Commemorated on May 22
The Second Ecumenical Council was convened in the year 381 and
consolidated the victory of Orthodoxy attained in the year 325 at the
First Ecumenical Council.
During the difficult years which passed
after the acceptance of the Nicene Symbol of Faith (Creed), the Arian
heresy developed new offshoots. Under the guise of struggle against the
Sabellian heresy, which taught about a blending of the Hypostatic
Persons of the Father and the Son [as mere aspects or modalities within
the Trinity], Macedonius began to employ the word “homoiousios” “of
similar essence” [in contrast to the Orthodox teaching of “homoousios”,
“of the same essence”] regarding the essence of the Son and that of the
Father.
This formula still presented a danger because Macedonius
presented himself as a struggler against the Arians, who used the term
“like the Father.” Besides this, the Macedonians, being semi-Arians,
depending on conditions and advantages of the moment, sometimes inclined
towards Orthodoxy, sometimes towards Arianism. They blasphemed the Holy
Spirit by suggesting that He was not “of the same essence” with the
Father and the Son.
A second heretic, Aetius, introduced the
concept “anomoion” (“different in essence.” He said that the Father has a
completely different essence from that of the Son. His disciple
Eunomios taught a hierarchical subordination of the Son to the Father,
and of the Holy Spirit to the Son. Everyone who came to him was
rebaptized into the “death of Christ,” denying Baptism in the Name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, which is commanded us
by the Savior Himself (Mt. 28:19).
A third heresy arose from the
teachings of Valentius and Ursacius at the Arimonian Council. They
attempted to deceive the Orthodox bishops, proclaiming that the Son of
God is from God, and is in the likeness of God the Father, and is not a
created being as the Arians taught. The heretics did not wish to use the
term “one in essence” in describing the relation of the Son to the
Father, saying that the word “essence” is not found within the Holy
Scripture. Besides these three main heresies, there were also many other
false teachings. The heretic Apollinarios said, “The flesh of the
Savior did not have a human soul or reason. The Word of God took the
place of the absent soul; and Divinity remained dead for three days.”
For
dealing with these crafters of heresy, the holy Emperor Theodosius the
Great (379-395) convened an Ecumenical Council at Constantinople, at
which 150 bishops were present. Upon investigation by the holy Fathers
it was proposed to affirm a Confession of Faith from a Roman Council,
which holy Pope Damasus had sent to Bishop Paulinos of Antioch. After
reading the document aloud, the holy Fathers rejected the false teaching
of Macedonius, and unanimously affirmed the Apostolic teaching that the
Holy Spirit is not a subordinate being, but is rather the Life-Creating
Lord, Who proceeds from the Father, and is worshipped and glorified
with the Father and the Son. In order to combat other heresies, of the
Eunomians, Arians and Semi-Arians, the holy Fathers affirmed the Nicene
Symbol of the Orthodox Faith.
In the Symbol (Creed), accepted by
the First Ecumenical Council, the divine nature of the Holy Spirit was
not addressed, since at that earlier time [in 325] heresies against the
Holy Spirit had not become widespread. Therefore, the holy Fathers of
the Second Ecumenical Council added to the Nicean Symbol its eighth,
ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth sections. They definitively
formulated and affirmed the Nicene-Constantinople Symbol of Faith, which
is used even now by all the Orthodox Churches.
The Second
Ecumenical Council also established the norms for ecclesiastical courts
[Canon VI], and it decided to receive those repentant heretics who were
properly baptized in the name of the Holy Trinity through Chrismation,
but those baptized with a single immersion were to be received as
pagans.
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