Q. What is different in the 5th from the 4th E.C.?
Many changes occurred to refine the Christology in those seven councils.
1 - Nicaea in 325 - The Son is God is consubstantial with the Father
2 - Const. I - 381 - The Holy Ghost is God
Three distinct schools of thought: the term homoousios (the Son is of the same substance as the Father), the term homoiousios (the Son is of like/similar substance to the Father), the term anomoiousios (the Son is of a substance dissimilar to the Father).
3 - Ephesus in 431 - deposed Nestorius and declared that it was appropriate to use Theotokos to describe the Virgin Mary.
4 - Chalcedon 451 - two natures of Christ
5 - Const. II, 544 - Monophysite direction: Council accepted henosis kath’hypostasin (hypostatic union), rejecting henosis kata physin (a union of natures), which was different than Chalcedon. kenosis = self-emptying (Cyril of Alexandria) – “One of the Trinity suffered in the flesh”, was established. (Used Cyril’s third letter to Nestorius, not admitted at Chalcedon) ** Thomas Aquinas also ** but terminology became later, strict Chalcedonian while respecting the mia physis forumula.
6 - Const. III, 680, there are two wills of Christ
7 - Const. IIII, true humanity of Christ affirmed
“…go in order to defend the Infallibility of the Papacy.”
I am saying that this is not an issue of infallibility. What I have shown is that in the modern definition of the infallibility of the Church from Vatican I, what happened at the time of
Vigilius would not be a case of infallibility. You are the one that brought up infallibility so I thought I needed to post something on it to correct your misunderstanding of what it means.
This statement of yours is untrue, since that is not what I posted: “Besides have you forgotten that YOU said before that the reason for the support of the Western Bishops to the Three Chapters was because of language barrier?”
Go back and read it in post #44: “2. Catholic theologians decided that some of the writings conclusions were based upon language misunderstandings.”
You wrote that now I say: “…that the reason for the support of the Western Bishops to the Three Chapters was …because it was composed in a very particular way by the Fathers of the 5th e.c. which it was different from the conclusion of Chalcedon!”
Yes, and before also, as stated in the Catholic Encyclopedia:
“Both Ibas and Theodoret had been deprived of their bishoprics by heretics, and had been restored by the Holy See and the Council of Chalcedon on anathematizing Nestorius. Yet the council had their writings before it, and, in the case of the epistle of Ibas, things were said which could easily be construed into an approval of it. All this made the condemnation look like an oblique blow at St. Leo and Chalcedon. The matter was further complicated by the fact that the Latins, Vigilius among them, were for the most part ignorant of Greek and therefore unable to judge the incriminated writings for themselves. Pelagius II in his third epistle to Elias, probably drawn up by St. Gregory the Great, ascribes all the trouble to this ignorance. All they had to go upon was the general attitude of the Fathers of Chalcedon.”
Regarding: “To be
ex cathedra it must be defined, and it must be a dogma, neither of which was the case here with any defense of the Three Chapters. Also if there was a definiton it could be not apart from, or opposed to, or set over against the entire Church.”
You wrote: “… According to you and to Pope Vigilius it was defined by the 4th E.C., so it must have been an ex-cathedra because he had in mind the definition of the 4th E.C.”
It was not a dogma to not condemn the Three Chapters; Chalcedon did not do so either. Nestorianism was rejected at Ephesus, and Vigilius always stated the he had the faith of Ephesus and Chalcedon.
It seems that you do not understand how to apply the current definition to a historical situation. It is not to be assumed that the dogma of infallibility was defined back then. Not condemning the Three Chapters is not the same matter as a definition of dogma.