creeds
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---
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title: Why the creeds matter
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hidden: true
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description: >-
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Plenty of Christians don't think the creeds are important for their faith.
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Plenty others take the creeds for granted. But Christians ought to appreciate
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415
website/src/content/blog/2025/10/05/creeds.md
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415
website/src/content/blog/2025/10/05/creeds.md
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---
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title: "381: how the church as we know it was made"
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description: >-
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The church which defines our world now is in a significant way the one which
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emerged out of sixty years of controversy from the Council of Constantinople
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in 381. I've been charting what happened, why, and the ongoing legacy.
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pubDate: 2025-10-05
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---
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Athanasius defined the fourth century. Not that he was a god, or even a king, or
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that he always got his way. But he wrote the history books. His tale of an epic
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battle fought tooth-and-nail between Arian heretics and him and his loyal allies
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has come to be the standard account of how, over the course of the fourth
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century, the Church redefined what orthodoxy means and how it is declared and
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identified.
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The result was the Nicene Creed. It had been first written for a very particular
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polemical purpose in 325, but later found itself the centre of a strange
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theological revival, and was finally revised in a council at Constantinople
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in 381. In so doing, the bishops assembled a recognisable 'Nicene' tradition
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which is still one of the defining features of planet Earth.
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For better and for worse, the church as we know it has a capacity both for great
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humility, faith and submission to the mystery of God, but it also has a capacity
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for great intolerance. This is the church created in 381.
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To understand the church as we know it today, then, we need to understand the
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complex, confusing journey from 325 to 381.
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Athanasius' chronicle of that journey is temptingly simple. The only problem
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with it is that it isn't true. Indeed, his 'history' was never meant to function
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as an all-encompassing narrative of Church history, to be read for centuries
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ever after. His accounts function as polemics, meant to cajole, condemn and
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persuade his readers in his own time of his vision for their future.
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Nevertheless, whatever Athanasius' real significance in how his times unfolded,
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his witness is important. He fully inhabited his times, often in the middle of
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the fray. Whether or not we buy Athanasius' portrayal of himself as fighting the
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good fight, he was certainly a fighter. By looking through his eyes, then, we
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can get a perspective on how the Church as we know it came to be.
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So it makes sense to start with him. As a young priest in his native Alexandria,
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he became tangled up in a controversy which would come to define his career. A
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strong-minded and fearless young priest had begun to preach. His name was Arius.
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---
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According to the Egyptian tradition, Alexander, the bishop of Alexandria, was
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the nineteenth in a direct line of succession from Mark the Evangelist himself.
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With a great deal of justice, he would have regarded himself as one of the most
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important Christian leaders in the world, and at least the equal of the bishop
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of Rome.
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Small wonder, then, that the insubordination that plagued his diocese bothered
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him. First Erescentius had started a schism, disputing the rule he used for
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calculating the date of Easter.
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Then there was Meletius. During the persecution under the Roman emperor
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Diocletian, Meletius had already rubbed a few people the wrong way: while other
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bishops were in hiding or in prison, he took the initiative to resolve problems
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and ordain priests without properly consulting the absent bishops'
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representatives. Perhaps it was intended kindly: it was seen as meddling. Now
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Meletius accused Alexander of being too soft on Christians who had caved into
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the threat of torture and made sacrifices to the pagan cults. When he decided
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Alexander was never going to match his high rigorist standards, he broke away,
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too.
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Alexander must have longed for the relatively good order of the Greek and Roman
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churches, where bickering subordinates were generally willing to let their
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bishop have the last say. The throne of St Mark was in trouble. If Christ's body
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wasn't to get chopped up any more than it already was, he needed to establish
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his personal authority.
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This was the context in which Arius, a young firebrand priest, steps onto stage
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right. He surely knew his own bishop's teaching: God is one substance and one
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essence, unchangeable, indivisible. Christ his Son is in every way God: God from
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God, light from light, true God from true God, eternally begotten of the Father
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before all ages. How else could Christ, by adopting human flesh, mediate the
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transcendent God to fallen humanity?
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But Arius didn't like this one bit. If God is unchangeable, how could he adopt
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flesh? That suggests he was not flesh, and then became flesh. And in any case,
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if the martyrs were right to give up their lives to know God, he must have the
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perfect, uncompromising transcendence which the martyrs so admired. But how can
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God adopt flesh, never mind suffer and die on a cross, without compromising that
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transcendence? Something had to give. For Arius, the solution was to modify the
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relationship between the Father and the Son.
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Arius accepted that Christ had to be in some sense divine, in order to mediate
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God to humanity. But he denied that he was quite as much God as God is. He has
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something like his Father's essence, not in a co-equal way, but rather in a
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derivative way. This makes sense of Father-Son language, which suggests the
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Father came first, and the Son came next, a derivative of the Father. So the Son
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is God from God, but not true God from true God. The Son was begotten in time,
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and is not eternal: only God the Father himself is eternal.
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At another time in another place, Arius might have passed for a creative,
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independent thinker without much notice. But Arius was directly contradicting
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Alexander just as the latter was desperate to assert his authority. It got ugly.
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Alexander called a council of local bishops in about 320. The council condemned
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Arius and removed him from his post as priest. In response, Arius went on the
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campaign trail, visiting bishops in Palestine and Asia Minor who he thought
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would be sympathetic to his theology. Shortly afterwards, he returned to
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Alexandria, triumphantly brandishing vindications from two councils, one in
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Jerusalem and one in Bithynia. He wasn't going to make it easy for Alexander.
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Luckily for Alexander, the Emperor Constantine had just united the eastern and
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western halves of the Empire. He had famously converted to Christianity after
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seeing the sign of the cross at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312, and saw the
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bishops as means towards his mission of uniting the Empire under one government
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and one God. Constantine had been made aware of the dispute between Arius and
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Alexander, and he didn't want schisms in the church any more than Alexander did.
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He called a council in his own palace in Nicaea, paying the travel expenses and
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hotel bills of all the bishops in attendance. For those bishops, many carrying
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the scars of torture they had endured under Diocletian, it must have been a
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bewildering experience. Alexander was in attendance. His secretary was
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Athanasius.
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In 325, the council condemned Arius. To avoid anyone else following in his path,
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they produced a statement of faith, designed to exclude Arius' teaching, no
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matter who taught it. This statement of faith is now known as the Nicene Creed.
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The council also fixed the date of Easter to boot. Alexander must have been
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relieved.
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You might have thought that would have been the end for Arius. In fact,
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Constantine engineered his re-admittance into the church as soon as 328. Arius
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died in peace in 336. Constantine's mission wasn't to purge the church, but to
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unite the church. As long as all sides worshipped God and could live in peace,
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he wanted as many people as possible included. His mission was unity, not
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uniformity.
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Bishops like Eusebius of Caesarea in Syria got this. He had been provisionally
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excommunicated on suspicion of Arianism in 325, but was reconciled at Nicaea
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given the chance to explain himself and sign up to the Nicene Creed. No sooner
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had he done this, however, than he had started explaining to the faithful back
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home how they could carry on believing that the Son was not really eternal, even
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as the Creed was designed to exclude exactly such a claim. While Eusebius might
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seem duplicitous, at the time, this was exactly the kind of tolerant pragmatism
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that Constantine asked of the bishops: as long as they didn't cause more
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out-and-out conflict.
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Alexander didn't have long to enjoy the peace of Nicaea. He died just a few
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years afterward in 328. The throne of St Mark passed to Athanasius.
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---
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The peace didn't last long. Just as Athanasius was donning his mitre, Eusebius
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was plotting against Eustathius the bishop of Antioch, and engineered his
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deposition. In his defence, Eusebius accused Eustathius of the long-condemned
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heresy, Sabellianism. Then in 335, he followed up by deposing Marcellus, the
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bishop of Ancyra, at a council in Tyre.
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To defend his action, he wrote _Against Marcellus_, in which he accused
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Marcellus of being a Sabellian, too. Sabellius' heresy was (to borrow a modern
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term) modalism, the view that 'Father', 'Son' and 'Spirit' are mere titles,
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aspects, 'modes' of God, not in any real way distinct. He also accused Marcellus
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of adoptionism, another agreed heresy. Marcellus taught that the Son only became
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an aspect of the divine nature at the Incarnation, and that in the last day,
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Christ would hand over his kingdom to his Father.
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This action would cast a long shadow over the next half-century. Time and again,
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bishops allied to Eusebius' way of thinking, or 'Eusebians', would re-affirm
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their opposition to that 'heretic' Marcellus and his 'Sabellianism'. This is a
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crucial dynamic for understanding where theological factions drew up their
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battle lines, and for what compromises were needed in order to get to 381.
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Even the bishop of Alexandria wasn't immune from Eusebius' purge. Athanasius had
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vigorously defended his ally, Marcellus, at the council of Tyre in 335. Eusebius
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set about plotting his downfall. He dug up dirt. He accused Athanasius of using
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threats and bribes to get himself elected, and sending goons to beat up his
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political opponents. Once he'd found evidence of Athanasius meddling with the
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crucial Egyptian grain export that kept Rome fed, he had the emperor on side.
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Constantine convened a meeting in 336 and exiled him to the German frontier.
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---
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Or at least, that's how Athanasius tells it. Athanasius loves a plot: at the
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time, alleging a conspiracy was a classic rhetorical technique for painting your
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enemies as heretics.
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Eusebius was no stranger to rhetoric himself, and it's to his 337 best-seller,
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the _Life of Constantine_, that we owe our standard account of Constantine's
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reign. He regarded Empire and Church as allies in a joint mission, to unite the
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world under one government and one faith. To him, someone like Athanasius,
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constitutionally incapable of tolerating anyone who disagreed with him and
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willing to use gangster tactics to get his way, was a threat to this divine
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mission.
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It's worth remembering that after Constantine died, Athanasius would be
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re-exiled by four more Roman emperors. In his lifetime, only Julian failed to
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exile Athanasius, and him only perhaps because he didn't have time in his
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whirlwind twenty-month reign. We also can't be sure how much influence Eusebius
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actually had in the expulsion of Athanasius and his allies: it coheres well
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enough with the emperor's anti-sectarian agenda that it might have happened with
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or without Eusebius' involvement.
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Perhaps Athanasius was a brute. Still, the Roman Catholic Church manages to
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venerate both Eusebius and Athanasius as saints. This may seem like a
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contradiction. But perhaps an ability to tolerate contradiction is precisely the
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legacy of 381.
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But we're not there yet. By 335, Eusebius had engineered the exile of
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Eustathius, Marcellus, and Athanasius. After Constantine died, he had to do it
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all over again, but by 339, he had persuaded his successor, Constantius, to
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re-assert his father's exiles of the three men. With the Empire once again
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split, Athanasius and Marcellus headed to Rome to re-group and re-think.
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---
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From Rome, Athanasius and Marcellus were safe for now from Eusebius' clutches,
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but also relatively impotent. In this period of exile in the 340s, in an effort
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to claw back his reputation, Athanasius developed the polemic which still
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defines the standard history of the fourth century. He invented a cunning label
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for Eusebius and his cronies: he called them 'Arians'.
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Eusebius rejected the label as ridiculous. Arius had been reconciled, and more
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to the point, had died in 336. For that matter, why would a bishop follow the
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teaching of a mere priest? Not only that, but the label ignored significant
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differences between Arius' and Eusebius' teaching. His verdict was clear: the
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label 'Arian' is a baseless slur, with no other purpose than to tar his
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reputation as a heretic.
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He was right, of course. But like it or not, Athanasius' theory of an Arian
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conspiracy began to win adherents, not least Julian, the bishop of Rome. Julian
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called a council to exonerate Athanasius and Marcellus. When the Greeks refused
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to turn up, he called a local council anyway and vindicated the two men. In the
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face of Greek obstinacy, Julian wrote east, pleading the bishops to take the
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'Arian' threat seriously.
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In response, the easterners held a council in Antioch in 341, agreeing four
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creeds which powerfully condemned Marcellus' teaching, including the influential
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Dedication Creed. This includes assertions that Father, Son and Spirit are
|
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'three in subsistence, one in agreement', that the Son was generated before time
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began, against Marcellus' teaching that the Father, Son and Spirit are aspects
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of God without division in subsistence, and that there only came to be a divine
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Son at his incarnation. They explicitly condemned Arius, Sabellius and
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Marcellus.
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So the divisions grew deeper. Without an emperor to compel the bishops to come
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together, there may not have been much chance of a rapprochement. But even if
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there were to be such an emperor, who's to say that their settlement would have
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satisfied the bishops?
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---
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Meanwhile, in the 340s and through the 350s, two further theological movements
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gathered steam: the homoians and the heterousians.
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The homoians, perhaps tired of the squabbles between the Athanasian and Eusebian
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factions, determined to sidestep their petty debates altogether.
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A key term of the theological disagreement was 'essence' or 'ousia'. Athanasius,
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in his lifelong battle to make sure Arius stayed dead, insisted that Father, Son
|
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and Spirit shared the same ousia. In contrast, Eusebius, with his anti-Sabellian
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polemic, needed to assert the real distinction between Father, Son and Spirit,
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and so asserted that each had a separate ousia. So the difference can be summed
|
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up as a counting problem. How many divine ousias are there? One or three?
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The homoians claimed that both sides were mistaken, simply because they used the
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word 'ousia'. There is no mention of ousia in Scripture, so, they claimed, we
|
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have no basis for asserting it of God one way or the other. All we can truly say
|
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is that Father, Son and Spirit are distinct but somehow alike. Whereof we cannot
|
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speak, there must we remain silent.
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This might have worked as a way forward, except that the heterousians provoked
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such a strong reaction that 'ousia'-talk was needed to refute them. Aetius, and
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his followed Eunomius, argued that since God is simple, and all generate things
|
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are divided, it follows that God is ingenerate. But the Son is generate:
|
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therefore Father and Son must be altogether unalike. They expressed this by
|
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saying that Father and Son are unlike in ousia. This teaching was swiftly
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branded 'neo-Arian', provoking a strong reaction. To counter the heterousian
|
||||
teaching, their opponents were forced to fight on their terms, and that meant
|
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using 'ousia'-talk.
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Thus enters Basil of Caesarea. He argued that if we abandon 'ousia'-talk, we
|
||||
will have no way of saying that the Father and Son have anything in common at
|
||||
all, which makes a nonsense of the idea that the Son brings humanity knowledge
|
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of his Father. Without like essence, they might as well be two completely
|
||||
different Gods. Therefore we have to say at least that they have like essence --
|
||||
'homoiousia'. But without direct access to perfect knowledge of the invisible
|
||||
God, we're not in a position to judge that they have exactly the same essence,
|
||||
so he stopped short of agreeing with the 'homoousia' of the Nicene Creed which
|
||||
Athanasius so treasured.
|
||||
|
||||
Seeing the opportunity to make common cause against the homoians, Athanasius
|
||||
started to soften. He wrote an extremely charitable commentary on Basil's
|
||||
theology which emphasised their similarities and papered over their differences.
|
||||
Athanasius recognised that both he and Basil wanted to assert the unity of God
|
||||
while still preserving distinctions between Father, Son and Spirit. The two
|
||||
began to campaign against the homoian movement.
|
||||
|
||||
But Basil got there too late. In 359, the emperor Constantine II called a
|
||||
council in Constantinople, and in 360 it issued a homoian creed with full
|
||||
imperial backing. Any campaign against the homoians would have to take place sub
|
||||
rosa.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
In Athanasius' and Basil's long, slow campaign against homoianism, their weapon
|
||||
of choice was surprising: they dusted off the Nicene Creed of 325. Athanasius
|
||||
argued, against the homoians, that 'ousia'-talk, although not directly
|
||||
Scriptural, was essential in order to draw out the consequences of Scripture
|
||||
while ruling out Arian mis-interpretations.
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||||
|
||||
Thus Nicaea, conceived as a one-off meant to clean up the Arian controversy,
|
||||
found a new life as the anti-homoian movement -- or perhaps you could call it
|
||||
the Nicene revival? -- rallied around it.
|
||||
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||||
As the movement progressed, the formerly disagreeing bishops found ways to come
|
||||
together. An essential move was that made in Athanasius' _Antiochene Tome_
|
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of 362. In it, he relented on his long opposition to there being three
|
||||
'hypostases' or 'substances' in the Godhead.
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||||
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||||
'Hypostasis' had for a long time been used interchangeably with 'ousia'.
|
||||
However, Athanasius claimed that perhaps God could have three hypostases, but
|
||||
only one ousia, at the same time. In so doing, he wedged apart a sharp technical
|
||||
distinction between 'hypostasis' and 'ousia' which previously wouldn't have made
|
||||
sense. Logical or not, it enabled the Nicene revival to have its cake and eat
|
||||
it. God is both one in ousia, protecting against Arianism, and three in
|
||||
hypostasis, protecting against Sabellianism.
|
||||
|
||||
So the Nicene revival gained a new superpower: the power to use formerly
|
||||
synonymous terms to assert contradictions without blushing. This power to accept
|
||||
apparent contradiction as part of the unknowable mystery of God is perhaps the
|
||||
most important legacy of the period. Arguably, the church has been at its best
|
||||
when it has put aside the need to know everything, and embraced this spirit of
|
||||
tolerance, humility and faith.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
For much of the 360s and 370s, the homoian emperor Valens had ruled over the
|
||||
eastern part of the Empire, while his big brother, Valentinian, ruled the west.
|
||||
In the late 370s, Valentinian and then Valens died within quick succession of
|
||||
each other. Valentinian's twenty-year-old son, Gratian, was left to clear up the
|
||||
mess. In 379, Gratian delegated rule of the east to Theodosius, who was to
|
||||
implement a decisively different religious policy than his predecessor, Valens.
|
||||
|
||||
In 380, Theodosius issued an edict, saying that only those who agreed to the
|
||||
homoousios clause of the Nicene Creed could be considered 'catholic' Christians.
|
||||
The message was clear: the homoians were out, and the Nicenes were in.
|
||||
|
||||
In 381, he called a council to Constantinople, and it (probably) issued the
|
||||
revision of the 325 creed which is still used in various versions in all the
|
||||
world's largest Christian denominations. There would be no more revisions, and
|
||||
it would become, then as now, compulsory reading for all those preparing to don
|
||||
vestments.
|
||||
|
||||
One question is, why did the 381 creed differ in the ways it did from 325? Many
|
||||
of the differences, including the much-enlarged section on the Son, seem to have
|
||||
little controversial content: nobody was disputing that Jesus was born of the
|
||||
Virgin Mary, for example, though she makes her first appearance in the Creed in
|
||||
the 381 version. Some historians think this suggests that the 381 was based on a
|
||||
similar, but distinct creed from 325. This seems unlikely to me, given that
|
||||
about half the creed is in verbatim agreement with 325.
|
||||
|
||||
However, a couple of edits stand out. There are some clear signs of
|
||||
anti-Marcellianism: 'his \[the Son's] kingdom shall have no end', the Son is
|
||||
begotten of the Father 'before all ages'. Perhaps a clear emphasis on the
|
||||
eternal relationship between the Son and the Father was part of the diplomacy
|
||||
needed to get the Eusebian faction on-side.
|
||||
|
||||
The new details on the Holy Spirit are interesting too. They suggest a delicate
|
||||
compromise. Some bishops were reluctant to suppose that the Father and the
|
||||
Spirit have the same essence. On the other hand, others reckoned that they must
|
||||
share the same essence, given that they are equally deserving of worship. Thus
|
||||
the creed does not have a 'homoousios' clause for the Spirit, but does assert
|
||||
that the Spirit 'together with the Father and with the Son is worshipped and
|
||||
glorified'. With a spoonful of humility, both sides can be satisfied with that.
|
||||
|
||||
The revised Nicene Creed was the focus point, the distillation of a growing
|
||||
theological movement, formed by the various anti-homoian bishops finding a way
|
||||
to keep true to their own convictions while respecting each other's red lines.
|
||||
|
||||
As a result of the context of 325, Athanasius' relentless anti-Arian polemic
|
||||
which kept that movement alive, and the 'neo-Arian' heterousian movement, the
|
||||
new Nicene tradition insisted on the full co-equal divinity of Father, Son and
|
||||
Holy Spirit. This doctrine ensures Nicenes can affirm that Christ mediates true
|
||||
knowledge of the transcendent Godhead to humanity: the one who was born of Mary,
|
||||
suffered and died on the cross, was raised from the dead and ascended into
|
||||
heaven was true God from true God, of the same essence as his Father.
|
||||
|
||||
To satisfy the Eusebian strain, which defined itself by opposition to Marcellus,
|
||||
the Nicene tradition included a commitment to a robust distinction between
|
||||
Father, Son and Spirit, and to the eternity of the Son: begotten of the Father
|
||||
before all ages, his kingdom shall have no end. As a result, Nicenes inherited a
|
||||
way of thinking about God's action in the world, as instrinsically co-operative
|
||||
without being divided.
|
||||
|
||||
The biggest change between 325 and 381 was not the text, but what the text is
|
||||
used for. In 325, the Creed functioned to condemn Arius in order to heal the
|
||||
divisions his teachings had caused. In its second life, the Creed found an
|
||||
altogether new purpose: to serve as a common statement of orthodox faith. It
|
||||
started life as a way to define who was out. It ended up defining who was in.
|
||||
|
||||
Where was Athanasius? Consider that when Athanasius was appointed bishop in 328,
|
||||
he was relatively young for a bishop at thirty-five. That means that in 381, he
|
||||
would have been the ripe old age of eighty-eight. In fact, he didn't make it
|
||||
that far: he died in peace in the countryside outside his native Alexandria
|
||||
in 373. If he had seen the outcome of 381, he might have regarded his life
|
||||
project complete. Perhaps he knew that with the new generation of bishops, the
|
||||
tide was turning for good, and died in peace. Perhaps not. Either way, his
|
||||
compromises, and his beloved homoousios, have left a permanent mark on the
|
||||
church.
|
||||
|
||||
This is the legacy of 381. It is two-faced: any common statement of faith can be
|
||||
used to exclude. Indeed, in the late fourth century, both non-Nicene Christians
|
||||
and pagans found themselves the victims of increasing state-backed sectarian
|
||||
violence.
|
||||
|
||||
However, 381 also bears witness to the power of humility and faith. Once we stop
|
||||
grasping at perfect knowledge we cannot attain, we can begin to appreciate the
|
||||
mystery of God. This is one legacy I hope we can carry forward into our century.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
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