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josie_L
Guest
Sorry, Cavaradossi, he was held captive prior to the Second Council of Constantinople as well (Justinian was hoping to secure his condemnation of the Three chapters before the thought of convening a council arose), which would be altogether 10 years (including the time he spent in prison after the council convened and finished), whereupon he was RELEASED once he affirmed the decrees II Constantinople.Your timeline is wrong. Vigilius was held in captivity for around two years at the most after the Second Council of Constantinople, not for ten years, and was even held in captivity for at least one year after he had already recanted of his earlier decisions and approved of the Council.
Vigilius was being held captive during the wars in Rome (he was first arrested on November 22, 545 while saying mass at the church of St. Cecelia in Rome), that is, he was being help captive because he refused to bend to the emperor who he believed was denigrating/usurping his position as head of the Church “You may keep me in captivity, but the blessed Apostle Peter will never be your captive.” Many attempts were made prior to the council to affirm the condemnation of the Three Chapters, and although Vigilius did issue such a condemnation in a document entitled “Judicatum” in April 548, he had trouble convincing the West, therefore, he asked Justinian to withdraw the Judicatum pending a general council on the issue (wherein Justinian was given the promise that Vigilius would persuade the council to condemn the Three Chapters). The role of Vigilius in all this was plain, he was not to be usurped by an emperor, i.e., he had to the duty to preserve the independence of the Church (as well as his position in the Church). This is why he was held in captivity for so long.Vigilius’ goal was to secure military aid for the city of Rome. Justinian wished to condemn the three chapters, something which Vigilius agreed to do. However, when Justinian convened the Second Council of Constantinople some time in mid 553, Vigilius refused to participate, because Justinian in convening the council had breached an agreement between the two of them. Justinian proceeded to hold the council without Vigilius. Under pressure from the Council, Vigilius, with a small gathering of sixteen other bishops who supported his cause, drafted his document, the First Constitutum in which he defended the persons of Theodore of Mopsuestia and the writings of Theodoret and the Letter of Ibas, and forbade anybody from making a different judgment with the ‘authority of the Apostolic See’.
Upon the commencement of the Council, Vigilius decried the small representation of bishops from the Latin West, and the fact that Justinian refused to permit him to hold a preliminary synod in Italy, on those grounds he refused to attend the council. It was at this time that Vigilius, of his own authority, issued,Upon receiving this *Constitutum *, Justinian presented to the Council several letters in which Vigilius had privately agreed to condemn the Three Chapters, causing Vigilius to appear duplicitous, sealing Vigilius’ fate. They struck him from the diptychs in the seventh session and in the eighth session made a judgment that the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia and the Three Chapters should all be anathematized, along with those who defended them. Vigilius was then held in captivity (some sources like the ones used for the Catholic Encyclopedia Article on the Second Council of Constantinople seem to indicate that he was sent into exile). On the eighth day of December in the year 533 wrote a letter to the Archbishop of Constantinople, Eutychus, in which he withdrew his First Constitutum. He then wrote a Second Constitutum, some time in February of 554, in which he promulgated the decisions of the council in the West (several sees in the West immediately went into schism upon receiving this Second Constitutum, claiming that Vigilius and the East had abandoned the true faith of Chalcedon). Only in the year 555 (over one year after approving of the Council’s decisions) was Vigilius allowed to return to Rome (but he died on the way home).
Constitutum which reaffirmed Chalcedon, condemned the works but not the person of Theodore of Mopsuestia, upheld Theodoret of Cyrrhus and Ibas of Edessa, condemned five heretical Nestorian propositions, and directed further discussion of the matter to cease. A power play between the emperor and Vigilius ensued, wherein, Vigilius was confined on the island of Proconnesos on a diet of bread and water (including the pope`s staff). Finally, in February of 554 (not 555) did Vigilius ratify the decrees of II Constantinople, and he was released (although he was not sent to Italy right away in substantial part because he was helping Justinian in the administrative planning of his new province, Italy). He died (enroute to Rome) in Sicily on the 7th of June 555.They (actually Justinian) imprisoned him (less than) one year after approving the conciliar decisions of II Constantinople because he refused to ratify the decisions until February 554. And it is proof that VigiliusIf they imprisoned/exiled Vigilius because they needed his approval, as you claim, then why did he remain imprisoned for one year after approving of the Council’s decisions? Furthermore, if imprisoning Vigilius is proof that they needed his approval, does that mean that they needed the approval of Nestorius, who was similarly exiled? And why did the council feel free to contradict the pope, who had declared in his First Constitutum that any declaration contrary to his would be nullified by the authority of the Apostolic See? Your interpretation of the Second Council of Constantinople leaves a few questions unanswered.
s approval was needed because Justinian himself understood who and what Vigilius stood for (recollect the quotes that I gave you concerning Justinians view) which never was applied to Nestorius (the patriarch of Constantinople). Furthermore, Justinian being emperor and caesaropapism being rampant in the East could have in part played a role in contradicting the pope or rather it was Justinians release of Vigiliuss earlier promise to secure condemnation of the Three Chapters by the council (I mentioned it earlier) that allowed them to move forward. Either way, Justinian kept Vigilius in captivity up until he, Vigilius, confirmed his condemnation of the Three Chapters, this after the Council of Constantinople II had condemned it.