Early Christian Schisms - IV: Ephesus, the Robber Council, and Chalcedon - Extra History
The Council of
Ephesus meant to heal a rift between
Nestorius of Constantinople and
Cyril of Alexandria, but instead it set off a chain of ecumenical councils that disagreed with each other, excommunicated rivals, and ultimately led to more factions within the church.
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Disclaimer: This series is intended for students, to give them a broad overview of a complicated subject that has driven world history for centuries. Our story begins and focuses on the
Romane Empire.
A centuary after
Constantine, the
Emperor Theodosius II found himself wrapped up in yet more theological disputes. His chosen patriarch of
Constantinople, Archbishop
Nestorius, had angered many other church leaders with his teachings that Christ had separate human and divine natures. Cyril of Alexandria wrote to the
Pope in
Rome for support against Nestorius, and received permission to excommunicate him. Nestorius responded by having the emperor call an ecumenical council, at which he intended to excommunicate
Cyril. But Cyril acted first, declaring for the excommunication of Nestorius and forming a majority by pushing the council to begin early before the supporters of Nestorius could gather. When they did, they formed their own council and excommunicated Cyril right back, only to be excommunicated in turn by Cyril's
Council of Ephesus.
Theodosius II attempted to resolve this by calling a second council, but this time none of the
Western delegates had time to arrive and in their absence, monophysite leaders from the
East excommunicated Nestorius again and declared monophysitism the official doctrine of the church. Those who didn't get to participate called this the
Robbers Council and refused to acknowledge it. Then Theodosius II died, and this fight devolved onto his successor,
Marcian. Marcian called together the
Council of Chalcedon to rule on the previous councils, where it was finally decided that Christ had two unified natures, human and divine, and everyone who'd supported the Robbers Council should be excommunicated.
Instead of bringing Christians together under an orthodox theology, they split the faith as those who wouldn't accept their decisions continued to preach and believe their own doctrines and a multitude of
Christian sects became their own separate orders. Ultimately, these new denominations followed regional lines, which meant that different areas of the empire formed distinct cultural identities shaped in part by their faith, and these areas were less connected to Constantinople and became the first to split off as the empire weakened over the centuries.
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