Greg Uttinger
September 23, 2002
The Second Council
of Constantinople
The Council of Chalcedon did not rid the church of Christological error. Neither
Antioch nor Alexandria was satisfied with the decision of the Council. The theologians
at Antioch pressed the distinction of Christ's natures and tended to favor Nestorianism.
Those at Alexandria insisted on the unity of His Person and favored Monophysite
thinking. Rome, not given to the subtleties of Greek thought, stayed clear of
much of the debate and usually came down on the side of orthodoxy. The patriarchs
of Constantinople were sometimes orthodox, often Monophysite; the same was true
of the emperors.
With Nestorius openly
condemned, theologians
favorable to his position
took refuge in the writings
of three men who had
shared his perspective.
These were Theodore
of Mopsuestia, who had
been Nestorius's teacher,
and Theodoret and Ibas,
two of his friends.
Each had passed under
the scrutiny of Chalcedon
but ultimately escaped
its condemnation. Now
their spiritual heirs
tried to make out that
the Council had actually
approved their works.
The Monophysites struck
at this neo-Nestorian
position through the
emperor. They moved
Justinian, who himself
was orthodox and devout,
to condemn Theodore
and certain writings
of Theodoret and Ibas.
The Monophysites hoped
to appear the champions
of orthodoxy and ultimately
to find a way of reconciling
the language of Chalcedon
with their own position.
But Justinian's decree
stirred up more controversy
than it settled. Finally,
in hopes of restoring
unity to the church
and the empire, he convened
a fifth ecumenical council
at Constantinople in
553.
In a series of fourteen
anathemas, the Second
Council of Constantinople
rejected the new Nestorianism,
approved the expression "hypostatic
union" (VIII),
and confessed that "our
Lord Jesus Christ who
was crucified in the
flesh is true God" (X).
It even sanctioned the
Alexandrian phrase "one
incarnate nature of
God the Word" (VIII),
but it did so in a context
that rejected any confusion
of the human and divine
in Christ:
For in saying that
the only-begotten
Word was united by
hypostasis [personally]
we do not mean that
there was a mutual
confusion of natures,
but rather we understand
that the Word was
united to the flesh,
each [nature] remaining
what it was.1
The Council clarified
the intent of Chalcedon
and, in terms of those
clarifications, anathematized
the writings of men
long dead and, in the
case of Theodore, the
man himself. While many
then and since would
have had the Council
leave the dead to God,
the bishops at Constantinople
recognized no neutral
harbors for the enemies
of the Faith, not even
death. The gospel was
at stake, and the Council
chose loyalty to Christ
over civility to the
deceased.
The Monothelite
Heresy
The Second Council of Constantinople shut the door on full-fledged Monophysitism,
but the demand for a fusion of the human and the divine reared its head again
in Monotheletism. The Greek word thelema refers to the will or volition,
though it was also used "
in a broader sense, as including the instincts,
appetites, desires, and affections, with their corresponding aversions."2 The
Monothelites argued that Christ had only one will (mono thelema).
The logic of the Monothelite
position was simple.
To exist as one Person,
Christ must have exactly
one will. Two wills
in Christ would demand
two persons and lead
back to the Nestorian
heresy. Christ's human
will, then, must either
have been absorbed into
His divine will or His
two wills must have
been fused together
to form some sort of
commixture.
The Christ of Scripture
But the Christ of Scripture is not the Christ of Monothelite logic, as the
orthodox knew. For Scripture contrasts the human will of our Lord with the
will of the Father: Jesus said, "For I came down from heaven, not to
do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me" (John 6:39).
During His years at Nazareth, He was "subject" to Mary and Joseph,
two sinful and fallible human beings (Luke 2:51).
But the clearest revelation
of Christ's human will
took place in Gethsemane.
There, in His humanity,
Christ had to come to
terms with the cross
and all that it meant.
Notice how our Lord's
words change through
the three passages below.
And he went
a little further, and
fell on his face, and
prayed, saying, O my
Father, if it be possible,
let this cup pass from
me: nevertheless not
as I will, but as thou
wilt. (Matt. 26:39)
He went away again the second time, and prayed, saying,
O my Father, if this cup may not pass away from me, except
I drink it, thy will be done. (Matt. 26:42)
Then said Jesus unto Peter, Put up thy sword into the sheath:
the cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink
it? (John 18:11)
The writer of Hebrews
tells us that, "Though
he were a Son, yet learned
he obedience by the
things which he suffered" (Heb.
5:8). Jesus never
turned aside from His
Father's will, but in
Gethsemane He yielded
up His own human will.
He actively embraced
obedience to His Father
at great cost to Himself.
In this, He set the
pattern for our own
sanctification.
The Third Council
of Constantinople
The Monothelite controversy raged from 633 to 680. The emperors Heraclius and
Constans II worked for reconciliation and peace, but in terms of compromise
and enforced silence. Constans' zeal for peace led him even to depose, imprison,
and exile Pope Martin I, who had led the battle against Montheletism in the
West. But Constans was murdered in a bath in Syracuse, and the Arab conquests
of Syria and Egypt left Rome more politically significant than Antioch and
Alexandria. So in 680 Constantine IV, in concert with Pope Agatho, summoned
the sixth ecumenical council, the Third Council of Constantinople. The emperor
presided in person, but Agatho exercised decisive influence through a letter
addressed to Constantine.
Pope Agatho wrote:
But when we make
a confession concerning
one of the same three
Persons of that Holy
Trinity, of the Son
of God, or God the
Word, and of the mystery
of his adorable dispensation
according to the flesh,
we assert that all
things are double
in the one and the
same our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ
according to the Evangelical
tradition, that is
to say, we confess
his two natures, to
wit the divine and
the human, of which
and in which he, even
after the wonderful
and inseparable union,
subsists. And we confess
that each of his natures
has its own natural
propriety, and that
the divine has all
things that are divine,
without any sin. And
we recognize that
each one (of the two
natures) of the one
and the same incarnated,
that is, humanated
(humanati)
Word of God is in
him unconfusedly,
inseparably and unchangeably,
intelligence alone
discerning a unity,
to avoid the error
of confusion. For
we equally detest
the blasphemy of division
and of commixture.
For when we confess
two natures and two
natural wills, and
two natural operations
in our one Lord Jesus
Christ, we do not
assert that they are
contrary or opposed
one to the other (as
those who err from
the path of truth
and accuse the apostolic
tradition of doing.
Far be this impiety
from the hearts of
the faithful!), nor
as though separated
(per se separated)
in two persons or
subsistences, but
we say that as the
same our Lord Jesus
Christ has two natures
so also he has two
natural wills and
operations, to wit,
the divine and the
human: the divine
will and operation
he has in common with
the coessential Father
from all eternity:
the human, he has
received from us,
taken with our nature
in time. This is the
apostolic and evangelic
tradition, which the
spiritual mother of
your most felicitous
empire, the Apostolic
Church of Christ,
holds.3
In language reflecting
Agatho's letter, the
Council pronounced belief
in two wills to be orthodoxy.
The Definition of the
Council read in part:
We likewise
declare that in him
are two natural wills
and two natural operations
indivisibly, inconvertibly,
inseparably, inconfusedly,
according to the teaching
of the holy Fathers.
And these two natural
wills are not contrary
the one to the other
(God forbid!) as the
impious heretics assert,
but his human will
follows and that not
as resisting and reluctant,
but rather as subject
to his divine and
omnipotent will. For
it was right that
the flesh should be
moved but subject
to the divine will,
according to the most
wise Athanasius. For
as his flesh is called
and is the flesh of
God the Word, so also
the natural will of
his flesh is called
and is the proper
will of God the Word,
as he himself says: "I
came down from heaven
not that I might do
mine own will but
the will of the Father
which sent me!" where
he calls his own will
the will of his flesh,
inasmuch as his flesh
was also his own .
. ..
Preserving therefore
the inconfusedness
and indivisibility,
we make briefly this
whole confession,
believing our Lord
Jesus Christ to be
one of the Trinity
and after the incarnation
our true God, we say
that his two natures
shone forth in his
one subsistence in
which he both performed
the miracles and endured
the sufferings through
the whole of his economic
conversation, and
that not in appearance
only but in very deed,
and this by reason
of the difference
of nature which must
be recognized in the
same Person, for although
joined together yet
each nature wills
and does the things
proper to it and that
indivisibly and inconfusedly.
Wherefore we confess
two wills and two
operations, concurring
most fitly in him
for the salvation
of the human race.4
The Issue at Stake
It would be easy to minimize the work of the sixth ecumenical council. The
issues seem esoteric and the psychology involved, speculative. Certainly
few Christians today have heard of the Council or its work. Does any of this
really matter?
What Constantinople
dealt with was the mixing
of the human and divine
in the will of Jesus
Christ, our Head and
Example. If in Christ
the will of man became
commingled or lost in
the will of God, would
not this mean that the
believer's union with
Christ is deification?
Would not this fusion
of wills set the pattern
of sanctification for
all Christians? Neander
writes:
At least, many among
the Monothelites supposed
the final result of
the perfect development
of the divine life
in believers would
be in them, as in
the case of Christ,
a total absorption
of the human will
in God's will; so
that in all, there
would be a subjective,
as well as objective
identity of will, which,
consistently carried
out, would lead to
the pantheistic notion
of an entire absorption
of all individuality
of existence in the
one original spirit.5
There are two ways
to understand the words "I
want God's will to be
mine." The first
would be something like, "I
want to obey God. I
want to conform my choices
to the precepts of His
law." The second
would be, "I want
a fusion of my own will
with God's so that my
choices are divine.
I will no longer act
or will, but God will
act and will through
me and for me." The
first is the attitude
of faith; the second,
of Satanic pride. Nonetheless,
during the past two
centuries, the second
has often passed for
the high road to sanctification.
I abandon my will, my
self, so that Christ
can live His life through
me. I "let go,
and let God." The
words "not I, but
Christ in me" are
torn out of context
and made a banner for
the most presumptuous
and yet irresponsible
kind of mysticism. For
once my will has been
replaced by God's, I
am responsible for nothing
and yet every act I
perform is divine.
The Third Council of
Constantinople raised
a roadblock against
such nonsense. If even
in the incarnate Son
of God the human will
and divine will remain
distinct, we must confess
that our own wills will
never be anything but
human. Sanctification
is not deification,
but growth in grace.
We are shut up to the
pattern of Gethsemane:
death to self-will and
active obedience to
the commandments of
God.
Conclusion
Finally, we should remember the time frame of the Monothelite controversy the
mid-600s. During this half-century, the armies of Islam swept out of Arabia
and stormed through Syria, Palestine, and Egypt. There was theological cause
and effect at work here, of course: mystics fare poorly against men with swords.
But we must not understand this in terms of a deistic framework: the Lord actively
judges in the affairs of men and in particular in the affairs of His church
(Heb. 10:30). God prunes His olive tree and discards the unbelieving
branches (Rom. 11:16-22). As the 600s drew to a close, God pruned His
church most severely, and many who confessed a false "Christ" were
swept away by a monotheism that recognized no Christ at all. With Islam again
at our gates, we of the 21st Century need to take history's lessons seriously.
Notes
1. John Leith, Creeds
of the Church (Atlanta:
John Knox Press, 1973),
49. The bracketed
expressions appear
in Leith.
2. Louis Berkhof, The History of Christian Doctrines (Grand
Rapids: Baker Book House,
1975 reprint), 110.
3. Henry R. Percival, The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church (Grand
Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1979 reprint), 330f.
4. Ibid., 345f.
5. Augustus Neander, General History of the Christian Religion and Church,
vol. III (Boston: Crocker and Brewster, 1855), 183 cited in Rousas
J. Rushdoony, Foundations
of Social Order (N. p.: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing
Company, 1972), 146.
Greg Uttinger teaches theology, history, and literature at Cornerstone Christian
School in Roseville, California. He lives nearby in Sacramento County with his
wife, Kate, and their three children. He may be contacted at paul_ryland@hotmail.com.
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