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Council of Nicea I

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CANON II.
 
FORASMUCH as, either from necessity, or through the urgency of 
individuals, many things have been done contrary to the Ecclesiastical 
canon, so that men just converted from heathenism to the faith, and 
who have been instructed but a little while, are straightway brought to 
the spiritual layer, and as soon as they have been baptized, are 
advanced to the episcopate or the presbyterate, it has seemed right to 
us that for the time to come no such thing shall be done. For to the 
catechumen himself there is need of time and of a longer trial after 
baptism. For the apostolical saying is clear, "Not a novice; lest, being 
lifted up with pride, he fall into condemnation and the snare of the 
devil." But if, as time goes on, any sensual sin should be found out 
about the person, and he should be convicted by two or three 
witnesses, let him cease from the clerical office. And whoso shall 
transgress these[enactments] will imperil his own clerical position, as 
a person who presumes to disobey fie great Synod.
 
NOTES.
 
ANCIENT EPITOME OF CANON II.
 
Those who have come from the heathen shall not be immediately 
advanced to the presbyterate. For without a probation of some time a 
neophyte is of no advantage( kakos  ). But if after 
ordination it be found out that he had sinned previously, let him then 
be expelled from the clergy.
 
HEFELE.
It may be seen by the very text of this canon, that it was already 
forbidden to baptize, and to raise to the episcopate or to the priesthood anyone who had only been a catechumen for a short time: this 
injunction is in fact contained in the eightieth(seventy-ninth) 
apostolical canon; and according to that, it would be older than the 
Council of Nicaea. There have been, nevertheless, certain cases in 
which, for urgent reasons, an exception has been made to the rule of 
the Council of Nicaea--for instance, that of S. Ambrose. The canon of 
Nicaea does not seem to allow such an exception, but it might be 
justified by the apostolical canon, which says, at the close: "It is not 
right that any one who has not yet been proved should be a teacher of 
others, unless by a peculiar divine grace." The expression of the canon 
of Nicaea,  yukikon    ti   
 amarthma  , is not easy to explain: some render it by 
the Latin words animale peccatam, believing that the Council has here 
especially in view sins of the flesh; but as Zonaras has said, all sins are  yukika    amarthmata  . We must then 
understand the passage in question to refer to a capital and very 
serious offence, as the penalty of deposition annexed to it points out.
 
These words have also given offence,  ei   
 de    proiontos    tou   
 krono  , n  ; that is to say, "It is 
necessary henceforward," etc., understanding that it is only those who 
have been too quickly ordained who are threatened with deposition in 
case they are guilty of crime; but the canon is framed, and ought to be 
understood, in a general manner: it applies to all other clergymen, but 
it appears also to point out that greater severity should be shown 
toward those who have been too quickly ordained.
 
Others have explained the passage in this manner: "If it shall become 
known that any one who has been too quickly ordained was guilty 
before his baptism of any serious offence, he ought to be deposed." 
This is the interpretation given by Gratian, but it must be confessed that such a translation does violence to the text. This is, I 
believe, the general sense of the canon, and of this passage in 
particular: "Henceforward no one shall be baptized or ordained 
quickly. As to those already in orders(without any distinction between 
those who have been ordained in due course and those who have been 
ordained too quickly), the rule is that they shall be de posed if they 
commit a serious offence. Those who are guilty of disobedience to this 
great Synod, either by allowing themselves to be ordained or even by 
ordaining others prematurely, are threatened with deposition ipso 
facto, and for this fault alone." We consider, in short, that the last 
words of the canon may be understood as well of the ordained as of the 
ordainer.
 
 



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