In the year 341, approximately 90 bishops of the Eastern Church met in a
Council of Antioch, formally presided over by bishop Flacillus of
Antioch. Other leaders of this council included
Eusebius of Nicomedia, now bishop of Constantinople, and
Acacius of Caesarea, who become bishop of
Caesarea in 340. The Council produced four documents. The second is the most important and is known as the Dedication Creed because the Council met at the celebration of the dedication of a new church built by
Constantius II.
Purpose of the Council The Council met to discuss the decisions of the
Council of Rome of the previous year (340), and the letter written to the Eusebians by Julius, Bishop of Rome, earlier in 341, after that council. That Council of Rome had vindicated Athanasius and Marcellus. Both of them were previously condemned at councils of the Eastern Church; Athanasius in 335 for violence against the Melitians in his see and Marcellus some time earlier for Sabellianism. Their vindication, therefore, caused significant tension between the East and West. That tension was heightened by the letter that Julius, the bishop of Rome, after that council wrote to the Eastern Church. In that letter, he accused the East of Arianism, meaning, being followers of Arius’ already discredited theology.
An Eastern Council, like Nicaea Both the Dedication Council and the Nicene Council of 325 were essentially councils of the Eastern Church. The Dedication Council consisted exclusively of bishops from the Eastern part of the Empire and represented the view of the ordinary educated Eastern bishop. Similarly, the vast majority of the bishops attending Nicaea were from the East:“Very few Western bishops took the trouble to attend the Council (of Nicaea). The Eastern Church was always the pioneer and leader in theological movements in the early Church. ... The Westerners at the Council represented a tiny minority.”However, although the two meetings were only 16 years apart and represented the same constituencies, there are significant differences between the creeds produced at the two councils:
No Mention of Ousia or Homoousios One difference is that, while Nicaea describes the Son using the terms ousia and homoousios, and while these terms are viewed today as a crucial part of that Creed, these terms are absent from the Dedication Creed. The reason is that, soon after Nicaea, these terms fell out of the Controversy. For more than twenty years, nobody mentioned it; not even Athanasius:"What is conventionally regarded as the key-word in the Creed homoousion, falls completely out of the controversy very shortly after the Council of Nicaea and is not heard of for over twenty years.” (Hanson Lecture) “Even Athanasius for about twenty years after Nicaea is strangely silent about this adjective (
homoousios) which had been formally adopted into the creed of the Church in 325.”The Nicene Creed and the term homoousios were only brought back into the Controversy in the 350s by Athanasius:“Athanasius’ decision to make Nicaea and
homoousios central to his theology has its origins in the shifting climate of the 350s.” (Ayres, p. 144).Both the Dedication Council and the
Council of Serdica, two years later, were held during the period that nobody mentioned the Nicene Creed or the term homoousios. For that reason, these councils do not defend or attack the term
homoousios. It simply was not an issue.
Anti-Sabellian But the most significant difference between the two creeds is that, while the Nicene Creed is pro-Sabellian, the Dedication Creed is anti-Sabellian. Eminent recent scholars confirm the pro-Sabellian nature of the Nicene Creed: • RPC Hanson: “If we are to take the creed N at its face value, the [Sabellian] theology of Eustathius and Marcellus was the theology which triumphed at Nicaea. That creed admits the possibility of only
one ousia and one hypostasis. This was the hallmark of the theology of these two men.” (Hanson, p. 235) • Lewis Ayres: After Nicaea, the Creed was associated “with the theology of Marcellus of Ancyra. … The language of that creed seemed to offer no prophylactic (prevention) against Marcellan doctrine, and increasingly came to be seen as implying such doctrine.” (Ayres, p. 96, 97) • Manlio Simonetti: “Simonetti estimates the Nicene Council as a temporary alliance for the defeat of Arianism between the tradition of Alexandria led by Alexander and ‘Asiatic’ circles (i.e. Eustathius, Marcellus) whose thought was at the opposite pole to that of Arius. … Alexander … accepted virtual Sabellianism in order to ensure the defeat of Arianism. … The ‘Asiatics’ … were able to include in N a hint of opposition to the three
hypostases theory.” (Hanson, p. 171) The following are indications in the Creed of its pro-Sabellian tendency: • Before, during, and after Nicaea, the term homoousios was used mainly by Sabellians. Before Bicaea, Sabellius himself, the Libyan Sabellians, Dionysius of Rome, and
Paul of Samosata used it to say that Father and Son are one single Person. In the year 268, about 70 years before the Dedication Council, another council in the same city (Antioch) had already condemned both the Sabellianism of Paul of Samosata and the term homoousios. • One of the anathemas seems to say that the Father and Son are one single hypostasis, which is the view that the Father, Son, and Spirit are one single Person with one single mind, which, as Hanson said, is the hallmark of Sabellianism. This is not to say that the Nicene Creed is clearly Sabellian, but at the least, it can be said that it does not exclude Sabellianism. Elsewhere, Hanson describes it as "a drawn battle." Note that these authors associate Sabellianism with one-hypostasis theology. Sabellianism is one form of one-hypostasis theology, which is the teaching that Father, Son, and Spirit are one single hypostasis or Person with one single Mind. Monarchianism and Modalism are other one-hypostasis theologies. The main dividing line in the fourth-century Controversy was between one- and three-hypostasis theologies. In contrast to Nicaea, the Dedication Creed explicitly opposes Sabellianism. Its main purpose is to oppose Sabellinism. In contrast to the single hypostasis of Sabellianism, the Dedication Creed explicitly asserts that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are “three in hypostasis but one in agreement (
συμφωνία)” (Ayres, p. 118) “One in agreement” indicates the existence of three distinct ‘Minds’.
Why do these creeds differ so much? So, why is the Nicene Creed pro-Sabellian while the Dedication Creed is anti-Sabellian?
The Nicene Creed The Nicene Creed is pro-Sabellian because “Constantine took part in the Council of Nicaea and ensured that it reached the kind of conclusion which he thought best.” (Hanson, p. 850) For that purpose, the emperor took Alexander's part in his dispute with Arius. However, at Nicaea, Alexander joined forces with the Sabellians Eustathius and Marcellus against the Eusebians. (Both Eustathius and Marcellus were later exiled for Sabellianism.) Consequently, the Sabellians were able to include in the Creed at least a hint of Sabellianism.
The Dedication Creed The Dedication Creed is anti-Sabellian because the main threat was the Sabellian one-hypostasis tendency of the Western Church, which can be illustrated in a number of ways: • Firstly, the Council of Rome vindicated Marcellus, a well-known Sabellian. “That Julius and later the Westerners at Sardica should have declared him (Marcellus) orthodox was bound to appear to the Eastern theologians to be a condoning of Sabellianism.” (Hanson Lecture) • Secondly, the Council of Rome also vindicated Athanasius, who also maintained a one-hypostasis theology. In his theology, the Son is “in” the Father as the Father's only Wisdom and Word. Athanasius, therefore, taught that Father, Son, and Spirit are one single hypostasis (Person). • Thirdly, at the failed Council of Serdica in 343, the Western delegates explicitly formulated a one-hypostasis manifesto.
Anti-Arian Julius, the bishop of Rome, accused the Easterners of Arianism, meaning that they were followers of Arius’ already discredited theology. The Dedication Council denied this. The Easterners did not follow Arius. In fact, Arius did not leave a school of followers. Consequently:“’Arianism’ as a coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciples,
is a fantasy … based on the polemic of Nicene writers, above all Athanasius.”In response to Julius' accusation, the Dedication Creed explicitly anathematizes some key aspects of Arius’ theology. For example, the Creed anathematizes all who say: “that either time or occasion or age exists or did exist before the Son was begotten.” The following is an apt summary of the Dedication Creed:It "represents the nearest approach we can make to discovering the views of the ordinary educated Eastern bishop who was no admirer of the extreme views of Arius but who had been shocked and disturbed by the apparent Sabellianism of N [the Nicene Creed], and the insensitiveness of the Western Church to the threat to orthodoxy which this tendency represented." (Hanson, p. 290-1)
Other Teachings The Son is subordinate to the Father. The Dedication Creed asserts that the Son is subordinate to the Father. But subordination was to be expected because subordination was orthodoxy at the time. “Indeed, until Athanasius began writing, every single theologian, East and West, had postulated some form of Subordinationism.” In other words, the subordination in the Creed is not a concession to Arius' theology.
He is the image of the Father's substance. The Creed says that “the Son is 'the exact Image of the Godhead, the
ousia and the will and the power and the glory of the Father'.” In contrast to the Nicene Creed, which says that the Son is of the same ousia as the Father (homoousios), the phrase “exact image of the … ousia … of the Father” means that the Son is distinct from the substance of the Father. Later in the fourth century, in the mid-50s, after Athanasius had re-introduced the term homoousios into the Controversy, "image of the Father's substance" became the catchphrase of the
Homoiousians (meaning 'similar substance').
The Son is God. The Creed regards the Son as subordinate to the Father but also refers to the Son as “God” (theos) and as “God from God.” The reason is that the term theos is not equivalent to the modern word "God." While we use the term "God" only for the Almighty, there were many theoi in ancient Greek:"It must be understood that in the fourth century the word 'God'
(theos, deus) had not acquired the significance which in our twentieth-century world it has acquired … viz. the one and sole true God. The word could apply to many gradations of divinity.” (Hanson, p. 456)
The Fourth Creed The Fourth Creed of Antioch " was intended to function as a reconciling formula obnoxious to nobody and capable of being accepted by all.” It condemns both Marcellus and Arius. But otherwise, it leaves out all contentious issues, such as the words
ousia and homoousios and does not even address the crucial aspect of the number of hypostases in God.
Text of the Dedication Creed Four creeds were produced at this council; the Dedication Creed itself is the Second Creed of Antioch. The phrases 'God from God,' 'whole from whole', and similar ones in the Dedication Creed were intended to deny the idea that the Son was a piece of the father that had been broken off or separated. Arians rejected the idea of the Son as a piece of the Father, so this is another sense in which the Dedication Creed was friendly to Arians. However, Hanson considers the rejection of the idea of the Son as a piece of the Father to be an
Origenist doctrine rather than specifically an Arian one. The distinction of
hypostases within the Godhead is also reminiscent of
Origen, so that the Dedication Creed can be considered 'Origenist.' Hanson also finds a possible influence of
Asterius in the terminology of
hypostases 'agreeing' (συμφωνίαν), a phrase found in the known fragments of Asterius. The Dedication Creed was intended to replace the Nicene Creed. The Dedication Creed excluded the kind of Arianism originally proposed by and associated with
Arius himself. Because of this, Simonetti believes that by 341,
Eusebius of Nicomedia had shifted his views from his earlier support of Arius. On the other hand, the Dedication Creed resembled the doctrines taught by
Eusebius of Caesarea prior to the Arian controversy. Thus, Hanson concludes that the intellectual ancestors of the Dedication Creed are
Origen,
Asterius, and
Eusebius of Caesarea. ==The Macrostich - 344==