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Chapter XL.—Acacius, Bishop of Cæsarea, dictates a new Form of Creed in the Synod at Seleucia.
Acacius and his adherents criticised what was done: because, that is to say, they closed the church doors and thus affixed their signatures; declaring that ‘all such secret transactions were justly to be suspected, and had no validity whatever.’ These objections he made because he was anxious to bring forward another exposition of the faith drawn up by himself, which he had already submitted to the governors Leonas and Lauricius, and was now intent on getting it alone confirmed and established, instead of that which had been subscribed. The second day was thus occupied with nothing else but exertions on his part to effect this object. On the third day Leonas endeavored to produce an amicable meeting of both parties; Macedonius of Constantinople, and also Basil of Ancyra, having arrived during its course. But when the Acacians found that both the parties had come to the same position, they refused to meet; saying 69that not only those who had before been deposed, but also such as were at present under any accusation, ought to be excluded from the assembly.’ And as after much cavilling on both sides, this opinion prevailed; those who lay under any charge went out of the council, and the party of Acacius entered in their places. Leonas then said that a document had been put into his hand by Acacius, to which he desired to call their attention: but he did not state that it was the drought of a creed, which in some particulars covertly, and in others unequivocally contradicted the former. When those present became silent, thinking that the document contained something else besides an exposition of a creed, the following creed composed by Acacius, together with its preamble, was read.
’We having yesterday assembled by the
emperor’s command at Seleucia, a city of Isauria, on the 27th day
of September, exerted ourselves to the utmost, with all moderation, to
preserve the peace of the church, and to determine doctrinal questions
on prophetic and evangelical authority, so as to sanction nothing in
the ecclesiastic confession of faith at variance with the sacred
Scriptures, as our Emperor Constantius most beloved of God has ordered.
But inasmuch as certain individuals in the Synod have acted injuriously
toward several of us, preventing some from expressing their sentiments,
and excluding others from the council against their wills; and at the
same time have introduced such as have been deposed, and persons who
were ordained contrary to the ecclesiastical canon, so that the Synod
has presented a scene of tumult and disorder, of which the most
illustrious Leonas, the Comes, and the most eminent Lauricius, governor
of the province, have been eye-witnesses, we are therefore under the
necessity of making this declaration. That we do not repudiate the
faith which was ratified at the consecration of the church at
Antioch;423423
Athanas. (de Synodd. 29) gives the following
portion of this creed apparently as the only declaration made by the
council.
for we give it our decided preference, because it received the
concurrence of our fathers who were assembled there to consider some
controverted points. Since, however, the terms homoousion and
homoiousion have in time past troubled the minds of many, and
still continue to disquiet them; and moreover that a new term has
recently been coined by some who assert the anomoion of the Son
to the Father: we reject the first two, as expressions which are not
found in the Scriptures; but we utterly anathematize the last, and
regard such as countenance its use, as alienated from the church. We
distinctly acknowledge the homoion of the Son to the Father, in
accordance with what the apostle has declared concerning him,424424
Col. i.
15.
“Who is the image of the invisible God.”
‘We confess then, and believe in one God the Father Almighty, the Maker of heaven and earth, and of things visible and invisible. We believe also in his Son our Lord Jesus Christ, who was begotten of him without passion before all ages, God the Word, the only-begotten of God, the Light, the Life, the Truth, the Wisdom: through whom all things were made which are in the heavens and upon the earth, whether visible or invisible. We believe that he took flesh of the holy Virgin Mary, at the end of the ages, in order to abolish sin; that he was made man, suffered for our sin, and rose again, and was taken up into the heavens, to sit at the right hand of the Father, whence he will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead. We believe also in the Holy Spirit, whom our Lord and Saviour has denominated the Comforter, and whom he sent to his disciples after his departure, according to his promise: by whom also he sanctifies all believers in the church, who are baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Those who preach anything contrary to this creed, we regard as aliens from the catholic church.’
This was the declaration of faith proposed by Acacius,
and subscribed by himself and as many as adhered to his opinion, the
number of whom we have already given. When this had been read,
Sophronius bishop of Pompeiopolis in Paphlagonia, thus expressed
himself: ‘If to express a separate opinion day after day, be
received as the exposition of the faith, we shall never arrive at any
accurate understanding of the truth.’ These were the words of
Sophronius. And I firmly believe, that if the predecessors of these
prelates, as well as their successors, had entertained similar
sentiments in reference to the Nicene creed, all polemical debates
would have been avoided; nor would the churches have been agitated by
such violent and irrational disturbances. However let those judge who
are capable of understanding how these things are. At that time after
many remarks on all sides had been made both in reference to this
doctrinal statement, and in relation to the parties accused, the
assembly was dissolved. On the fourth day they all again met in the
same place, and resumed their proceedings in the same contentious
spirit as before. On this occasion Acacius expressed himself in these
words: ‘Since the Nicene creed has been altered not once only,
but frequently, there is no hindrance to our publishing another at this
time.’ To which Eleusius bishop of Cyzicus, 70replied: ‘The Synod is at present
convened not to learn what it had no previous knowledge of, nor to
receive a creed which it had not assented to before, but to confirm the
faith of the fathers, from which it should never recede, either in life
or death.’ Thus Eleusius opposing Acacius spoke meaning by
‘the faith of the fathers,’ that creed which had been
promulgated at Antioch. But surely he too might have been fairly
answered in this way: ‘How is it O Eleusius, that you call those
convened at Antioch “the fathers,” seeing that you do not
recognize those who were their fathers? The framers of the Nicene
creed, by whom the homoousian faith was acknowledged, have a far
higher claim to the title of “the fathers”; both as having
the priority in point of time, and also because those assembled at
Antioch were by them invested with the sacerdotal office. Now if those
at Antioch have disowned their own fathers, those who follow them are
unconsciously following parricides. Besides how can they have received
a legitimate ordination from those whose faith they pronounce unsound
and impious? If those, however, who constituted the Nicene Synod had
not the Holy Spirit which is imparted by the imposition of hands,425425
See Chrysostom, Homilies 9 and 27, on
Acts, and Hom. 1, on 2 Tim., for the belief of the
ancient Church in the descent of the Holy Spirit on the ordained in and
through ordination.
those at Antioch have not duly received the priesthood: for how could
they have received it from those who had not the power of conferring
it?’ Such considerations as these might have been submitted to
Eleusius in reply to his objections. But they then proceeded to another
question, connected with the assertion made by Acacius in his
exposition of the faith, ‘that the Son was like the
Father’; enquiring of one another in what this resemblance
consisted. The Acacian party affirmed that the Son was like the Father
as it respected his will only, and not his ‘substance’ or
‘essence’; but the rest maintained that the likeness
extended to both essence and will. In altercations on this point, the
whole day was consumed; and Acacius, being confuted by his own
published works, in which he had asserted that ‘the Son is in all
things like the Father,’ his opponents asked him ‘how do
you now deny the likeness of the Son to the Father as to his
“essence”?’ Acacius in reply said, that ‘no
author, ancient or modern, was ever condemned out of his own
writings.’ As they kept on their discussion on this matter to a
most tedious extent, with much acrimonious feeling and subtlety of
argument, but without any approach to unity of judgment, Leonas arose
and dissolved the council: and this was the conclusion of the Synod at
Seleucia. For on the following day [Leonas] being urged to do so would
not again meet with them. ‘I have been deputed by the
emperor,’ said he, ‘to attend a council where unanimity was
expected to prevail: but since you can by no means come to a mutual
understanding, I can no longer be present: go therefore to the church,
if you please, and indulge in vain babbling there.’ The Acacian
faction conceiving this decision to be advantageous to themselves, also
refused to meet with the others. The adverse party left alone met in
the church and requested the attendance of those who followed Acacius,
that cognizance might be taken of the case of Cyril, bishop of
Jerusalem: for that prelate had been accused long before, on what
grounds however I am unable to state. He had even been deposed, because
owing to fear, he had not made his appearance during two whole years,
after having been repeatedly summoned in order that the charges against
him might be investigated. Nevertheless, when he was deposed, he sent a
written notification to those who had condemned him, that he should
appeal to a higher jurisdiction: and to this appeal the emperor
Constantius gave his sanction. Cyril was thus the first and indeed only
clergyman who ventured to break through ecclesiastical usage, by
becoming an appellant, in the way commonly done in the secular courts
of judicature:426426
He was the only one, inasmuch as the General Synod
of Constantinople (381 a.d.) expressly forbade
all appeals from the ecclesiastical to the civil courts, attaching
severe penalties to the violation of its canon on this subject. Cf.
Canon 6 of Council of Constantinople. Hefele, Hist. of the Ch.
Councils, Vol. II. p. 364.
and he was now present at Seleucia, ready to be put upon his trial; on
this account the other bishops invited the Acacian party to take their
places in the assembly, that in a general council a definite judgment
might be pronounced on the case of those who were arraigned: for they
cited others also charged with various misdemeanors to appear before
them at the same time, who to protect themselves had sought refuge
among the partisans of Acacius. When therefore that faction persisted
in their refusal to meet, after being repeatedly summoned, the bishops
deposed Acacius himself, together with George of Alexandria, Uranius of
Tyre, Theodulus of Chæretapi in Phrygia, Theodosius of
Philadelphia in Lydia, Evagrius of the island of Mytilene, Leontius of
Tripolis in Lydia, and Eudoxius who had formerly been bishop of
Germanica, but had afterwards insinuated himself into the bishopric of
Antioch in Syria. They also deposed Patrophilus for contumacy, in not
having presented himself to answer a charge preferred against him by a
presbyter named Dorotheus. These they deposed: they also excommunicated
Asterius, Eusebius, Abgarus, Basilicus, Phœbus, Fidelis,
Eutychius, Magnus, and Eustathius; determining that they should 71not be restored to communion, until they
made such a defense as would clear them from the imputations under
which they lay. This being done, they addressed explanatory letters to
each of the churches whose bishops had been deposed. Anianus was then
constituted bishop of Antioch instead of Eudoxius: but the Acacians
having soon after apprehended him, he was delivered into the hands of
Leonas and Lauricius, by whom he was sent into exile. The bishops who
had ordained him being incensed on this account, lodged protests
against the Acacian party with Leonas and Lauricius, in which they
openly charged them with having violated the decisions of the Synod.
Finding that no redress could be obtained by this means, they went to
Constantinople to lay the whole matter before the emperor.
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