C
Cavaradossi
Guest
It is easy to understand why the fathers of the council connected St. Leo to St. Peter; it is both because he held fast to the faith of Peter and his position in the governance of the Church at the time, as first in the diptychs. Were it because of his position in the governance of the Church alone, then it holds that Vigilius’ Constitutum (which he declared to be in force by the power of the Apostolic See) ought to have received the same reception, but instead we know that it was outright rejected.It is hard to understand why the Fathers of Chalcedon singled out St. Peter among the Apostles for any other reason than that he had a unique role among the Apostles. And it is hard to understand why the Fathers connected St. Peter to Pope St. Leo and no one else among the illustrious names mentioned by the Fathers of the Council, except for the fact that Pope St. Leo held the same place among the Fathers of the Coucil that St. Peter had among the Apostles.
The Acts of the Council makes it pretty clear that the objections were to certain Nestorian-sounding passages in the tome.Most of the interruptions were because of difficulties in language - the Tome was in Latin and had to be translated. A few were due to their hearing it for the first time, while having been assured previously from others that it was correct (remember that almost the entire Church had subscribed to the Tome before the Council was even convened). and there were certain statements that seemed to divide Christ.
Objections.24. When there was being read the part of the aforesaid letter that contains the words, ‘For the payment of the debt owed by our nature divine nature was united to the passible nature, so that – this fitting our cure – one and the same, being the mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, would be able to die in respect of the one and would not be able to expire in respect of the other’, and the most devout Illyrian and Palestinian bishops raised an objection, Aetius the most devout archdeacon of imperial Constantinople read out the chapter of Cyril of sacred memory, the late bishop of the city of Alexandria, containing the words, ‘Since again his own body by the grace of God tasted death on behalf of everyone, as the apostle says, he himself is said to have suffered death on our behalf, not as though he entered into the experience of death in regard to his own nature (for to say or think that would be lunacy) but because, as I have just said, his own flesh tasted death.’Were they objections or simply requests for clarification?
25. Likewise when there was being read the part that contains the words, ‘For each form performs what is proper to it in association with the other, the Word achieving what is the Word’s, while the body accomplishes what is the body’s; the one shines with miracles while the other has succumbed to outrages’, and the most devout Illyrian and Palestinian bishops raised an objection, Aetius archdeacon of the holy church of Constantinople read out the chapter of Cyril of sacred memory containing the words, ‘Some of the sayings are particularly fitting to God, some again are particularly fitting to man, while others occupy a middle position, revealing the Son of God as God and man simultaneously and at the same time.’
26. Likewise when there was being read from the same letter the part that contains the words, ‘Although indeed in the Lord Jesus Christ there is one person of God and man, nevertheless that because of which the outrage is common in both is one thing and that because of which the glory is common is another, for he has from us the humanity that is less than the Father, and he has from the Father the Godhead that is equal with the Father’, and the most devout Illyrian and Palestinian bishops raised an objection, Theodoret the most devout bishop of Cyrrhus said, ‘There is a similar instance in the blessed Cyril which contains the words, “He became man without shedding what was his own, for he remained what he was; he is certainly conceived as one dwelling in another, that is, the divine nature in what is human.”’