No Pope = No Ecumenical Council

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Someone once told me that one of the early Ecumenical Councils contains a statement that there can not be a Council without the Bishop of Rome. Can anyone provide a quote or tell me which Council? Thanks!
Getting back to (^ this) original question …

I am unaware of any such formal statement. I am interested in anything that turns up, however.

For those who have the time, one can read the decrees or canons of the seven Councils and other texts here. Naturally, they have been superseded in the western church by the formally promulgated Code of Canon Law (first in 1917 - replaced in 1983), which probably does have such a statement written into it.
 
Someone once told me that one of the early Ecumenical Councils contains a statement that there can not be a Council without the Bishop of Rome. Can anyone provide a quote or tell me which Council? Thanks!
The Bishop of Rome accepts or rejects the conciliar decisions without need to be present, or even to have legates. Historically this occurred with the local eastern council in 381.
  1. Council of Nicaea (325)
    ratified by Pope St. Sylvester I (314-335 pontificate)
  2. First Council of Constantinople (381)
    It was a local council of the east. Creed revision not received by the Latin Church until Chalcedon (451).
  3. Council of Ephesus (431)
    ratified by Pope Celestine I (421-432 pontificate)
447 dogma of filioque, Pope St. Leo the Great.
  1. Council of Chalcedon (451)
    conciliar acceptance of Tome of Pope St. Leo the Great, Creed of 381,
    rejection of canon 28 (that of canon 3 of Const. 381) by Pope St. Leo the Great,
    ratified by Pope St. Leo the Great (440-461 pontificate)
  2. Council of Constantinople II (553)
    reconfirmed the first four councils: Nicea 325, Constantinople 381, Ephesus 431, Chalcedon 451,
    ratified by Pope Vigilius (537-555 pontificate)
 
Someone once told me that one of the early Ecumenical Councils contains a statement that there can not be a Council without the Bishop of Rome. Can anyone provide a quote or tell me which Council? Thanks!
It doesn’t exist, not from a Council at least, if some Bishops or even Bishops said such things some times, maybe, possible, I’ve read many such quotes, at one time Pope Leo was flattered by the Greeks so much (in order to get him to agree on the Canon 28) that he wanted to capture the moment and claim supremacy and put them to the test to see if they mean what they say…well… the results were that they turned their backs without saying a word and they went ahead with the 28th Canon anyhow.
 
Having no real time to read the surrounding snippets right now, I will say one think.

One Bishop does not hold much weight in either Catholic or Orthodox circles. Plenty of Bishops have been wrong on their own before, in fact whole swaths of Bishops have been wrong before a la Arianism.
How could a council at which so many bishops excommunicated the reigning pope ever become ecumenical by the consent of the man holding that office at the time or later on?

The more discussions I read, the less Early Church history and Catholic ecclesiology seem to line up…
 
How could a council at which so many bishops excommunicated the reigning pope ever become ecumenical by the consent of the man holding that office at the time or later on?

The more discussions I read, the less Early Church history and Catholic ecclesiology seem to line up…
My response would be the same. How many bishops can support Arianism? Just because a Bishop, or Bishops, does something wrong does not make it a matter of faith. That’s why conciliar documents or early teachings are all I am concerned with, because churchmen’s actions are often worthless, sinful, or ambigous.
 
My response would be the same. How many bishops can support Arianism? Just because a Bishop, or Bishops, does something wrong does not make it a matter of faith. That’s why conciliar documents or early teachings are all I am concerned with, because churchmen’s actions are often worthless, sinful, or ambigous.
I understand. But if what the bishops did at the gathering in question was so sinful, why do we now call it the fifth ecumenical council? The pope should have vetoed the bishops’ erroneous decisions; right-thinking clergy and laity should have followed his lead in condemning their mistakes and sins; another council should have been held to discuss the matter (cf. the 449 Robber Council vs. the 451 Council of Chalcedon).
 
Because there is much more going on in this Council than this one incident. Most of the history that I have read about this Council, Catholic and Orthodox, barely mention the excoomunications. And any impropriety at this Council did not even come close to the scandal of the Robber Council.

Finally though it comes down, in my mind, to the action of the Holy Spirit. Why is the Didache not Scripture, while St. John’s Letters are, even though one of them does not even mention Christ?
 
“Macedonius declared, when desired by the Emperor Anastasius to condemn the Council of Chalcedon, that ‘such a step without an Ecumenical Synod presided over by the Pope of Rome is impossible.’” (Macedonius, Patr. Graec. 108: 360a (Theophan. Chronogr. pp. 234-346 seq. A.D. 520-533).

-Emperor Justinian
 
“Macedonius declared, when desired by the Emperor Anastasius to condemn the Council of Chalcedon, that ‘such a step without an Ecumenical Synod presided over by the Pope of Rome is impossible.’” (Macedonius, Patr. Graec. 108: 360a (Theophan. Chronogr. pp. 234-346 seq. A.D. 520-533).

-Emperor Justinian
That’s definitely not a declaration of a council, nor is it an affirmation that a council cannot be ecumenical without a pope presiding. As it was pointed out earlier in this thread, the First Council of Constantinople eventually reached ecumenical status, even though it was conducted without any involvement of the pope.
 
Because there is much more going on in this Council than this one incident. Most of the history that I have read about this Council, Catholic and Orthodox, barely mention the excoomunications. And any impropriety at this Council did not even come close to the scandal of the Robber Council.

Finally though it comes down, in my mind, to the action of the Holy Spirit. Why is the Didache not Scripture, while St. John’s Letters are, even though one of them does not even mention Christ?
All right. What positive evidence exists for the pope playing a vital role before, during, and/or after the fifth council? Examining potential text- and event-based early-church support for the modern papacy is so tedious because of (1) the widespread use of flowery language in letters between clerics and among hierarches and emperors, and (2) the opaque character of the motives of people living over a millennium ago in very different political and theological circumstances.

Also, I have discovered that Mardukm began this thread where he argues, in the opening post, that the fifth ecumenical council didn’t actually excommunicate Vigilius…
 
All right. What positive evidence exists for the pope playing a vital role before, during, and/or after the fifth council? Examining potential text- and event-based early-church support for the modern papacy is so tedious because of (1) the widespread use of flowery language in letters between clerics and among hierarches and emperors, and (2) the opaque character of the motives of people living over a millennium ago in very different political and theological circumstances.

Also, I have discovered that Mardukm began this thread where he argues, in the opening post, that the fifth ecumenical council didn’t actually excommunicate Vigilius…
This argument on whether or not pope Vigilius was excommunicated has come up several times on this board. Here are the facts behind the matter: firstly, pope Vigilius wrote concerning the Three Chapters his Constitutum in which he defended the orthodoxy of the Letter of Ibas and declared that neither Theodore of Mopsuestia, Theodoret, or Ibas should be anathematized in person; secondly, the Council anathematized those who “have written or do write in defence of [the Three Chapters or the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia].” It is my opinion that this statement was almost certainly aimed at Pope Vigilius, who defended the orthodoxy of the Letter of Ibas and the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia in his Constitutum. Others may interpret the facts differently, of course, but it seems rather self-evident to me.

For reference, here is the relevant passage from the sentence of the Second Council of Constantinople, which I have quoted above:
Having thus detailed all that has been done by us, we again confess that we receive the four holy Synods, that is, the Nicene, the Constantinopolitan, the first of Ephesus, and that of Chalcedon, and we have taught, and do teach all that they defined respecting the one faith. And we account those who do not receive these things aliens from the Catholic Church. Moreover we condemn and anathematize, together with all the other heretics who have been condemned and anathematized by the before-mentioned four holy Synods, and by the holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, Theodore who was Bishop of Mopsuestia, and his impious writings, and also those things which Theodoret impiously wrote against the right faith, and against the Twelve Chapters of the holy Cyril, and against the first Synod of Ephesus, and also those which he wrote in defence of Theodore and Nestorius. In addition to these we also anathematize the impious Epistle which Ibas is said to have written to Maris, the Persian, which denies that God the Word was incarnate of the holy Mother of God, and ever Virgin Mary, and accuses Cyril of holy memory, who taught the truth, as an heretic, and of the same sentiments with Apollinaris, and blames the first Synod of Ephesus as deposing Nestorius without examination and inquiry, and calls the Twelve Chapters of the holy Cyril impious, and contrary to the right faith, and defends Theodorus and Nestorius, and their impious dogmas and writings. We therefore anathematize the Three Chapters before-mentioned, that is, the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia, with his execrable writings, and those things which Theodoret impiously wrote, and the impious letter which is said to be of Ibas, and their defenders, and those who have written or do write in defence of them, or who dare to say that they are correct, and who have defended or attempt to defend their impiety with the names of the holy Fathers, or of the holy Council of Chalcedon.
 
That’s definitely not a declaration of a council, nor is it an affirmation that a council cannot be ecumenical without a pope presiding. As it was pointed out earlier in this thread, the First Council of Constantinople eventually reached ecumenical status, even though it was conducted without any involvement of the pope.
The first council of Constantinople (381 A.D.) was ratified by Pope Vigilius when he ratified the second council of Constantinople (~554 A.D.).
 
The first council of Constantinople (381 A.D.) was ratified by Pope Vigilius when he ratified the second council of Constantinople (~554 A.D.).
But we also see that First Constantinople was declared ecumenical by the Council of Chalcedon, which seemed to incur no protest from the legates of Pope Leo I.
 
But we also see that First Constantinople was declared ecumenical by the Council of Chalcedon, which seemed to incur no protest from the legates of Pope Leo I.
I could not find any verification of that. The Catholic Encyclopedia has:

At the close of this council Emperor Theodosius issued an imperial decree (30 July) declaring that the churches should be restored to those bishops who confessed the equal Divinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and who held communion with Nectarius of Constantinople and other important Oriental prelates whom he named. The ecumenical character of this council seems to date, among the Greeks, from the Council of Chalcedon (451). According to Photius (Mansi, III, 596) Pope Damasus approved it, but if any part of the council were approved by this pope it could have been only the aforesaid creed. In the latter half of the fifth century the successors of Leo the Great are silent as to this council. Its mention in the so-called “Decretum Gelasii”, towards the end of the fifth century, is not original but a later insertion in that text (Hefele). Gregory the Great, following the example of Vigilius and Pelagius II, recognized it as one of the four general councils, but only in its dogmatic utterances (P.G., LXXVII, 468, 893).

APA citation. Shahan, T. (1908). First Council of Constantinople. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved February 21, 2012 from New Advent: newadvent.org/cathen/04308a.htm
 
This argument on whether or not pope Vigilius was excommunicated has come up several times on this board. Here are the facts behind the matter: firstly, pope Vigilius wrote concerning the Three Chapters his Constitutum in which he defended the orthodoxy of the Letter of Ibas and declared that neither Theodore of Mopsuestia, Theodoret, or Ibas should be anathematized in person; secondly, the Council anathematized those who “have written or do write in defence of [the Three Chapters or the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia].” It is my opinion that this statement was almost certainly aimed at Pope Vigilius, who defended the orthodoxy of the Letter of Ibas and the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia in his Constitutum. Others may interpret the facts differently, of course, but it seems rather self-evident to me.

For reference, here is the relevant passage from the sentence of the Second Council of Constantinople, which I have quoted above:
Interesting.

What would be the Catholic response to this seemingly… unhelpful information?
 
Interesting.

What would be the Catholic response to this seemingly… unhelpful information?
Catholic: … Justinian agreed to on condition that Vigilius would recognize the late council. This Vigilius finally agreed to do, and in two documents (a letter to Eutychius of Constantinople, 8 Dec., 553, and a second “Constitutum” of 23 Feb., 554, probably addressed to the Western episcopate) condemned, at last, the Three Chapters (Mansi, IX, 424-20, 457-88; cf. Hefele, II, 905-11), independently, however, and without mention of the council. His opposition had never been based on doctrinal grounds but on the decency and opportuneness of the measures proposed, the wrongful imperial violence, and a delicate fear of injury to the authority of the Council of Chalcedon, especially in the West. …The pope was always correct as to the doctrine involved, and yielded, for the sake of peace, only when he was satisfied that there was no fear for the authority of Chalcedon, which he at first, with the entire West, deemed in peril from the machinations of the Monophysites.
Shahan, T. (1908). Second Council of Constantinople. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved February 21, 2012 from New Advent: newadvent.org/cathen/04308b.htm
 
Interesting.

What would be the Catholic response to this seemingly… unhelpful information?
Our Eastern Orthodox brother typically does not tell the whole story, or perhaps it is just a matter of his own sources being rather bias in its reporting of the facts: Here are the full and actual facts of the matter:

The letter of Ibas passed before the Council Fathers of Chalcedon and did not receive a condemnation (a mistake of Chalcedon).

Theodoret was regarded as orthodox in his lifetime and was a Father at the Council of Chalcedon and died at peace with the Church. At Chalcedon, he agreed to the condemnation of certain propositions branded as “Nestorianism.” However, he had always maintained that Nestorius was wrongly accused of the teachings that were attributed to him (in other words, that Nestorius did not really teach what his enemies claimed he taught).

Theodore was regarded as orthodox in his lifetime and though his teaching was condemned at the Council of Ephesus (after his death), St. Cyril of Alexandria refused to condemn his person.

The Fathers of Chalcedon acted favorably towards Ibas and Theodoret (and by association, Theodore).

Pope Vigilius’ actions merely followed those orthodox Fathers that went before him.

Btw, it is a bit of a stretch to claim that Pope Vigilius “defended the orthodoxy of the Letter of Ibas.” Pope Vigilius had initially condemned it in his Judicatum, and withdrew it only after all of Western Christendom protested that the condemnation would weaken the authority of the Council of Chalcedon. Pope Vigilius wrote that the Letter could be taken as orthodox if interpreted in the best possible sense. It was not an unmitigated defense of the Letter of Ibas, as our EO brother would like to pretend and have us believe.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Here is the Final Sentence of the Fifth Ecumenical Council, and its statements on Pope Vigilius (given several months before the Pope finally confirmed the Acts of the Council):
And because it happened that the most religious Vigilius stopping in the royal city was present at all the discussions with regard to the Three Chapters, and had often condemned them orally and in writing, nevertheless afterwards he gave his consent in writing to be present at the Council and examine together with us the Three Chapters, that a suitable definition of the right faith might be set forth by us all.

Gee, no mention of an anathema on Pope Vigilius here.🤷 How does a Council posiitively BY NAME appeal to one it supposedly anathematized?:confused:

It is also a fact that Patriarchs who were judged to be in opposition to Ecum Councils were DEPOSED (e.g., Nesotorius and Pope St. Dioscorus of Alexandria). Was Pope Vigilius deposed? If he was supposedly anathematized (as some EO like to pretend), why was he not deposed? Brother Trebor, that’s a question you have to seriously consider before granting any validity to the non-Catholic rhetoric.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Here is the Final Sentence of the Fifth Ecumenical Council, and its statements on Pope Vigilius (given several months before the Pope finally confirmed the Acts of the Council):
And because it happened that the most religious Vigilius stopping in the royal city was present at all the discussions with regard to the Three Chapters, and had often condemned them orally and in writing, nevertheless afterwards he gave his consent in writing to be present at the Council and examine together with us the Three Chapters, that a suitable definition of the right faith might be set forth by us all.

Gee, no mention of an anathema on Pope Vigilius here.🤷 How does a Council posiitively BY NAME appeal to one it supposedly anathematized?:confused:

It is also a fact that Patriarchs who were judged to be in opposition to Ecum Councils were DEPOSED (e.g., Nesotorius and Pope St. Dioscorus of Alexandria). Was Pope Vigilius deposed? If he was supposedly anathematized (as some EO like to pretend), why was he not deposed? Brother Trebor, that’s a question you have to seriously consider before granting any validity to the non-Catholic rhetoric.

Blessings,
Marduk
You have omitted the part of the story where Vigilius was struck from the diptychs for his defense of the Three Chapters. From the seventh session of the Council:
Constantine, the most glorious Quæstor, said: While I am still present at your holy council by reason of the reading of the documents which have been presented to you, I would say that the most pious Emperor has sent a minute (formam), to your Holy Synod, concerning the name of Vigilius, that it be no more inserted in the holy diptychs of the Church, on account of the impiety which he defended. Neither let it be recited by you, nor retained, either in the church of the royal city, or in other churches which are intrusted to you and to the other bishops in the State committed by God to his rule. And when you hear this minute, again you will perceive by it how much the most serene Emperor cares for the unity of the holy churches and for the purity of the holy mysteries.
Now how about a quotation straight from Pope Vigilius’ pen after he decided that approving of the council was better than being struck from the diptychs:
Therefore we anathematize and condemn the aforesaid impious Three Chapters, to-wit, the impious Theodore of Mopsuestia and his impious writings; And all that Theodoret impiously wrote, as well as the letter said to have been written by Ibas, in which are contained the above mentioned profane blasphemies. We likewise subject to anathema whoever shall at any time believe that these chapters should be received or defended; or shall attempt to subvert this present condemnation.
And further we define that they are our brethren and fellow-priests who ever keep the right faith set forth by those afore-mentioned synods, and shall have condemned the above-named Three Chapters, or even do now condemn them.
And further we annul and evacuate by this present written definition of ours whatever has been said by me (a me) or by others in defence of the aforesaid Three Chapters.
This isn’t just a letter in which pope Vigilius approves of the council’s actions, this is a full-blown retraction of his prior defense of the Three Chapters. Even he himself admits the possibility that he wrote in defense of the Three Chapters.

Given these things, it is clear that the proof-text which you have pulled from the sentence of the Council does not mean what you want it to mean. It is clear that what the fathers of the council meant by the small passage you have quoted is that they invited pope Vigilius to the council (and history shows of course that he did not show up or participate actively).
 
Someone once told me that one of the early Ecumenical Councils contains a statement that there can not be a Council without the Bishop of Rome. Can anyone provide a quote or tell me which Council? Thanks!
The very first ecumenical council of the Church was held in Saint James’ diocese in Jerusalem, which His Holiness Saint Peter presided over. When he spoke all the rest “fell silent”; that is, they talked, he listened and decided.

There is no such thing as a Council without the Pope’s approval since the beginning:

[6] And the apostles and ancients assembled to consider of this matter. [7] And when there had been much disputing, Peter, rising up, said to them…
 
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