor Pelagius I. The Baluze edition is reprinted in Mansi,
"Coll. Conc.", IX, 163 sqq. In the next General Council of Constantinople (680)
it was found that the original Acts of the Fifth Council had been tampered with
(Hefele, op. cit., II, 855-58) in favour of Monothelitism; nor is it certain
that in their present shape we have them in their original completeness (ibid.,
pp. 859-60). This has a bearing on the much disputed question concerning the
condemnation of Origenism at this council. Hefele, moved by the antiquity and
persistency of the reports of Origen's condemnation, maintains (p. 861) with
Cardinal Noris, that in it Origen was condemned, but only en passant,
and that his name in the eleventh anathema is not an interpolation.
From the Catholic Encyclopedia