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    (Published in The Greek Australian VEMA, September 2005)

    Nestorianism:Challenges to the Faith in Jesus Christ

    Introductory Remarks

    In the fifth century yet another extensive and complicated controversy

    developed over the person and nature of Jesus Christ. Named Nestorianism after its

    chief protagonist Nestorius, this heresy posed a grave danger to the Church since it

    seriously came to question the divinity of the historical person Jesus. Formerly a

    monk and a priest of the Church in Constantinople, Nestorius also ascended to theEpiscopal throne, becoming Patriarch of that city in 428.1 In wanting to stress the

    humanity of Christ, Nestorius went to the opposite extreme of Apollinarius (analysed

    in the last issue ofVEMA) and taught that in the person ofJesus Christ there were

    two natures and two persons. That is to say, unlike Apollinarianism which had

    denied the presence of a human soul in Christ and thereby failed to recognize

    Christ's full humanity, Nestorianism came to stress the humanity of Jesus Christ to

    such an extent that it ultimately failed to recognize the divinity of Jesus Christ.

    As we shall see, Nestorius' theology came to be questioned by the Church as

    a whole when he tried to put as stop to the title 'Theotokos' being used for the Virgin

    Mary since this term was also a key word for the person of the incarnate Christ. For a

    long time, in popular piety the Virgin Mary was believed to be Theotokos or ' God-

    bearer'. However, Nestorius falsely claimed that it was more correct to say that the

    Virgin Mary gave birth to a mere man called Christ and so His mother could be called

    'Anthropotokos' (bearer of a human being) or at best 'Christotokos' (Christ bearer).

    Reflecting back on this, one could say that Nestorius' Christology was one-sided

    since, in so far as it emphasized the distinction between the divine and human

    elements to such an extent it failed to account for the unity ofChrist. And so the

    Church had to respond so as to safeguard not only the natural distinction in Christ

    but also to uphold the person unity.

    Nestorius' position

    Nestorius, as his former teacherTheodore of Mopsuestia (d. 428), wanted

    to highlight the fullness of the human aspect of the person of Christ. And so, in

    1

    Strictly speaking the title 'Patriarch' was given to the bishops of Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria andAntioch only after the 3rd Ecumenical Council which met in Ephesus to condemn Nestorius and histeaching in 431.

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    their writings they underscored the significance of the human soul in Christ, of

    Christ's ignorance and His real temptations (both physical and spiritual) especially at

    Gethsemane.2 Indeed at a time when the humanity of Christ was being seriously

    questioned in the person of Apollinarius, Nestorius was able to assert not only the

    fullness of Christ's humanity, but also to allude to a human will in Christ as well,

    something which St Maximus the Confessor, several centuries later would fight to

    uphold against all odds.3 In Christ they saw not only a victory of God but also a real

    triumph in Christ's human nature since, at every step of Christ's life, they maintained,

    Jesus chose voluntarily to obey God His Father. That such a concern to emphasize

    the humanity of the person of Jesus was important is without question, yet the

    problem arose in theirarticulation of the unity. Indeed, it could be said that whilst

    Nestorius' language concerning the distinction between the divine and the human

    in Christ was to be commended, the terms used to explain the unity was indeed

    weak and deficient.

    Nestorius' main deficiency was his assertion that the unity between the divine

    and human in Christ was merely external. This basically meant that one could speak

    of the oneness of Christ only on an external level that is in terms of honour, will,

    value (i.e. that both were equally valid) and rank.4 It was not enough to say that

    Christ simply shared in all the divine qualities of the Logos as ifthe union was merely

    a moral one since this would lead Nestorius to assert that Christ only

    progressively became god-like. That is to say, Nestorius believed that it was only

    after a gradual process of intensification that the union between Christ and the Logos

    was radically transformed. In regards to this issue, Nestorius wrote: "But although he

    [Christ] had all those things which appertain unto our nature, anger and

    concupiscence and thoughts, and although also they increased with the progress and

    increase of every age [in His life], he stood firm in thoughts of obedience."5 From this

    it is clear that Nestorius believed that Christ was ultimately divine only because he

    always obeyed the divine Word of God. And in believing the union in Christ to be

    purely external, ultimately led Nestorius to the erroneous belief that the historicalperson, Christ, was, ontologically speaking [i.e in His actual being] sinful even

    though He never sinned.6 That is to say, for Nestorius, the man Jesus was potentially

    2 Indeed Nestorius' teacher, Theodore of Mopsuestia believed that Christ's spiritual conflicts would have

    been greater that his physical ones (cfDe Incarnatione 15, 3).3 Cf Demetrios Bathrellos, The Byzantine Christ(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 22-23.4 Cf Demetrios Bathrellos, The Byzantine Christ, 19.

    5 Nestorius, Bazaar of Heracleides, 63.

    6 For Nestorius and Theodore of Mopsuestia, the man Christ was not simply to be attributed as having

    the so called 'blameless passions' (adiableta pathe) such hunger, thirst, desire for sleep, tiredness, pain,

    sadness and agony, but sinful passions and therefore could be characterised as being sinful even ifChrist had not actualised any sinful actions. Indeed the fifth Ecumenical Council held in Constantinoplein 553 condemned in an outright manner the erroneous belief that: "Christ was troubled by the passions

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    sinful in precisely the same way that any other human being is said to be sinful, but

    that, in the case of Christ, He gradually overcame His sinfulness, through obedience,

    moral struggle and divine aid. In stating this however Nestorius went very close to

    admitting that Christ was sinful by not being able to declare his absolute sinlessness.

    Like Apollinarius, Nestorius was not able to understand that sinfulness, although a

    reality of the fallen human condition, did not go hand in hand with integral humanity

    as God had originally conceived and willed from all eternity.

    The unity between the divine and human in Christ was further weakened

    and, in the end destroyed by Nestorius in his insistence that the Logos not only

    assumed a human nature but also a human person or hypostasis as well. For

    Nestorius, Jesus was the man to whom the Son of God (the Logos) subsequently

    joined himself. That is to say, he did not wish to identify Jesus Christ with the

    divine Logos of God. He believed that the Son of God assumed and joined

    (synapheia) with the Son of Mary. That is to say, the real unity in Christ was not

    secured by Nestorius since he was not able to speak of the one person (or

    hypostasis) of Christ. This led to the suggestion that the divinity and humanity of

    Christ were to be conceived ultimately as two persons.7 In this regard, Nestorius

    argued: "the essence of the likeness of God and the essence of the likeness of the

    servant remain in their hypostases [i.e. the person of the divine Logos and the

    different person of the human Christ]".8 From this, it is clear that Nestorius went so

    far as to say that the distinguishing features between what was human and divine in

    Christ were the separate hypostases (or two centres of activity), in this way implying

    another person alongside the Logos. And even when he did speak of ' two natures,

    one person' this formula was not understood in a proper manner. For him, the term

    'one person' simply indicated the outward appearance of Jesus Christ who still had

    two natures and twoprosopa i.e. the Son of God and the Son of David were two

    distinct personal subjects. Nestorius' belief was contrary to the faith of the Church

    since, by 'person' the divine Son and Word of God who had become incarnate was

    not meant, but the unified activity of an alleged two persons (the divine Word and theperson of the human nature) in Christ.9

    of the soul and the desires of human flesh, was gradually separated from that which is inferior, andbecame better by his progress in good works and faultless through his way of life and.. became afterthe resurrection immutable in his thoughts and entirely without sin". (See Tanner (ed.), Decrees of theEcumenical Councils, i. 119, cited in Demetrios Bathrellos, The Byzantine Christ, 56).7 Even though it has to be admitted that Nestorius could also speak of one person, the fact that he also

    spoke of two persons clearly made him guilty of the theory of two Sons. Besides by the formula 'twonatures, one person' Nestorius did not mean the Logos of God.8

    Nestorius, Bazaar of Heracleides, 172.9 For Nestorius, the term 'Christ' did not imply the divine Word of God but the person to which the Son of

    God joined himself.

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    Church's Response

    The Church was most concerned to stress the fact that the One who was

    born of the Virgin Mary was no other than the divine Son of God the second

    person of the holy Trinity - in human flesh, something which Nestorius failed to

    perceive. For the fathers of the Church, the fullness of Christ's human nature was

    never questioned, yet, unlike Nestorius, they wanted to assert that it never existed in

    a separate human person because this would ultimately destroy its unity with the

    divine Word of God. And this would make Christ incapable of saving the world. Far

    from existing side by side or each having its own prosopon conjoined (synapheia) in

    an exterior or moral way, the two distinct natures were united in the one divine

    Logos of God. The man Jesus and the divine Word of God [the second person of

    the holy Trinity] were not joined together as two distinct entities forming a union since

    this could easily be misinterpreted as suggesting 'two sons'. That is to say, the

    person whom the Virgin Mary gave birth to was not merely a human person upon

    whom the Son of God came to be joined in a later stage, but was the very Son of

    God Himself. There could be no division between the Son of God begotten in

    eternally from God the Father and the Son of Man born in time from a human

    mother. And so it was not possible to speak of a 'connection' or 'conjunction'

    between God's Son and Mary's son since they were in fact one and the same

    person.

    Furthermore, the Church rightly believed that the unity of the one undivided

    reality of the Word of God, who existed as one unique personal divine subject of

    both His divine and human natures, was safeguarded in the title 'Theotokos' given to

    the Virgin Mary. Indeed it was Nestorius' rejection of this term, in favour of

    Christotokos which gave rise to his dispute with the Church since the One who was

    born, crucified and resurrected was God, the divine Word of God.10 The title

    'Theotokos' is a composite Greek word made up of the Greek words 'Theos'meaning

    God and the verb 'tikto' meaning 'to give birth to'. Therefore the title 'Theotokos'

    implies the one who gives birth to God. Both before and after this period, it was seenas a term central to the confession of the true Christian faith. The term was already in

    use for over two hundred years already employed by Origen11 (2nd century). In an

    even earlier statement, St Ignatius of Antioch had written: "Our God, Jesus Christ

    was conceived by Mary according to the economy."12St Gregory the Theologian

    10 Upon being enthroned Patriarch Nestorius wanted to rid the city of heresy. Ironically Nestorius

    supported his presbyter who preached a sermon on the Theotokos stating: "Let no one call MaryTheotokos, for Mary was but a woman and it was impossible that God should be born of a woman".(Cited in Georges Florovsky, The Byzantine Fathers of the Fifth Century, vol. 8 (Belmont:Bchervertriebsanstalt, 1987), 216.11PG 67.812B.

    12To the Ephesians 18, 2.

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    stated: "if anyone does not confess the Holy Virgin to be Theotokos, that

    person is estranged from God."13 It is clear that the Patristic tradition understood

    this appellation as possessing a precise Christological significance which

    safeguarded the personal unity in Jesus Christ.

    And so, in so far as the person to which Mary gave birth was the Son of God,

    divine with exactly the same divinity as God the Father, she could subsequently be

    called Theotokos that is the 'God-bearer' or the one who gives birth to God. By

    calling the Virgin Mary, Theotokos, the Church safeguarded and guaranteed the unity

    of Christ. In his second letter to Nestorius, St Cyril of Alexandria clearly indicated the

    position of the Church:

    When the fathers dared to call the Holy Virgin Theotokos, they did

    not mean by this that the nature of the Word or His Godhead

    originated from the Holy Virgin.14

    Clearly for St Cyril, the term Theotokos in no way implied that the Virgin Mary gave

    birth to the eternal Godhead or the nature of the Godhead. Rather, just as a mother

    in general gives birth not to a 'faceless nature' but to a person so too the person

    that the Virgin Mary had given birth to was none other than the divine second person

    of the Holy Trinity and in this sense could be called 'God-bearer'.15 Nestorius'

    theological blunder was that he failed to understand that the personal subject in the

    incarnate Christ was always the divine Word of God. Therefore if the term

    'Theotokos' were not accepted then there would be a danger of dividing the incarnate

    Christ into two personal subjects. And so, it was claimed that the title Theotokos was

    not an optional title of worship but a theological presupposition of true doctrine in

    Christ.

    Concluding Remarks

    In calling a council in Ephesus which came to be known as the 3rd Ecumenical

    Council in 431 to condemn Nestorianism, the Church had triumphed over this long

    and difficult dispute over the person of Christ. In calling the Virgin Mary 'Theotokos'the Church was able to affirm that it was God the Logos who was born of the Virgin

    and suffered on the cross. By no means did this mean however that it was the divine

    nature of the Son of God that was born or suffered on the cross. Rather it implied that

    13 Cited in Kallistos Ware, 'Mary Theotokos in the Orthodox Tradition', Epiphany Journal, 9.2(1989): 50.

    14Letter4.7.

    15 On this point Ware noted: "the key here to Cyril's standpoint is that he regards motherhood as a

    relationship between persons, not natures". Kallistos Ware, 'Mary Theotokos in the Orthodox Tradition',Epiphany Journal, 9.2(1989): 52. Florovsky also stated that "Christian thought moves always in the

    dimension of personalities not in the realm of general ideas. It apprehends the mystery of theIncarnation as a mystery of the Mother and Child". (Georges Florovsky, Creation and Redemption,Collected Works, vol. 3 (Massachusetts: Norland Publishing Company),179).

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    that the person who was born in order to save the world was no mere human being,

    but God Himself incarnate. Yet as we shall see this was short lived since the Church

    was soon to be confronted with yet another Christological dispute which came to be

    known as Monophysitism (the heresy that Christ had only one nature). Did Christ

    have two natures which remained without confusion or was He simply from two

    natures? That is to say, did Jesus Christ remain in two natures or was He from two

    natures? It was this question which would give rise to the convocation of the Council

    of Chalcedon in 451 which dealt with this important matter and in so doing gave the

    Church once and for all a clear and comprehensive teaching on the person and

    nature of Jesus Christ. Indeed for the Orthodox Church, the Chalcedon articulation

    regarding the person and nature of Jesus Christ marked both the most important

    declaration of Patristic Christology and the final and binding Christological synthesis.

    Philip Kariatlis

    Academic Secretary and Associate Lecturer

    St Andrews Greek Orthodox Theological College