Troparion in Tone 8
Most glorious are You, O Christ our God!
You have established the Holy Fathers as lights on the earth!
Through them you have guided us to the true faith!
O greatly Compassionate One, glory to You!
Kontakion in Tone 8
The Apostles' preaching and the Fathers' doctrines have
established one faith for the Church.
Adorned with the robe of truth, woven from heavenly theology,
It defines and glorifies the great mystery of Orthodoxy!
The Commemoration of the Holy Fathers of
the First Six Ecumenical Councils.
In the Ninth Article of the
Nicea-Constantinople Symbol of Faith proclaimed by the holy Fathers of
the First and Second Ecumenical Councils, we confess our faith in
"One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church." By virtue of the
catholic nature of the Church, an Ecumenical Council is the Church's
supreme authority, and possesses the competence to resolve major
questions of church life. An Ecumenical Council is comprised of
archpastors and pastors of the Church, and representatives of all the
local Churches, from every land of the "oikumene" (i.e. from all the
whole inhabited world).
The Orthodox Church acknowledges Seven Holy
Ecumenical Councils: The First Ecumenical Council (Nicea I) (May 29, and
also on seventh Sunday after Pascha) was convened in the year 325
against the heresy of Arius, in the city of Nicea in Bithynia under St
Constantine the Great, Equal of the Apostles.
The Second Ecumenical Council (Constantinople
I) (May 22) was convened in the year 381 against the heresy of
Macedonias, by the emperor Theodosius the Great.
The Third Ecumenical Council (Ephesus)
(September 9) was convened in the year 431 against the heresy of
Nestorius, in the city of Ephesus by the emperor Theodosius the Younger.
The Fourth Ecumenical Council (Chalcedon) (July
16) was convened in the year 451, against the Monophysite heresy, in the
city of Chalcedon under the emperor Marcian.
The Fifth Ecumenical Council (Constnatinople
II) (July 25) "Concerning the Three Chapters," was convened in the year
553, under the emperor Justinian the Great.
The Sixth Ecumenical Council (Constantinople
III) (January 23) met during the years 680-681, to fight the Monothelite
heresy, under the emperor Constantine Pogonatos.
The fact that the Seventh Ecumenical Council
(Nicea II) is not commemorated today testifies to the antiquity of
today's celebration. The Seventh Council, commemorated on the Sunday
nearest to October 11, was convened at Nicea in the year 787 against the
Iconoclast heresy, under the emperor Constantine and his mother Irene.
The Church venerates the Holy Fathers of the
Ecumenical Councils because Christ has established them as "lights
upon the earth," guiding us to the true Faith. "Adorned with the
robe of truth," the doctrine of the Fathers, based upon the preaching of
the Apostles, has established one faith for the Church. The Ecumenical
Councils, are the highest authority in the Church. Such Councils, guided
by the grace of the Holy Spirit, and accepted by the Church, are
infallible.
The Orthodox Church's conciliar definitions of
dogma have the highest authority, and such definitions always begin with
the Apostolic formula: "It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us..."
(Acts 15: 28).
The Ecumenical Councils were always convened
for a specific reason: to combat false opinions and heresies, and to
clarify the Orthodox Church's teaching. But the Holy Spirit has thus
seen fit, that the dogmas, the truths of faith, immutable in their
content and scope, constantly and consequently are revealed by the
conciliar mind of the Church, and are given precision by the holy
Fathers within theological concepts and terms in exactly such measure as
is needed by the Church itself for its economy of salvation. The Church,
in expounding its dogmas, is dealing with the concerns of a given
historical moment, "not revealing everything in haste and thoughtlessly,
nor indeed, ultimately hiding something" (St Gregory the Theologian).
A brief summary of the dogmatic theology of the
First Six Ecumenical Councils is formulated and contained in the First
Canon of the Council of Trullo (also known as Quinisext), held in the
year 692. The 318 Holy Fathers of the First Ecumenical Council are
spoken of in this Canon I of Trullo as having: "with unanimity of faith
revealed and declared to us the consubstantiality of the three Persons
of the Divine nature and, ... instructing the faithful to adore the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit with one worship, they cast down and
dispelled the false teaching about different degrees of Divinity."
The 150 Holy Fathers of the Second Ecumenical
Council left their mark on the theology of the Church concerning the
Holy Spirit, "repudiating the teaching of Macedonius, as one who
wished to divide the inseparable Unity, so that there might be no
perfect mystery of our hope."
The 200 God-bearing Fathers of the Third
Ecumenical Council expounded the teaching that "Christ, the
Incarnate Son of God is One." They also confessed that "she who
bore Him without seed was the spotless Ever-Virgin, glorifying her as
truly the Mother of God.
The 630 Holy Fathers of the Fourth Ecumenical
Council decreed that "the One Christ, the Son of God... must be
glorified in two natures."
The 165 God-bearing Holy Fathers of the Fifth
Ecumenical Council "in synod anathematized and repudiated Theodore of
Mopsuestia (the teacher of Nestorius), and Origen, and Didymus, and
Evagrius, renovators of the Hellenic teaching about the transmigration
of souls and the transmutation of bodies and the impieties they raised
against the resurrection of the dead."
The 170 Holy Fathers of the Sixth Ecumenical
Council "taught that we ought to confess two natural volitions, or two
wills [trans. note: one divine, and the other human], and two natural
operations (energies) in Him Who was incarnate for our salvation, Jesus
Christ, our true God."
In decisive moments of Church history, the holy
Ecumenical Councils promulgated their dogmatic definitions, as
trustworthy delimitations in the spiritual battle for the purity of
Orthodoxy, which will last until such time, as "all shall come into the
unity of faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God" (Eph. 4: 13). In
the struggle with new heresies, the Church does not abandon its former
dogmatic concepts nor replace them with some sort of new formulations.
The dogmatic formulae of the Holy Ecumenical Councils need never be
superseded, they remain always contemporary to the living Tradition of
the Church. Therefore the Church proclaims:
"The faith of all in the Church of God hath
been glorified by men, which were luminaries in the world, cleaving to
the Word of Life, so that it be observed firmly, and that it dwell
unshakably until the end of the ages, conjointly with their God-bestown
writings and dogmas. We reject and we anathematize all whom they have
rejected and anathematized, as being enemies of Truth. And if
anyone does not cleave to nor admit the aforementioned pious dogmas, and
does not teach or preach accordingly, let him be anathema"
(Canon I of the Council of Trullo).
In addition to their dogmatic definitions, the
Holy Fathers of the Ecumenical Councils exerted great efforts towards
the strengthening of church discipline. Local Councils promulgated their
disciplinary canons according to the circumstances of the time and
place, frequently differing among themselves in various particulars.
The universal unity of the Orthodox Church
required unity also in canonical practice, i.e. a conciliar deliberation
and affirmation of the most important canonical norms by the Fathers of
the Ecumenical Councils. Thus, according to conciliar judgment, the
Church has accepted: 20 Canons from the First, 7 Canons from the Second,
8 Canons from the Third, and 30 Canons from the Fourth Ecumenical
Synods. The Fifth and the Sixth Councils concerned themselves only with
resolving dogmatic questions, and did not leave behind any disciplinary
canons.
The need to establish in codified form the
customary practices during the years 451-680, and ultimately to compile
a canonical codex for the Orthodox Church, occasioned the convening of a
special Council, which was wholly devoted to the general application of
churchly rules. This was convened in the year 692. The Council "in the
Imperial Palace" or "Under the Arches" (in Greek "en trullo"), came to
be called the Council in Trullo. It is also called the "Quinisext"
[meaning the "fifth and sixth"], because it is considered to have
completed the activities of the Fifth and Sixth Councils, or rather that
it was simply a direct continuation of the Sixth Ecumenical Council
itself, separated by just a few years.
The Council in Trullo, with its 102 Canons
(more than of all the Ecumenical Synods combined), had a tremendous
significance in the history of the canonical theology of the Orthodox
Church. It might be said that the Fathers of this Council produced a
complete compilation of the basic codex from the relevant sources for
the Orthodox Church's canons. Listing through in chronological order,
and having been accepted by the Church the Canons of the Holy Apostles,
and the Canons of the Holy Ecumenical and the Local Councils and of the
holy Fathers, the Trullo Council declared: "Let no one be permitted to
alter or to annul the aforementioned canons, nor in place of these put
forth, or to accept others, made of spurious inscription" (2nd Canon of
the Council in Trullo).
Church canons, sanctified by the authority of
the first Six Ecumenical Councils (including the rules of the Seventh
Ecumenical Council in 787, and the Constantinople Councils of 861 and
879, which were added later under the holy Patriarch Photius), form the
basis of THE RUDDER, or KORMCHAYA KNIGA (a canon law codex known as "Syntagma"
or "Nomokanon" in 14 titles). In its repository of grace is expressed a
canonical norm, a connection to every era, and a guide for all the local
Orthodox Churches in churchly practice.
New historical conditions can lead to the
change of some particular external aspect of the life of the Church.
This makes creative canonical activity necessary in the conciliar
reasoning of the Church, in order to reconcile the external norms of
churchly life with historical circumstances. The details of canonical
regulation are not fully developed for the various eras of churchly
organization at all once. With every push to either forsake the literal
meaning of a canon, or to fulfill and develop it, the Church again and
again turns for reasoning and guidance to the eternal legacy of the Holy
Ecumenical Councils, to the inexhaustable treasury of dogmatic and
canonical truths.