2 Great points of Christian dispute: Filioque & Papal Supremacy
Nicene Creed
-the most widely used Christian liturgy (Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Angelican, major Protestant Churches)
First Council of Nicaea /FILIOQUE
-325, modern day Turkey
-established the first uniform Christian doctrine
-the first ecumenical council, about 300 bishops in attendance
-called by Constantine (the emperor who tolerated and later converted to Christianity) who wanted a unified church; an important instance of the church being given authority by the state
-the controversy of Filioque: is the Son of the Father divine?
-Arius and his follower (Arians) claimed that the Son was created by the Father, and therefore not equal in nature
-the consensus of the council was that the Trinity is united: the Father and Son are of the same substance & co-eternal
-Arius exiled
-the council was far from definitive however, as Arius’s views were not suppressed (the two emperors who followed Constantine were Arians)
-around 360 issues arose when people realized that the nature of the Holy Spirit was still a mystery
Theodosius/ First Council of Constantinople (381)
-last emperor to rule both the eastern and western empires (Byzantine & Roman empires), died 395
-named Catholicism the state religion
-called the Council to repair the schism between the East and West
-Differences between East and West : linguistic and cultural (Latin in West, Greek in east=translation nightmares)
-the East by now had gained greater influence, 3 presiding bishops were Eastern; the bishop of Constantinople was second only to the bishop of Rome
-Con. was firmly Arian; men had to decide the nature of the Holy Spirit; the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are equal, though the HS ‘proceeded’ from the Father, while the Son was ‘begotten’ of him
-there were a number of ‘heretical’ sects of Christianity, though most of them were relatively insignificant and died off due to lack of followers or oppression
Papal Supremacy
-what does it mean to be the Bishop of Rome? Is he the ultimate authority or merely the ‘first among equals’?
-the West naturally wanted to give greater authority to Rome than the East, this became a major source of conflict
-eventually the West demanded to be recognized as supreme, the East refused, and the Great Schism followed
The Great Schism
-differences of Doctrine, Theology, Geography, Politics, Language, Culture
-the other language is outlawed
-in 1054 both Bishops try to excommunicate each other, the Church split
-early 16th century Luther and the 95 Thesis mark the beginning of Western Protestantism