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Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon

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Council creating the Christian Church of the East (410)
Ruined palace at Ctesiphon
For the council held in 359, see Council of Seleucia.

The Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, also called the Council of Mar Isaac, met in AD 410 in Seleucia-Ctesiphon, the capital of the Persian Sassanid Empire. Convoked by King Yazdegerd I (399–421), it organized the Christians of his empire into a single structured Church, which became known as the Church of the East. It is often compared to Constantine's Edict of Milan, approximately a century earlier. The events of this council are documented in the Synodicon Orientale.

Previously, the Persian state persecuted those Christians, fearing that their loyalty lay with the Roman Empire, which under Constantine the Great had legalized Christianity and with which the Sassanid Empire was repeatedly at war. Persecution had been most severe under Shapur II (309–379). Shapur I (241–272), the second shahinshah (king of kings) of the Sasanian dynasty had advanced as far as Antioch in 260, and both he and Shapur II deported eastward much of the population of the invaded territories to strengthen the Persian economy.

Yazdegerd I adopted a policy of engagement with the Roman Emperor in Constantinople and with the Christian minority in his own empire. In 409, he allowed the Christians to worship openly and to have churches. Zoroastrianism continued to be the official religion, and apostasy from it was punishable by death.

At the suggestion of a bishop from the Roman side of the frontier, a council of bishops was called to organize the Persian Christians as a single Church, with a single bishop in each diocese and with one bishop to act as their head collectively throughout his empire (See Maruthas of Martyropolis).

Establishment of the Church of the East

The Council, presided over by Mar Isaac, archbishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, arranged the Persian Church in ecclesiastical provinces, with the bishops in each province grouped around a metropolitan, the arrangement approved by the First Council of Nicaea (325) in the civil provinces of the Roman Empire.

The archbishop of Seleucia-Ctesiphon, the capital city, who is referred to in the acts of the council as the Grand Metropolitan, was to hold authority throughout the Church and for that reason was called (probably only from a later date) the Catholicos.

The 410 council set up six provinces, which became known as the interior provinces, according as other provinces, referred to as exterior provinces, were recognized further afield within the empire and even beyond it.

In order of precedence, the six interior provinces were:

  1. Seleucia-Ctesiphon, in what is now central Iraq
  2. Beth Lapat, in western Iran
  3. Nisibis, on the border between today's Turkey and Iraq
  4. Prat de Maishan, Basra, southern Iraq
  5. Arbela, Erbil, Kurdistan region of Iraq
  6. Karka de Beth Slokh, Kirkuk, northeastern Iraq

The council marked a major milestone in the history of the Church of the East and of Christianity in Asia in general.

Uncertain early example of the Filioque

The synod also declared its adherence to the decisions of the First Council of Nicaea and adopted a form of the Nicene Creed. The creed is found in two different recensions, each of which is recorded in much later manuscripts. The first recension is East Syriac and comes from Church of the East sources. The second is West Syriac and comes from Syriac Orthodox sources. The East Syriac recension contains: "And in the Holy Spirit" while the West Syriac recension contains: "And we confess the living and Holy Spirit, the living Paraclete, who is from the Father and the Son". There has long been controversy among scholars about the relation between the two texts. The development of the Persian creed is difficult to trace, since there were several recensions prior to 410. The first recension is textually closer to the original Nicene Creed. On the other hand, some scholars claim that the second represents the original text of the Seleucia-Ctesiphon Council, and that the words "who is from the Father and the Son" in the second recension are the earliest example of the Filioque clause.

See also

References

  1. MTS, Roselin Aravackal (2014-01-01). "THE HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF THE PATRIARCHATE IN THE CHURCH OF THE EAST OVER ITS FIRST FOUR NATIONAL SYNODS". Asian Horizons. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  2. Wilhelm Baum, Dietmar W. Winkler, The Church of the East: A Concise History (Routledge 2003), pp. 7−14
  3. Wigram 1910, p. 89 questionable source.
  4. Canon XXI of the council
  5. Baum and Winkler (2003), pp. 15-16
  6. Jean-Baptiste Chabot, Synodicon orientale ou Recueil de synodes nestoriens (Paris 1902), pp. 271-273
  7. T.J. Lamy, "Le concile tenu à Séleucie-Ctésiphon en 410" in Compte rendu du troisième Congrès scientifique international des catholiques tenu à Bruxelles du 5 au huit septembre 1894. Deuxième section : Sciences religeuses (Brussels 1895), pp. 250-276
  8. Wigram 1910, pp. 97–100; Williams 2013, p. 390.
  9. Brock 1985, p. 133; Panicker 2002, p. 58.
  10. ^ Brock 1985, p. 133, quoted in Panicker (2002, pp. 58–59)
  11. Price & Gaddis 2005, p. 193: "We acknowledge the living and holy Spirit, the living Paraclete, who from the Father and the Son."
  12. Williams 2013, p. 388.
  13. Williams 2013, pp. 388, 390; Price & Gaddis 2005, p. 193.

Sources

Ecumenical councils
First seven ecumenical councils
Recognized by the
Catholic Church
Recognized by the
Eastern Orthodox Church
Recognized by the
Oriental Orthodox Church
Recognized by the
Church of the East
See also
* Ecumenical status disputed within the Eastern Orthodox Church.
  1. Even though the Council was moved to Ferrara in 1438 and later to Florence, some bishops refused to move and remained in a parallel Council at Basel.
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