Was Chalcedon really necessary?

Patristic theology, and traditional teachings of Orthodoxy from the Church fathers of apostolic times to the present. All forum Rules apply. No polemics. No heated discussions. No name-calling.


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尼古拉前执事
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Post by 尼古拉前执事 »

George Australia wrote:

....And unless someone else comes to the defence of the Faith of the Orthodox Church, this: http://euphrosynoscafe.com/forum/viewto ... 8910#38910
will be my last post on this subject in this thread.

"As long as it depends on Monothelitism, then Miaphysitism is nothing but a variant of Monophysitism."

Thank you for your defense of the Faith of the Orthodox Church and Her 4th, 5th and 6th Œcumenical Councils, George. I hope that you, and many other Orthodox Christians, will continue to contribute to this thread to defend their Faith.

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Post by GOCPriestMark »

Either they accept Chalcedon and all Orthodox Councils or they don't. They didn't listen then, they are not listening now. What more can be said? Accept the Orthodox Faith and all its Councils or go your way. Too much idle chatter simply heats up the passions and that is not beneficial to anyone.

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Post by George Australia »

EkhristosAnesti wrote:

I have not denied that the Orthodox Church teaches One Will,

The Orthodox Church teaches Two wills.
You guys teach One Will.

EkhristosAnesti wrote:

I have simply placed that confession in context, a thing necessary in light of the fact that words and phrases are not self-interpreting and the obvious fact that Chalcedonian members of a Chalcedonian forum will be inclined to approach this discussion with false preconceived notions established by Chalcedonian polemics regarding what these phrases imply and mean.

The fact that Pope Shenouda's teachings are not "self-interpreting" and require continual "explanation" and "context" is because they are heresy. He says you guys believe in One Will and One Nature, and you keep telling us that this is not what he means, but then you come out an say "I have not denied that the Orthodox Church teaches One Will". In other words: "I reject monothelitism, but Christ has One Will", much like "I reject monophysitism, but Christ has One Nature." The fact is that you guys have misinterpretred the Hypostatic Union by comingling the Natures to the point of making them one combined Nature- which is what Pope Shenouda teaches in "The Nature of Christ". I'm not denying that you say that the Two Natures and the Two wills existed, but your error is in the fact that you consider the Two Natures to have fused to form a Third Nature different from the first Two, and the Two Wills as fused to form a Will different to the other Two, or as Pope Shenouda himself says, and you quote:

"If there was not unity between the Will of the Divine nature of Christ and His human nature, this would have resulted in internal conflict. Far be it from Him!" (p. 47)

EkhristosAnesti wrote:

Again, for the umpteenth time I refer you to Christ’s declaration that husband and wife become ‘One flesh’ in the marital union. Please accuse Christ of confusing the husband and wife!

And you seem to have missed Our Lord's point in that He emphasised that they are "one flesh". Not "one hypostasis" nor "one psyche". This is exactly where I say your error lies, in the fact that you consider the Hypostatic Union to be creating a "third" Nature and a "third" Will out of a con-fusion ("joining together") of the original Two. The Husband and wife remain two hypostases in one flesh. Christ remains One Hypostasis with Two Natures and Two Wills. And it is this "third" Nature and this "third" Will which Pope Shenouda is stating are the "miaphysite" belief of "One Nature" and "One Will". Therefore "miaphysitism" is nothing more than "monophysitism"- just a more elaborate form of it.

"As long as it depends on Monothelitism, then Miaphysitism is nothing but a variant of Monophysitism."

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Post by spiridon »

if that in fact is true, then the fusion that the Pontiff has declared as vicar of Christ here on earth, is quite true and shouldnt be taken as heretical. it should be taken as unknown to the feeble human mind, and therefore we have all been heretical for not following the Pontiff of Rome...But this is True what Gearge says, that too much explaining and jumping around means one is trying to hard to prove something...God knows we are simple people and he has allowed us to receive him simply aswell, we Follow the tradtions of the Fathers and as my Namesake showed everybody at the the 1st ecumenical council- What exactly did he mean by-He was born of a Virgin, He lived among men, and suffered and died for our salvation, and then He arose from the dead, and He has resurrected the human race with Him. We believe that He is One in Essence with the Father, and equal to Him in authority and honor. We believe this without any sly rationalizations, At this Council, St. Spyridon displayed the unity of the Holy Trinity in a remarkable way. He took a brick in his hand and squeezed it. At that instant fire shot up from it, water dripped on the ground, and only dust remained in the hands of the wonderworker. There was only one brick, St. Spyridon said, But it was composed of three elements. In the Holy Trinity there are three Persons, but only one God.

First, and Last, and Always
in CHRIST

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Post by EkhristosAnesti »

jckstraw72,

you say you believe Christ has a human and a divine nature and will, but those are somehow one nature and will.

No they are not “somehow” One Nature and One Willl. I have explained precisely just how they are One Nature or One Will in a manner which does not undermine the integrity of either His Divinity or Humanity, or the natural divine will and natural human will, or their unconfused union.

your theology does not actually have a separate humanity and divinity

Ofcourse not; God forbid. My Church teaches that Divinity and Humanity of Christ are without separation; they are distinct, but they are not, and can never be separate. I understand that Chalcedonian Christology maintains that they are separate, and this is why Chalcedon was rejected as crypto-Nestorianism. If, as Chalcedonian Christology would have us believe, the Human Nature of Christ was the subject of suffering in separation to His Divinity, then Orthodox Soteriology which dictates that the single agent of God The Word had to suffer in the flesh (please see St. Cyril’s 12th anathema) in order for salvation to be effected, is undermined.

but rather a divino-human nature and will. He is thus neither human nor divine, but a mixture of both that is a totally different being.

To those who argue that saying Christ has a divine nature and human nature and yet One ultimate Incarnate Nature entails a confusion or mixture of natures, St. Cyril has this to say:

"For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)"

It is exactly the same principle underlying the One Will of Christ. If you want to argue with St. Cyril, the Doctor of Orthodox Christology, then please…be my guest.

Chalcedonians can keep parroting the claim that proclaiming Christ in His Incarnate State to be One Nature necessarily entails confusion or mixing, over and over again, but they simply can’t get around the facts that: a) It is non-sequitor—there is a huge leap in logic between the premise and conclusion which you do not account for, b) the logic underlying it condemns St. Cyril and hence, essentially Ephesian Christology all together, c) my Church explicitly rejects any notion of confusion or mixture. The very formula regarding Christ’s Union being “without mingling, confusion, alteration or separation”, which is used in the Coptic Orthodox Liturgy, was in fact formulated by an Oriental Orthodox Saint—St. Dioscoros of Alexandria. He was the first to pronounce the formula at Chalcedon, and the Chalcedonians stole it from him. How ironic! If you want proof just read the historical acts of Chalcedon. I can give you references if you wish.

Last edited by EkhristosAnesti on Tue 28 November 2006 12:33 am, edited 1 time in total.

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"If we fear to preach the truth because that causes us some inconvenience, how, in our gatherings, can we chant the combats and triumphs of our holy martyrs?” - St. Cyril of Alexandria

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Post by EkhristosAnesti »

Deacon Nikolai,

Pasting articles from the internet is not only intellectual laziness but it is dishonest for it inhibits fair discussion. It would not be difficult for me to do likewise; in fact most of those articles have already been responded to on OC.net and other online forums; I would be more than happy to just cut and paste.

By the way, it seems that it has slipped your notice, but one of the articles you have pasted was already pasted by GOCTheophan on the first page. I already responded to it, and debunked it…line by line.

Fraction on Wisdom

"If we fear to preach the truth because that causes us some inconvenience, how, in our gatherings, can we chant the combats and triumphs of our holy martyrs?” - St. Cyril of Alexandria

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Post by EkhristosAnesti »

Ozgeorge,

Nice to see you continue my friend; I could not think of a better candidate to assist me in exposing the futility, absurdity and deception of Chalcedonian polemics against Holy Orthodoxy!

The Orthodox Church teaches Two wills.
You guys teach One Will.

Reductionism…Again! We are not just dealing with words and phrases here ozgeorge, we are dealing with the intended concepts attached to those words and phrases, and contrary to your simplistic logic, there are many possible concepts that can be attached to both phrases, and indeed many differing concepts have been attached to both phrases, not all of which were/are Orthodox. If your Church rejects the concept of One Will in the sense that I have consistently explained it, then your dyothelitism is plainly heretical and blasphemous. Your Christ is capable of internal conflict, hence schizophrenia, hence division hence non-existence. Your refusal to acknowledge proper qualification only leads to the same problem your Church suffered subsequent to Chalcedon. As I pointed out to you, many of your Fathers upheld Chalcedon and the Nestorian Christology of Theodore and Ibas which were later condemned by a certain faction of your own Church at Constantinople 553; many of your Fathers were celebrating the feast day of Nestorius whilst celebrating Chalcedon—historical facts my friend.

The Orthodox Church teaches that Christ has two natural wills that can be conceived in abstract thought alone—a distinct natural divine will and a distinct natural human will, and that those wills, being hypostatised by the One Hypostasis are in such perfect unison that they are indeed for all practical purposes One Will. There is no getting around this; this is Orthodoxy; this is the corollary of Ephesian Christology as understood by the very author of Ephesian Christology himself, St. Cyril, whose Christology was Ecumenically Received and who proclaimed the One Incarnate Nature of Christ as Sts. Athanasius and Gregory the Theologian did before him.

The fact that Pope Shenouda's teachings are not "self-interpreting"

The fact is no human language is self-interpreting; this has nothing to do with His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, it has to do with the intrinsic nature of human language. If Chalcedonian Christology is self-interpreting, then explain why half your Church and the Orthodox Church interpreted it in Nestorian fashion to the point that another Council had to be called to “interpret” it for you? Your ridiculous logic shoots your own Chalcedonian foot. The “in Two Natures” formula was a) interpreted by Nestorians before Chalcedon to mean that Christ exists as two subjects, b) also interpreted as such by St. Cyril and the Oriental Orthodox Church, c) also interpreted as such by a vast number of Chalcedonians subsequent to Chalcedon, d) was interpreted to merely imply the distinction between Christ’s divinity and humanity by other Chalcedonians etc. etc. Ha! In what manner therefore was it ever self-interpreting?

require continual "explanation" and "context"

I’m dialoguing with people who are forcefully taking him out of context and either imputing their own preconceived notions and presuppositions upon his words or simply unwittingly presuming those preconceived notions and presuppositions to be in the mindset of His Holiness. My explanations are only as consistent as your incomprehension, deceit, and ignorance which lead you to a consistent misinterpretation and misrepresentation in the first place.

Any Oriental Orthodox Christian, or open-minded non-Orthodox Christian would not need me to consistently explain what is plain, for such persons are open to letting His Holiness’s words speak for themselves in context; they approach his text to exegete not to eisegete; they approach his work with the intent of learning and understanding, not with malicious intentions or false agendas.

He says you guys believe in One Will and One Nature, and you keep telling us that this is not what he means,

Try again. What I keep telling you, is that our belief in One Will and One Nature does not mean what

you

are seeking to imply it to mean, it means what

we

say it means since we’re the ones using those expressions in the first place. I am telling you to accept our phrases on our terms. Your problem is that you don’t want to understand what we mean by it, you want to force your own twisted definition upon it as if it is the only definition capable of being produced by those phrases, which, linguistically speaking, is stupid, because no word or phrase is necessarily constrained to one exclusive meaning. I am doing nothing more than what the great St. Cyril did when he told his heretical opponents who took the same track you are taking with me now, that his confession of One Nature does not mean what they keep telling him it means, but rather what he says it means:

St. Cyril the Great: "For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)

much like "I reject monophysitism, but Christ has One Nature."

You speak in the same spirit of St. Cyril’s Nestorian opponents (which makes sense considering Theodoret, an arch-heretic and enemy of St. Cyril and Ephesian Christology, is a Father of your Church) in your attempt to set up a dichotomy between the denial of monophysitism and the confession of Christ’s One Incarnate Nature. If monophysitism is the corollary of a mere confession of One Nature, then you must believe St. Cyril was a Monophysite. Thank you for admitting what the OO Church has taught all along; that the Chalcedonian Church betrayed Ephesus 431 in accusing its president and the one whose Christology defines the spirit of Ephesus 431, to be a Monophysite. I’m glad you don’t deny it as many before you have attempted; it’s good to see just a little honesty for once, even if short-lived. Nevertheless, as St. Cyril quickly shut down his Nestorian opponent's objection, so too do I with his very words:

"For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)"

In other words: "I reject monothelitism, but Christ has One Will"

The same logic that you implicitly apply here, whereby the concept of monothelitism becomes the direct corollary of a mere linguistic confession of “one will”, is the same logic you have used to condemn the Great Doctor St. Cyril above. It just doesn’t hold water. Monothelitism is not evidenced by a particular and mere linguistic expression of faith, it is evidenced primarily by the intended concept that one attaches to their linguistic expression of faith. As you should be well aware ozgeorge, Nestorians used your two nature confession well before, and even during and after Chalcedon; this is a historical fact you cannot deny. If we were to play your game with your rules, then you must admit to being a Nestorian on the mere basis that you use the same confession that Nestorians used to confess their concept of Christ subsisting in divinity and subsisting in humanity as if in two different subsistences or grounds of being.

Any person with a basic grasp of logic will realise that a two word phrase can be subject to multiple interpretations and meanings. The OO conception of “One Will” is not monothelitic in any way, and you have yet to deal with the official teachings I have pasted over and over again which evidence principles that directly contradict the concept of monothelitism. Monothelitism is not a linguistic confession it is a concept which denies the existence of a natural will proper to Christ’s humanity; Monothelites may choose a ‘One will’ confession to express that concept, but it doesn’t mean that that linguistic expression necessarily entails that concept. But of course, it would take some humility to accept that you’re just plain wrong in your conclusions, but as I pointed out earlier, you do not even have enough humility to submit to the conclusions of your own Hierarchs and Synods, who have studied and discussed these issues at length in a spirit of prayer and charitable dialogue, so how can I expect you to display some in dialogue with the Orthodox.

The fact is that you guys have misinterpretred the Hypostatic Union by comingling the Natures to the point of making them one combined Nature- which is what Pope Shenouda teaches in "The Nature of Christ".

Considering the fact His Holiness explicitly rejects any concept of commingling, then we can only renounce the above statement as yet another lie in the sea of lies you have purported. There can be no concept of commingling if the distinction of Christ’s Humanity and Divinity are maintained, and this distinction has been stressed ad nauseum by the OO Church, so you have no honest ground upon which to continue your false propaganda.

The One Nature of Christ is the Union of the Two distinct Natures, as St. Cyril of Alexandria whose Christology defines the spirit of Ephesus 431, explained:

"For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)

I'm not denying that you say that the Two Natures and the Two wills existed, but your error is in the fact that you consider the Two Natures to have fused to form a Third Nature

No there is no Third Nature; again, your own ignorant rendering of OO Christology. St. Cyril’s One Incarnate Nature is not a third Nature, it is simply the union of the two natures. His Holiness Pope Shenouda appeals to the body-soul and iron-fire union analogy of St. Cyril to emphasise this; human nature is not a third new nature resulting from the fusion of the body and soul, it is simply the unity of those two natures. Again to quote the blessed St. Cyril:

"For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)

Please argue with St. Cyril.

And you seem to have missed Our Lord's point in that He emphasised that they are "one flesh".

Huh? The whole stress is on the manner in which he uses the term one, not the term flesh. The Husband and Wife become one flesh…that one flesh is not a third flesh, it is not the confusion of the flesh of the husband and flesh of the wife, it is simply the union. Just as is the case with St. Cyril’s One Incarnate Nature, and the corollary of that, the Orthodox Confession of One Will. And on many occasions in the Scripture One is used to describe a union of things; many souls are referred to as “one soul”; many minds and hearts are referred to as “one mind” and “one heart”. Why? Because as St. Cyril says:

"For not only in the case of those who are simple by nature is the term ‘one’ truly used, but also in respect to what has been brought together according to a synthesis, as man is one being, who is of soul and body. For soul and body are of different species and are not consubstantial to each other, but united they produce one Nature (physis) of man, even though in the considerations of the synthesis the difference exist according to the nature of those which have been brought together into a unity. Accordingly they are speaking in vain who say that, if there should be one incarnate Nature (physis) ‘of the Word’ in every way and in every manner it would follow that a mixture and a confusion occurred as if lessening and taking away the nature of man.’ (Letter to Bishop Succensus)"

Fraction on Wisdom

"If we fear to preach the truth because that causes us some inconvenience, how, in our gatherings, can we chant the combats and triumphs of our holy martyrs?” - St. Cyril of Alexandria

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