D
Duane1966
Guest
That’s funny. Here I am on an official site of the Assyrian Church of the East, and what do I see? Bishop John of Persia attended the Council of Nicaea!The bishops in the Assyrian Empire learned about the Council of Nicea in 410. They only decided to accept it after holding a council of their own and determining that Nicea is correct and worthy of acceptance because its teachings “agree with the faith handed down from their fathers.” There’s absolutely no mention of Rome or “obeying the council because Rome says so.”
What does another Assyrian Church of the East site say? That it was natural for Constantine not to summon bishops from outside the Empire, since he viewed it as a domestic matter.325 A.D. First Ecumenical Council called by the Emperor Constantine in Nicaea; Bishop John of Persia attended and participated in the Council. The Council fixed the method of the reckoning of Holy Pascha for the entire church.
This fact, the ignorance of a not unimportant Church of the greatest of all Church controversies, will bear some examination. First, the fact must be admitted, explain it as we may, that the “Assyrian” Church did know nothing officially of the Nicene Council at the time of its assembling. Not only is there no reference to it in any of the nearly contemporary documents that remain to us (for they, with one important exception, are acta martyrum where such reference might naturally not be found); but the one work of theology (properly so called) that remains to us from the period, is obviously the work of a man who had no knowledge of the council, or what was debated therein. The author in question, of course, is Afraat, the “Sage of Persia.” Writing about fifteen years after the council (337-346) he uses expressions, and formulates a creed56 in a fashion that one may fairly say would have been impossible to a man who had heard of the rights and wrongs of the great controversy that was then agitating “the West,” no matter which side he took in it.
The Church of “the East” was not asked to accept Nicaea, or its doctrines, until eighty-five years later, when it frankly and fully accepted both the council and its creed. **Individual bishops may have (must have)**57 known of the fact, but not the auto-cephalous Church as such.
The most probable explanation of the phenomenon is as follows. Constantine regarded the council as an “imperial affair.” In the whole controversy, it was the peace of the Empire that he saw endangered, not the vital truth of Christianity; and the council was summoned to guard the first, by determining the second. Under these circumstances, it was natural that he should not summon bishops from outside the empire to settle a domestic matter. The Emperor was, of course, aware of the existence of the Church in Persia, and took an interest (too much interest, perhaps) in its fortunes; but in the matter of the council he seems to have regarded it as outside his purview. So the synod met, and the “Easterns” were not represented to it.
A few years elapsed, and the rise of the great persecution protected them (at a frightful cost) from the weary controversy that followed.
Just because they were asked to accept something in 410 does not mean that it was not known before then.It is a fact, however, that one of the greatest of “Assyrian” saints, and the holder of one of the most important metropolitical sees of later “Assyrian” history, was undoubtedly present at Nicaea. James of Nisibis certainly, and Ephraim Syrus his deacon probably, were at the council; but they were there as representatives, not of a see in the Persian Empire, but of one in the Roman.
Can you show me that the bishops had no awareness of it from day 1, with links?If Peter’s divine authority as head of the church was understood from day 1, then why did bishops outside of the Roman Empire have absolutely no awareness of this?
Can you show me that they had no awareness whatsoever, with links?When papal legates reached India in the 16th century, the Indian bishops, who had been there since the second century, had no awareness of a papacy or supreme bishop of any sort whatsoever.
What part does this statement play in your premise that the East had not heard of Peter’s divine authority?The papal legates used violence to make some of the Indian church submit, but not all did
To be continued…