No, there was/is some question if the tome mentioned in the reputed canon V was appended later to the Council.
For who will give us wings as of a dove, and we will fly and be at rest? But this course seemed likely to leave the churches who were just recovering quite undefended, and the undertaking was to most of us impossible, for, in accordance witch the letters sent a year ago from your holiness after the synod at Aquileia to the most pious emperor Theodosius, we had journeyed to Constantinople, equipped only for travelling 189so far as Constantinople, and bringing the consent of the bishops remaining in the provinces of this synod alone.
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf214.ix.ix.html
They obviously knew of the synod, and they obviously were attempting to gain the consent of the bishops remaining in the provinces that could attend Constantinople.
I also brought up that if it were the case that the Council rubber stamped what Rome sent, how do you plead ignorance of the Council’s Ecumenical status, and canon III, as is claimed?
I never claimed they rubber stamped it. I claim they knew of it. Whether it was properly adopted or not does not concern me. Canon III was not part of it. It was part of what Constantinople decreed. I also did not claim that the West was ignorant of the third canon. I do claim that they did not adopt when it was received. I do that now, but I didn’t in any earlier post.
There is also the issue that the Council notified Rome of what they had done.
Yes, and where did they adopt it again? Or is this an argument from silence? Besides that, it apparently wouldn’t make any difference according to you. It was ecumenical before Rome accepted it. Right?
I am having difficulty seeing what any of this has to do with the Council of Jerusalem and the claim that St. James wrote the epistle of the council.
Yes, Ecumenical everywhere else but Rome. Sorry we didn’t wait for the Vatican. It was accepted by Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem.
You mean that it was their assertion that the entire Church was bound by it before Rome had a chance to see it and accept it. And I have not seen historical evidence that all four other Sees were present. I have no doubt they were attempting to act in accordance with what had already been decided by the Western Synod, but Canon III was not part of that. I’m afraid 150 bishops meeting at Constantinople doesn’t make Canon III ecumenical.
And yet it happened. Even if was not Ecumenical until Chalcedon, the opinion popular on your side, that still wouldn’t create any partcipation of Rome in a Council nearly a century old by that time.
It wasn’t accepted at Chalcedon. Canon 28 was explicitly rejected by Pope Leo.
Every source I have ever seen on the subject. I will give you links tomorrow.
You mean the Protestant Schaff. Pray tell, what is his definition of an Ecumenical Council. One approved by the pope of Rome?
I said “including Schaff.” You seem to accept his interpretations when it suits you on the subject. Of course I suppose the real issue is what is your definition of an ecumenical council. You can’t even affirm that all the other Sees were present. You want to say that the See of Rome with its “primacy of honor” wasn’t a necessary participant. Your own Orthodox brethren disagree, as I will show you later.
None of the Seven Ecumenical Councils was at Rome, so what are you imagining?
Since I never said they were, I suppose I’m not imagining anything. Where did I ever assert that the place the council occurred was important? I honestly have no idea what you are talking about or arguing against at this point.
Quite the contrary. Yes the Conciliar epistles were in the name of all the assembled bishops.
Seems an Epistle of St. James was widely distrubuted enough to make it into the canon. And it seems to be solely from him, so I don’t see your point.
And I didn’t claim it was only from St. James, nor would St. James claim so. Neither does Acts.

The poster I responded to said St. James had written it. I said there was no evidence of that. I also said it would have been an epistle from the entire council. I don’t even know what you are arguing against anymore.
And yet that deafening silence on Matthew 16, the Vatican’s great “proof text.” Speaking of consistent, if it was so important, why did he accept ordination from someone not in communion with Rome? (confrast St. Jerome’s whinning on this).
He did write on Matthew 16. Why did he accept ordination from someone outside of Rome? St. Jerome’s whining? I get the impression you aren’t really here to engage me on the issue of the Council of Jerusalem at all. It looks like you want a fight on anything at all that has to do even tangentially with the papacy.
Pentarchy. Constantinople being in second place. All of the developments that occurred in the first seven ecumenical councils.
Because it is wildly off topic. You apparently want to argue anything and everything associated with the papacy on a post made to show that the Council of Jerusalem doesn’t conflict with the modern notion of the papacy as asserted by another poster.
Or maybe it’s because I’m afraid to debate the subject with you. Although I guess that wouldn’t explain the multitude of other threads (even on that very topic) that I’ve had with you. You are all over the place Isa.
Only the position that the Council has no authority separate from the “pope.” Jerusalem says otherwise.
Well then why don’t you demonstrate it since that is what the post was about. If the Council of Jerusalem says otherwise, then let’s see it. Not every other objection imaginable that you might have to the papacy.
