The
Anathemas
of the Second Council
of Constantinople (553 AD)
The Second Council of Constantinople
was called to resolve certain questions that were raised by the , the most
important of which had to do with the unity of the two natures, God and
man, is Jesus Christ. The Second Council of Constantinople confirmed the
Definition of Chalcedon, while emphasizing that Jesus Christ does not just
embody God the Son, He is God the Son.
I.
If anyone does not confess that the
Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are one nature or essence, one power
or authority, worshipped as a trinity of the same essence, one deity in
three hypostases or persons, let him be anathema. For there is one God and
Father, of whom are all things, and one Lord Jesus Christ, through whom are
all things, and one Holy Spirit, in whom are all things.
II.
If anyone does not confess that God the
Word was twice begotten, the first before all time from the Father,
non-temporal and bodiless, the other in the last days when he came down
from the heavens and was incarnate by the holy, glorious, God-bearer,
ever-virgin Mary [Note: The claim that Mary is "ever-virgin" is Roman
Catholic folklore. (Jonathan Barlow)], and born of her, let him be
anathema.
III.
If anyone says that God the Word who
performed miracles is one and Christ who suffered is another, or says that
God the Word was together with Christ who came from woman, or that the Word
was in him as one person is in another, but is not one and the same, our
Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, incarnate and become human, and that
the wonders and the suffering which he voluntarily endured in flesh were
not of the same person, let him be anathema.
IV.
If anyone says that the union of the
Word of God with man was only according to grace or function or dignity or
equality of honor or authority or relation or effect or power or according
to his good pleasure, as though God the Word was pleased with man, or
approved of him, as the raving Theodosius says; or that the union exists
according to similarity of name, by which the Nestorians call God the Word
Jesus and Christ, designating the man separately as Christ and as Son,
speaking thus clearly of two persons, but when it comes to his honor,
dignity, and worship, pretend to say that there is one person, one Son and
one Christ, by a single designation; and if he does not acknowledge, as the
holy Fathers have taught, that the union of God is made with the flesh
animated by a reasonable and intelligent soul, and that such union is
according to synthesis or hypostasis, and that therefore there is only one
person, the Lord Jesus Christ one of the holy Trinity -- let him be
anathema. As the word "union" has many meanings, the followers of the
impiety of Apollinaris and Eutyches, assuming the disappearance of the
natures, affirm a union by confusion. On the other hand the followers of
Theodore and of Nestorius rejoicing in the division of the natures,
introduce only a union of relation. But the holy Church of God, rejecting
equally the impiety of both heresies, recognizes the union of God the Word
with the flesh according to synthesis, that is according to hypostasis. For
in the mystery of Christ the union according to synthesis preserves the two
natures which have combined without confusion and without separation.
V.
If anyone understands the expression --
one hypostasis of our Lord Jesus Christ -- so that it means the union of
many hypostases, and if he attempts thus to introduce into the mystery of
Christ two hypostases, or two persons, and, after having introduced two
persons, speaks of one person according to dignity, honor or worship, as
Theodore and Nestorius insanely have written; and if anyone slanders the
holy synod of Chalcedon, as though it had used this expression in this
impious sense, and does not confess that the Word of God is united with the
flesh hypostatically, and that therefore there is but one hypostasis or one
person, and that the holy synod of Chalcedon has professed in this sense
the one hypostasis of our Lord Jesus Christ; let him be anathema. For the
Holy Trinity, when God the Word was incarnate, was not increased by the
addition of a person or hypostasis.
VI.
If anyone says that the holy, glorious,
and ever-virgin Mary [Note: The claim that Mary is "ever-virgin" is Roman
Catholic folklore. (Jonathan Barlow)] is called God-bearer by misuse of
language and not truly, or by analogy, believing that only a mere man was
born of her and that God the Word was not incarnate of her, but that the
incarnation of God the Word resulted only from the fact that he united
himself to that man who was born of her; if anyone slanders the Holy Synod
of Chalcedon as though it had asserted the Virgin to be God-bearer
according to the impious sense of Theodore; or if anyone shall call her
manbearer or Christbearer, as if Christ were not God, and shall not confess
that she is truly God-bearer, because God the Word who before all time was
begotten of the Father was in these last days incarnate of her, and if
anyone shall not confess that in this pious sense the holy Synod of
Chalcedon confessed her to be God-bearer: let him be anathema.
VII.
If anyone using the expression, "in two
natures," does not confess that our one Lord Jesus Christ is made known in
the deity and in the manhood, in order to indicate by that expression a
difference of the natures of which the ineffable union took place without
confusion, a union in which neither the nature of the Word has changed into
that of the flesh, nor that of the flesh into that of the Word (for each
remained what it was by nature, even when the union by hypostasis had taken
place); but shall take the expression with regard to the mystery of Christ
in a sense so as to divide the parties, let him be anathema. Or if anyone
recognizing the number of natures in the same our one Lord Jesus Christ,
God the Word incarnate, does not take in contemplation only the difference
of the natures which compose him, which difference is not destroyed by the
union between them -- for one is composed of the two and the two are in one
-- but shall make use of the number two to divide the natures or to make of
them persons properly so called, let him be anathema.
VIII.
If anyone confesses that the union took
place out of two natures or speaks of the one incarnate nature of God the
Word and does not understand those expressions as the holy Fathers have
taught, that out of the divine and human natures, when union by hypostasis
took place, one Christ was formed; but from these expressions tries to
introduce one nature or essence of the Godhead and manhood of Christ; let
him be anathema. 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. Therefore there is one Christ, God and
man, of the same essence with the Father as touching his Godhead, and of
the same essence with us as touching his manhood. Therefore the Church of
God equally rejects and anathematizes those who divide or cut apart or who
introduce confusion into the mystery of the divine dispensation of Christ.
IX.
If anyone says that Christ ought to be
worshipped in his two natures, in the sense that he introduces two
adorations, the one peculiar to God the Word and the other peculiar to the
man; or if anyone by destroying the flesh, or by confusing the Godhead and
the humanity, or by contriving one nature or essence of those which were
united and so worships Christ, and does not with one adoration worship God
the Word incarnate with his own flesh, as the Church of God has received
from the beginning; let him be anathema.
X.
If anyone does not confess that our
Lord Jesus Christ who was crucified in the flesh is true God and the Lord
of Glory and one of the Holy Trinity; let him be anathema.
XI.
If anyone does not anathematize Arius,
Eunomius, Macedonius, Apollinaris, Nestorius, Eutyches and Origen, together
with their impious, godless writings, and all the other heretics already
condemned and anathematized by the holy catholic and apostolic Church, and
by the aforementioned four Holy Synods and all those who have held and hold
or who in their godlessness persist in holding to the end the same opinion
as those heretics just mentioned; let him be anathema.
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