The forms of monophysism were numerous, and included the following: •
Acephali were monophysites who in 482 broke away from
Peter III of Alexandria who made an agreement with
Acacius of Constantinople, sanctioned by Emperor
Zeno with his
Henotikon edict that condemned both Nestorius and Eutyches, as the Council of Chalcedon had done, but ignored that council's decree on the two natures of Christ. They saw this as a betrayal of S. Cyril's use of "mia physis" and refused to be subject to the Chalcedonian Patriarch of Alexandria, preferring to be instead ecclesiastically (). For this, they were known as or . •
Agnoetae, Themistians or Agnosticists, founded by Themistius Calonymus around 534, held that the nature of Jesus Christ, although divine, was like other men's in all respects, including limited knowledge. They must be distinguished from a fourth-century group called by the same name, who denied that God knew the past and the future. •
Aphthartodocetae,
Phantasiasts or, after their leader
Julian of Halicarnassus, Julianists believed "that the body of Christ, from the very moment of his conception, was incorruptible, immortal and impassible, as it was after the resurrection, and held that the suffering and death on the cross was a miracle contrary to the normal conditions of Christ's humanity". Emperor
Justinian I wished to have this teaching adopted as orthodox, but died before he could put his plans into effect. •
Apollinarians or Apollinarists, named after
Apollinaris of Laodicea (who died in 390) proposed that Jesus had a normal human body but had a divine mind instead of a regular human
soul. This teaching was condemned by the
First Council of Constantinople (381) and died out within a few decades. Cyril of Alexandria declared it a mad proposal. •
Docetists, not all of whom were monophysites, held that Jesus had no human nature: his humanity was only a phantasm, which, united with the impassible, immaterial divine nature, could not really suffer and die. •
Eutychians taught that Jesus had only one nature, a union of the divine and human that is not an even compound, since what is divine is infinitely larger than what is human: the humanity is absorbed by and transmuted into the divinity, as a drop of honey, mixing with the water of the sea, vanishes. The body of Christ, thus transmuted, is not consubstantial
homoousios with humankind. In contrast to Severians, who are called verbal monophysites, Eutychianists are called real or ontological monophysites, and their teaching is "an extreme form of the monophysite heresy that emphasizes the exclusive prevalence of the divinity in Christ". •
Tritheists, a group of sixth-century monophysites said to have been founded by a monophysite named John Ascunages of Antioch. Their principal writer was
John Philoponus, who taught that the common nature of Father, Son and Holy Spirit is an abstraction of their distinct individual natures. • The
Oriental Orthodox, or
Severians, accept the reality of Christ's human nature to the extent of insisting that his body was capable of corruption, but argue that, since a single person has a single nature and Christ is one person, not two, he has only a single nature. Agreeing in substance, though not in words, with the Definition of Chalcedon, they are called "verbal monophysites" by some
Eastern Orthodox. The Oriental Orthodox reject the label of monophysitism and consider monophysitism a heresy, preferring to label their
non-Chalcedonian beliefs as
miaphysitism. ==Verbal monophysitism==