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Council of Ephesus

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501 3,4 | evident that the word is a composite formed of Qeos = God, and 502 3,4 | delighting in the happy compositions of that language, called 503 3,4 | men and shall not rather con- ~215 ~fess that it was his 504 6 | Mercator. ~Quesnel, Dissert. de conc. Africanis in Pelag. causa 505 3,1 | the same manner also we conceive respecting his dying; for 506 3,4 | least so far as practice is concerned. ~209 ~(Hefele, Hist. of 507 6,1 | seventh, from which Beveridge concludes that he rejects the Canon 508 3,4 | Godhead and manhood), but in concreto (God and man). Christ. himself 509 6 | the Carthaginian conciliar condemnations of the Pelagian heresy to 510 6,1 | VIII., Seconde Partie. Condensed.) ~St. Epiphanius distinguishes 511 1 | before informing you of this; condescend, therefore, to unfold your 512 5 | the Apostolic See, who has condescended to send us as his executors 513 4 | the Rev. A. J. Mason. The Conditions of Our Lord's Life on Earth, 514 4 | Continued). (L. and C., Cone., Tom. III., Col. 503.) ~[ 515 1 | of by Cyril. "We have not confidently abstained from Communion 516 6,1 | have endured such great conflicts, by reason of which now 517 3,1 | that which is written, and conform our thoughts to their upright 518 6 | this way he and Cyril had confused everything, so that their 519 3,4 | irrelevant, and indicated some confusedness of thought: much would, 520 6,1 | shewn how both heresies were confuted by it, and having set forth 521 3,4 | truly assert that it was congruous to the measures of the kenosis, 522 3,4 | proceeded, as by addition, most congruously to the stature of the body; 523 6,1 | had done this thing, and conjuring our holy Synod that John 524 6,1 | patience his temerity might be conquered, we have reserved this to 525 1 | Council; and though he were conscious of no error in himself yet, 526 3,4 | ignore the fact that the consciousness of the Church rejected such 527 6,1 | the Euchologion. In the consecration of a Bishop, the Bishop 528 6 | Clerics who shall have consented to Celestine or Nestorius, 529 3,4 | is One, not [merely] in consequence of connection, but [also] 530 3,4 | according to this passage, consisted in this--in stature, real 531 4 | accept the expression as consistent with true piety. But if 532 6,1 | Protestants may reject consistently the authority of all councils; 533 3,3 | conjunction with God as consists in a unity(1) of dignity 534 3,1 | Does it also seem to be consonant to the faith set forth by 535 3,4 | See also Eusebius (Vit. Const., iij., 43); St. Cyril of 536 6,1 | sprang up in the time of Constance, although Theodoret does 537 5 | known. Let us shew them the constancy of our mind with that reverence 538 6,1 | reception was useless. That only constant prayer could drive out this 539 6,1 | contains the Nicene, or Constantinopolitan Creed, variously enlarged 540 3,4 | this being the case, it constitutes a strong argument in favour 541 6,1 | contrary to the ecclessiastical constitutions and the Canons of the Holy 542 3,4 | itself, admit of an orthodox construction; in one of the latest of 543 5 | the Ides of May, in the consulate of Bassus and Antiochus. ~ 544 6,1 | what other name this most contaminating heresy is called. And when 545 6,1 | came to us weeping, not contending with the aforenamed most 546 6 | Nestorius and his doctrine and contented itself with attacking St. 547 5 | let us do nothing out of contention, nothing out of vain glory: 548 4 | one would still seem to be contentious, we would say to him: "Go 549 1 | order to understand their contents, but, not to decide on their 550 3,4 | must be determined by the context in which it is used, and 551 5 | assemble, bearing in mind and continually watching over the Catholic 552 3,4 | manhood, in one Son, as still continuing without mingling; let him 553 3,4 | Mary h mhthr tou Qeou mou (Contr. Paul. Samos., Quaest. viij.); 554 6,1 | additional statement not being a contradiction of its truth, then (as Cardinal 555 6,1 | expanded, because fresh contradictions of the faith had emerged. 556 6,1 | need of fasting, nor of controlling lust by the precepts of 557 6 | Vossius, G. J., Histor. de controv. quas Pel. ejusque reliquioe 558 3,3 | the great and holy synod convened in Nice: for you have not 559 4 | mystery; therefore it was convenient that this anathematism should 560 6 | time for repentance and conversion, and to separate themselves 561 3,4 | by the Nestorians] to convey this meaning); and shall 562 5 | of course after your full conviction, the rest shall be added 563 5 | reverence will be fully convinced of the justice of the sentence, 564 3,4 | lacking in the ordinary copies, viz. "according as it is 565 3,4 | God" (paqhmata Qeou) (1 Ad Cor. 2), Ignatius of Antioch ( 566 6,1 | called "Enthusiasts" or "Corentes" because of the agitation 567 3,3 | holy Virgin brought forth corporally God made one with flesh 568 3,1 | This the declaration of the correct faith proclaims everywhere. 569 6 | Nicholas Hydruntinus, while correcting the name, still is of opinion 570 5 | assembly. And now again for the corroboration of the Catholic (kaqolikhs) 571 5 | 224 ~enemy of the truth, a corrupter of the faith, and as guilty 572 3,1 | as if tie had fallen into corruption (God forbid), but because 573 6,1 | Cappadocia with its wonted corruptions. Harmenopulus remarks that 574 6 | Zosys of Esbus, Sallust of Corycus in Cilicia, Hesychius of 575 3,4 | HEFELE. ~(Hist. of the Coucn., Vol. III., p. 7.) ~Theodore [ 576 6,1 | his resignation had been counted against the said Eustathins 577 Intro | Cyril, and Nestorius's Counter-anathematisms, with Notes. ~Excursus to 578 6 | him be discharged. ~How courageous the passing of this canon 579 2 | transactions, to go home, or to the court, or elsewhere. Moreover, 580 6,1 | from inexperience than from cowardice and sloth, your holiness 581 3,3 | Virgin Mother, he filled all creation as God, and was a fellow-ruler 582 4 | we invoke him who is no creature nor any common man, but 583 1 | least the Holy Council gives credence to Philip uttering these 584 6,1 | as a true and indubitable crime, induced the temerarious 585 6 | WHO MET AT EPHESUS. ~(1)~(Critical Annotations on the text 586 4 | also his answers to the criticisms of Theodoret, and to those 587 3,4 | a double and dissimilar cultus be attributed to each one, 588 3,1 | legontos enargws, k. t. l. ~Cum Salvator noster, etc. ~ 589 2 | afterwards come to Ephesus out of curiosity, so that disorder and confusion 590 6,1 | unexceptionable; and anything curious, after it, is not safe. 591 3,1 | whose months are full of cursing and bitterness, and who 592 1 | their signature, as was customary, should make plain and manifest 593 6 | by his soldiers, and even cutting off their supply of food, 594 6 | Neocaesarea, Theodoret of Cyrus, Apringius of Chalcedon, 595 6,1 | Their first writers were Dadoes, Sabas, Adelphus, Hermes, 596 6,1 | as they cause the greater damage, and particularly when they 597 3,4 | will be found in St. John Damascene's famous treatise De Fide 598 6 | Antioch in Syria, John of Damascus, Alexander of Apamea, Alexander 599 6 | Philip of Theodosia, and Daniel, and Dexianus, and Julian, 600 6,1 | accordance with the canons, they dared to bring what they had done 601 3,4 | his sermons, which Garnier dates on Sunday, December 14, 602 6,1 | might apologize for their dating acts, and if they had any 603 6 | by the Ephesine fathers dealt merely with the peculiar 604 5 | 219 ~And strangest of all, Dean Milman cites the Sentence 605 6,1 | Synod. We pray that you, dearly beloved t and most longed 606 6,1 | Bogomiles, so well known in the decadence of the Greek empire. ~DECREE 607 1 | possessed such influence, had deceived men's minds with such an 608 3,4 | Garnier dates on Sunday, December 14, 430, he grants that " 609 4 | ST. CYRIL. ~(Declaratio decima.) ~But I do not know how 610 1 | of the Council would be decisive and final. He adds, "those 611 3,1 | remaining what he was. This the declaration of the correct faith proclaims 612 6,1 | intermingled with various declarations. Nay, Photius himself is 613 1 | proceedings themselves will declare what that confirmation means. 614 6,1 | inexperience of affairs, declined to battle with the difficulties 615 1 | not only by words, but by deeds, of any since the birth 616 1 | INTRODUCTION.~(Bossuet, Def. Cler. Gall., Lib. vij., 617 3,4 | of Dionysius Exiguus is defective. ~PETAVIUS. ~Nestorius captiously 618 6 | in open opposition to the defenders of the orthodox faith; but, 619 3,1 | most religious Nestorius, defending the right faith. I think 620 5 | aside since the very cause defends itself. ~Let us look once 621 6,1 | he proved himself to be deficient in practical capacity, having 622 6,1 | holy and ecumenical Synod defines, that it shall be lawful 623 2 | Synod themselves should degenerate into violent disputes and 624 3,4 | the word (sarkikws) in no degree lessens the dignity of his 625 3,4 | her Virginem Deiparam et Deigenitricem."(1) In the passage to which 626 3,4 | imitation styled her Virginem Deiparam et Deigenitricem."(1) In 627 4 | beloved in whom my soul delighteth. I will put my Spirit upon 628 3,4 | in the Greek Church, who, delighting in the happy compositions 629 6,1 | Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Deliverer of all men, hath given us 630 6 | Paul, also a letter to Demetrius and his Libellus fidei ad 631 3,4 | possesses the power of expelling demons; let him be anathema. ~PETAVIUS. ~ 632 3,4 | an infant, he had made a demonstration of his wisdom worthy of 633 3,4 | which arose at the first denial of it by Anastasius [Nestorius' 634 6 | The last word commonly denotes either "an estate, a farm," 635 3,2 | subject in the words of Denziger, being the caption he gives 636 6,1 | hereafter shall there be any departure from the ancient custom. ~ 637 1 | of course suspended, and depended on the sentence of the Council. 638 6,1 | deposed, and proceeded to depose those who had deposed them. 639 3,3 | Spirit in him." Rather we deprecate the term of "junction" ( 640 6 | Fuchs, G. D., Bibliothek der Kirchenversammlungen. ~Horn, 641 6,1 | of the things proposed as deride to be prohibited, but only 642 6,1 | their head, and only not derided the glory of Christ, and 643 3,4 | Mary. All that every child derives from its Mother that God 644 6,1 | expelled, the Holy Spirit descended and gave visible and sensible 645 4 | thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him, the 646 6 | tumultuously (it was thus that he described what had happened). But 647 6 | reason Cyril and Memnon deserved to be deposed, because they 648 3,4 | that he has obtained the desig- ~214 ~nation of Only-begotten 649 3,4 | Church. And again, Theodore designates a merely external connection 650 6,1 | death, read the hearts and desires of man, the secrets of the 651 6 | introduce or offer it to persons desiring to turn to the acknowledgment 652 5 | reasonably your reverence is desirous of learning what has been 653 3,3 | days rose again, having despoiled hell. So although it is 654 5 | we should arrive at the destined place, as we had hoped, 655 3,4 | it again in the words: "Destroy this temple, and in three 656 6,1 | that they were hastening to destruction by such a course of action, 657 6 | needful that they who were detained from the holy Synod and 658 5 | likewise may ratify their determination. ~Theodotus, the bishop 659 6,1 | edikaiwsamen) that the determinations of your holiness concerning 660 6,1 | Christ. If, however, ye shall determine anything more favourable 661 6,1 | impieties, and others still more detestable. ~Their principal tenet 662 3,4 | testify."(3) (Cf. Origen in Deut. xxii., 23; vol. ij., p. 663 3,4 | gradually attaining their full development; and, on the other hand, 664 3,3 | faith, and followers of the devotion of the holy fathers. And 665 6 | Theodosia, and Daniel, and Dexianus, and Julian, and Cyril, 666 6 | Cyril, and Olympius, and Diegenes, Polius, Theophanes of Philadelphia, 667 4 | himself. Since those who think differently were again unreasonably 668 3,4 | measure of the body, and differing according to age. For it 669 6,1 | declined to battle with the difficulties which beset him, and in 670 3,4 | endeavoured to get rid of the difficulty, and he repeatedly says 671 5 | to our trust is no less dignified than that of handing it 672 6,1 | expound these things more diligently to others. ~NOTE ON THE 673 3,3 | is without quantity and dimension, and cannot have limits. ~ 674 6,1 | faith had emerged. After directing that both Creeds should 675 1 | order, give judgment that it disagreed from the Nicene Creed, and 676 1 | and doctrine of Cyril, but disapproves, too, the perverse dogma 677 6 | the heretic himself, and disapproving of what they looked upon 678 6 | was not unusual for those disciplined for their faults in one 679 6,1 | our own, we hastened to discover whether the aforenamed [ 680 6,1 | province, they ought to discuss all things by reference 681 3,4 | remember that the question I am discussing is not whether Mary can 682 6 | the sacred priesthood, but diseased members must certainly be 683 6,1 | of faith or new Creed, as dishonouring that old and venerable Creed," 684 3,4 | and another (two persons) disjunctively and partitively, to him 685 6 | they had given occasion to disorders, and had acted in opposition 686 6,1 | arrangement (dispositionem vel dispensationem). But should any question 687 3,4 | his Counter Anathematism] displays the hidden meaning of his 688 6,1 | his thought (which was so displeasing to God,) [a plan and thought] 689 1 | Patriarch John himself--were ill disposed to Cyril, and seemed to 690 6,1 | communion, and arrangement (dispositionem vel dispensationem). But 691 6 | that the clergy were to disregard the inhibition of Nestorian 692 6,1 | that of Nice. ~(Le Quien, Diss. Dam., n. 37.) ~In the Sixth 693 6 | Mar. Mercator. ~Quesnel, Dissert. de conc. Africanis in Pelag. 694 6 | Pelagiana. ~Garnier, J. Dissertat. in Pelag. in Opera Mar. 695 3,4 | adoration; lest if a double and dissimilar cultus be attributed to 696 4 | who think with him rashly dissolve the power of this mystery; 697 6,1 | that many from much greater distances arrived before him. ~Nevertheless 698 3,4 | consider the natures in their distinction, we should define the nature 699 3,4 | become afterwards the very distinctive marks and shibboleths of 700 6 | kwrion ("district"), may be distinguished as implying locality, extension, 701 6,1 | Condensed.) ~St. Epiphanius distinguishes two sorts of persons who 702 3,3 | from these mischievous and distorted dogmas, which you hold arid 703 6,1 | been chastised aright, all disturbance will cease, and the reverence 704 6,1 | canonically; but having been much disturbed, as he declares, by certain 705 3,3 | of two (ek duo) and they diverse, yet he has joined them 706 3,4 | scholar who can and will divest himself of theological bias, 707 5 | again at these words of our Doctor, which he uses with express 708 3,4 | rejected in later times by the doctors of the Church. And again, 709 1 | come, and chose to have his doors besieged with an armed force, 710 6,1 | innovates in nothing, nor doth he frame any new exposition 711 6 | intellect, but this seems quite doubtful. Pelagius's writings have 712 3,4 | My Lord and my God" was a doxology to the Father; and above 713 6,1 | or changed his travelling dress, he assembled those who 714 6,1 | before. For all by himself he drew up a paper which he called 715 3,3 | flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood. For we must not 716 6,1 | only constant prayer could drive out this demon. That when 717 4 | certain that something has dropped out here, most probably 718 3,3 | double, although of two (ek duo) and they diverse, yet he 719 3,4 | distinct entities (re ipsa duos) that is to say two persons 720 | during 721 6,1 | had even shaken off the dust of the journey, or changed 722 6 | his arrival, while still dusty from the journey, and at 723 3,3 | not just as he is said to dwell in the saints, but we define 724 6,1 | him birth, and from the dwelling-places of his fathers, we have 725 3,4 | the effect that "the Logos dwells in the man assumed as in 726 3,1 | conceive respecting his dying; for the Word of God is 727 6,1 | themselves from blame, and eager to satisfy the lovers of 728 3,4 | from orthodox many of the earliest Christian writers were, 729 1 | these almost all of the East--that is, of the Patriarchate 730 4 | by the Father; so he that eateth me shall live by me." Since 731 3,3 | of no reputation (kaqeis eauton eis kenwsin), was incarnate 732 6,1 | introduced contrary to the ecclessiastical constitutions and the Canons 733 6 | deposed, among them Julian of Eclanum. After this Pelagius and 734 3,4 | hold, that by way of an economical appropriation (kat oikeiwsin 735 6,1 | we also deemed it right (edikaiwsamen) that the determinations 736 6,1 | the Canons, and the Codex edited by Christopher Justellus 737 6,1 | Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1955), XIV, pp. 192-242 ~ 738 6 | divine service. All the efforts of John to appoint by force 739 6,1 | this it seems clear that egeran must mean "different," " 740 6 | Balsamon here makes an egregious mistake, for it was not 741 3,3 | assembled in Alexandria, of the Egyptian Province, Greeting in the 742 6,1 | Zonaras, and that of Elias Ehingerus Augustanus (so says Beveridge) 743 6,1 | necessary to have pity on the eider who, at so advanced an age, 744 6 | for its editors, are found eight canons of the Ephesine council, 745 6 | time by the Greeks, on the eighth day of April was kept the 746 5 | the letter (anagkaiws kate?eikqentes apo te twn kanonw?, kai 747 3,4 | Athanasius, estaurwmenon einai Qeon (Ep. ad Epictet., n. 748 3,3 | the same person (par' enos eirhsqai). ~For when as God he speaks 749 3,3 | reputation (kaqeis eauton eis kenwsin), was incarnate 750 6,1 | and some without sees and ejected [from their dioceses]? Or 751 3,4 | more than a close alliance, ejusdem generis, in the last analysis, 752 6 | Histor. de controv. quas Pel. ejusque reliquioe moverunt. ~230 ~ 753 5 | my brethren an executor (ekbibasths) of the aforesaid sentence, 754 6,1 | fault (orqws kai alhptws ekein), and in no point out of 755 3,4 | was not allowed to appear (ekfhnai), to avoid an aspect of 756 5 | many fold. For the vase of election tells us that it is not 757 Intro | III. ~Pope.--CELESTINE I. ~Elenchus. ~Historical Introduction. ~ 758 6,1 | Harmenopulus remarks that a certain Eleutherius of Paphlagonia had added 759 6,1 | and Zonaras, and that of Elias Ehingerus Augustanus (so 760 3,4 | the Evangelists, and by Elizabeth particularly the 'Mother 761 5 | limit set for Nestorius's emendation was long gone by, and much 762 6,1 | contradictions of the faith had emerged. After directing that both 763 6 | of Trajanopolis, Paul of Emissa, Polychronius of Heracleopolis, 764 3,3 | equality (kata ton ison en autw tropou). But being 765 6,1 | him, when he had been once en-trusted with the priestly care, 766 1 | this care to us, we may be enabled to confirm the judgment 767 6,1 | gave also occasion for the enacting of this, by arrogating to 768 3,1 | Tou Swthros hmwn legontos enargws, k. t. l. ~Cum Salvator 769 3,2 | xij. Anathematisms in his Enchiridion, under "Decrees of the Third 770 4 | anathema.] ~HEFELE. ~The part enclosed in brackets is certainly 771 1 | these true and magnificent encomiums, concerning the dignity 772 1 | faithless innovation, which endeavours to separate what Scripture 773 3,2 | possible doubt that the synod endorsed St. Cyril's teaching and 774 3,3 | became flesh, that is, a man endowed with a reasonable soul, 775 5 | there, and thus abruptly ends the account of this session.] ~ 776 3,4 | could waste their time and energies over such trivialities. 777 3,4 | that Jesus as man is only energized by the Word of God, and 778 6,1 | churches in Cyprus shall enjoy, without dispute or injury, 779 1 | gained so many bishops and enjoyed such favour with the younger 780 6,1 | are established in [the enjoyment of] an honest hope concerning 781 6,1 | that it did not hold the enlargement of the things proposed as 782 3,3 | to the same person (par' enos eirhsqai). ~For when as 783 6,1 | somehow suspected of being entangled in the meshes of Nestorius, 784 6,1 | are of the Messalian or Enthusiastic heresy, or suspected of 785 3,4 | Cyril. Such however, is an entire mistake. It was an old term 786 3,4 | there were two distinct entities (re ipsa duos) that is to 787 3,3 | for natural oneness (pros enwson Fusikhn). Nor yet according 788 6 | John, was considered as eo ipso having lost all jurisdiction. 789 5 | Scott on this verb and also epeigw) but the adverb which precedes 790 6,1 | EXCURSUS ON THE WORDS pistin eperan~It has been held by some 791 3,4 | Ignatius of Antioch (Ad Ephes., c. 1, and Ad Rom., 6) 792 3,4 | estaurwmenon einai Qeon (Ep. ad Epictet., n. 10, t. j., p. 726. 793 3,1 | Cyril., Opera, Tom. X.]; Epist. iv., co]. 43.) ~To the 794 6 | gave notice of this in his "epistola tractoria" to the bishops. 795 5 | twn kanonw?, kai ek ths epistolhs, k. t. h.) of our most holy 796 6,1 | Euchites" is the Greek equivalent of "Messalians" in Hebrew. 797 3,4 | mhthr tou Qeou are proper equivalents for Qeotokos. This point 798 1 | with him who cherishes such erroneous doctrine." And he adds, 799 6 | Laodicea Magna, Zosys of Esbus, Sallust of Corycus in Cilicia, 800 4 | When as his mother Mary was espoused to Joseph ... she was found 801 3,3 | through the identity of essence--"The image and impress and 802 3,4 | Person, while they remain essentially two Persons. ~IV. ~IF anyone 803 6 | commonly denotes either "an estate, a farm," or "a fastness, 804 3,4 | passibilis); and Athanasius, estaurwmenon einai Qeon (Ep. ad Epictet., 805 3,1 | are rashly talking of the estimation in which I hold your holiness, 806 6,1 | MESSALIANS WHO ARE ALSO CALLED EUCHETAE ANDENTHUSIASTS. ~(Found 807 6,1 | Messalians, that is the Euchetes or Enthusiasts, who were 808 6,1 | also called "Eustathians." "Euchites" is the Greek equivalent 809 6,1 | Constantinople, as may be seen in the Euchologion. In the consecration of 810 6,1 | Apollinarians, and Arians, and Eunomians, and therefore they have 811 6,1 | anchorite and was surnamed "the Eunuch," because he had mutilated 812 6,1 | be made in the cities of Europa, but according to the ancient 813 6,1 | They are also called "Eustathians." "Euchites" is the Greek 814 6,1 | counted against the said Eustathins instead of a [regular] indictment. 815 6 | Polychronius of Heracleopolis, Euthyrius of Tyana, Meletius of Neocaesarea, 816 6,1 | of God bishops, Zeno and Evagrius, of the Province of Cyprus, 817 6,1 | following the Apostolic and Evangelic doctrines, how should they 818 6 | own folly. ~On Saturday evening the Conciliabulum asked 819 5 | letters l of the holy and ever-to-be-mentioned-with-veneration Pope Coelestine, bishop 820 6,1 | Eustathius. For it is in evidence that he has been ordained 821 6 | doctrine of the inherent evilness of humanity he fell into 822 1 | rejoice at the conclusion of evils." The learned reader understands 823 6,1 | Council of Chalcedon is evinced by the fact that it immediately 824 3,4 | God. "Mother" expresses exactly the relation to the incarnate 825 3,4 | word Qeotokos cannot be exaggerated. ~208 ~I shall treat the 826 4 | Holy Ghost." So this exact examiner of the divine decrees has 827 3,4 | restrictions specified and with examples of its use. A brief but 828 5 | most blessed Peter, prince (exarkos) and head of the Apostles, 829 3,1 | we shall accomplish most excellently if we shall turn over the 830 6 | should not be compelled to exclude from the Church any one 831 5 | Synod that Nestorius be excluded from the episcopal dignity, 832 3,2 | at their first session to excommunicate Nestorius. Further there 833 3,4 | sense orthodox and quite excusable before a heresy arises, 834 3,3 | judgment, or what kind of excuse shall we find for thus keeping 835 4 | Carthage, was next read, excusing his absence; after the reading 836 1 | that you, with us, have executed this matter so faithfully 837 1 | commanded. He promulgates and executes the decrees of Celestine; 838 5 | being with my brethren an executor (ekbibasths) of the aforesaid 839 5 | condescended to send us as his executors of this business, and also 840 6,1 | views (fwnas) in his private exegesis, and after this a just sentence 841 5 | nobis anted statuta sunt, exequa tur). ~To the performing 842 6 | or his followers from the exercise of the priesthood, on account 843 1 | authority being most fully exercised. ~But Nestorius, bishop 844 1 | very time lives ever, and exercises judgment, in his successors." 845 6 | communion and made incapable of exercising his ministry; but he shall 846 5 | oppressed by falsehood. ~I exhort you, most blessed brethren, 847 6 | epitome the words, kai to exhs adioikhtos which are necessary 848 3,4 | Theodore was forced by the exigencies of his position to deny 849 5 | himself an alien and an exile from us, we following the 850 3,3 | the other, nor does God exist together with the other; 851 3,4 | Conciliar authority. (Pearson, Exp. of the Creed, Art. III., 852 6,1 | statements of the faith were expanded, because fresh contradictions 853 3,4 | wisdom worthy of God; but expanding it gradually and in proportion 854 5 | Apostolic Succession. For we are expected to walk according to the 855 5 | same thing, for this is expedient: let us do nothing out of 856 6,1 | demon. That when it was expelled, the Holy Spirit descended 857 3,4 | and possesses the power of expelling demons; let him be anathema. ~ 858 6,1 | and much burdened by the expense, and some even died. A great 859 3,4 | confusion of natures. ~St. Cyril explains that by sarkikws, carnaliter, 860 3,3 | everywhere [the books of your explanation were sent]. How can we any 861 6,1 | another" in the sense of mere explanatory additions to the already 862 6,1 | practice, are authoritative exponents of the Canon of Ephesus. 863 3,1 | those who believe in Christ, exposes a body to the unbearable 864 6,1 | blasphemies. ~His most impious expositions were likewise read, and 865 3,4 | Cyril. Since to such an extent only the human nature of 866 6,1 | nevertheless, through an extraordinary inexperience of affairs, 867 6 | canon was passed it was extremely difficult to say whether 868 3,3 | and Evangelists, who "were eye-witnesses, and ministers of the Word." 869 6,1 | Trinity with their bodily eyes. They affirmed that man 870 5 | pay heed to over strange fables, as he himself ordered. 871 3,3 | every tear from off all faces."(1) For this cause also 872 3,4 | unskilled in theology cannot fail to grasp the enormous difference 873 1 | he openly rejects this faithless innovation, which endeavours 874 6 | To these impudent and false accusations John replied 875 5 | of truth be oppressed by falsehood. ~I exhort you, most blessed 876 6 | appreciated by those who are familiar with the weight of the imperial 877 5 | our great father of the family, to whom alone assuredly 878 6 | denotes either "an estate, a farm," or "a fastness, a stronghold," 879 3,4 | Since he was incorporeal, he fashioned a body for himself of our 880 5 | that are perfect"), stand fast by the Catholic faith, and 881 6,1 | and knowledge. ~They never fasted, slept men and women together, 882 6,1 | afterwards there was no need of fasting, nor of controlling lust 883 6 | an estate, a farm," or "a fastness, a stronghold," or (as a 884 6 | revolutionary. ~LIGHTFOOT. ~(Apos. Fath. Ign. Ad Rom. i., Vol. II., 885 6 | those disciplined for their faults in one communion to go to 886 6,1 | are borne along, as by a favouring breeze, in things that they 887 6 | any bishop assents to or favours Nestorius, let him be discharged. ~ 888 6,1 | of the holy Synod as the Feast of the Holy Pentecost, all 889 3,2 | suggestion, but I cannot help feeling that in the remarks of the 890 1 | Nestorius: because men's feelings were divided, and the whole 891 6,1 | With our brethren and fellow-ministers, both Cyril the bishop and 892 3,3 | creation as God, and was a fellow-ruler with him who begat him, 893 5 | our most holy father and fellow-servant Coelestine, the Roman bishop, 894 3,4 | oil of gladness above thy fellows." For although he was the 895 3,4 | Christian in true moral fellowship with him--an alliance which 896 6,1 | opinions. For those who thus ferociously, and cruelly, and uncanonically 897 3,4 | shall not rather con- ~215 ~fess that it was his own Spirit 898 6 | church, and even on the festival of Pentecost had permitted 899 | few 900 5 | Christian Biography; nor by Ffoulkes in his article on the Council 901 6 | Demetrius and his Libellus fidei ad Innocentium. In the writings 902 1 | appeareth agreeable to the fight faith, whether the wrong 903 3,4 | of God (Theotocos). Only figuratively, per anaphoram, can she 904 3,4 | a full treatment of the figure of speech called the communicatio 905 3,4 | so in nature (naturaliter filius=Logos), while he (Since 906 6,1 | it seemed good that the filthy book of this heresy, which 907 6 | Celestine and Celestius. Whose finds at the end of the fourth 908 5 | of the Catholic Church. ~Firmus, the bishop of Caesarea 909 4 | and that he is become the first-begotten of the dead, for, as he 910 3,4 | the ground that they are fit to be applied to God: let 911 6 | decrees, had held a session five days before, had contested 912 3,4 | an external connection, a fixing together. and is therefore 913 4 | especially as condemnation, flagellation, thirst, the cross, death, 914 5 | yourselves and to the whole flock, over which the Holy Ghost 915 6,1 | Julian, and Praesidius, and Florus, and Marcellian, and Orontius, 916 6,1 | or Enthusiasts, who were flourishing in Pamphylia, or by what 917 1 | empire of the East seemed to fluctuate between Cyril and Nestorius. 918 5 | fruit uncorrupt and many fold. For the vase of election 919 6 | forced to lament their own folly. ~On Saturday evening the 920 6 | cutting off their supply of food, while he provided Nestorius 921 3,4 | quoted are a portion of a footnote, he says: "Wherefore from 922 5 | admonition of the Apostle, we are forbidden to add aught. For the office 923 6,1 | circumstances he had not foreseen, therefore, though fully 924 6,1 | dissolved marriages, that they foreswore and perjured themselves 925 5 | down even to to-day and forever both lives and judges in 926 6 | clergymen, they shall absolutely forfeit their office; and, if laymen, 927 6,1 | ecclesiastical canons, and forgetting that they were hastening 928 3,2 | which hereafter follow, was formally approved at the Council 929 6 | Metropolitan of a Province, forsaking the holy and Ecumenical 930 6,1 | he thought that when that foundation-less and most unjust reviling 931 6 | pure form. There are fourteen books on the Epistles of 932 6 | St. Augustine are found fragments of Pelagius's writings on 933 6,1 | in nothing, nor doth he frame any new exposition of faith, 934 3,4 | and in another place he frankly confesses that he did so 935 6,1 | Council, whether out of friendship to Nestorius, or because 936 6,1 | are wont to rush to such frightful and most wicked things, 937 5 | Apostles is assigned, may find fruit uncorrupt and many fold. 938 6 | Nestorius and made many fruitless attempts to induce him to 939 6 | the place of Memnon were frustrated by the opposition of the 940 3,2 | looked upon as the very fulcrum on which the whole matter 941 6 | dismissed from all sacerdotal functions, as the originators of the 942 6,1 | them be anathematized. ~Furthermore those convicted of this 943 3,3 | But being made one kata fusin,(1) and not converted into 944 4 | These are the sentiments (fwnai) of all of us, these are 945 1 | appearance of piety, had gained so many bishops and enjoyed 946 3,3 | the marriage in Cana of Galilee, with his holy Apostles 947 1 | INTRODUCTION.~(Bossuet, Def. Cler. Gall., Lib. vij., Cap. ix. et 948 3,2 | Jesuit Petavius and the Gallican Tillemont in thinking them 949 6,1 | the glory of Christ, and gathering as a college to himself, 950 3,4 | physician, of flesh and spirit, generate and ingenerate, God in man, 951 3,4 | close alliance, ejusdem generis, in the last analysis, with 952 4 | bring forth judgment to the Gentiles." This testimony the Evangelist 953 6 | required the members of the genuine Synod, in writing, no longer 954 3,4 | Christ. he endeavoured to get rid of the difficulty, and 955 3,4 | disciples did, as a kind of gift (beneficii loco). ~The Orientals 956 5 | calumny. Dear Brethren, gird ye with the armour of God. 957 3,4 | anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows." For 958 3,4 | Emmanuel and pay to him one glorification, as [it is written] "The 959 3,3 | Spirit, he said: "He shall glorify me." If we think rightly, 960 6 | horror of Manichaeism and Gnosticism he fell into the opposite 961 3,4 | has been suggested that "God-bearer" is an exact translation. 962 6,1 | ignorant, but learned and God-fearing, in which he was bold enough 963 3,3 | Evangelists, and all the God-inspired Scriptures, and in the true 964 3,3 | To the most reverend and God-loving fellow-minister Nestorius, 965 6 | was Bishop of Rome" and goes on to affirm that, "The 966 1 | determined, and has now the goodness to remind you of." This 967 6,1 | who had poured forth idle gossip against his reputation. 968 5 | about them, or how they got there, and thus abruptly 969 6,1 | the sect to instruct and govern men, even priests. ~Although 970 3,4 | of the body, and (in this gradual manner) making it manifest 971 3,4 | Cyril's Opera. Migne, Pat. Graec, Tom. LXXVII., Col. 119; 972 5 | different, yet that their grammatical relation to the verb is 973 6,1 | Schaff and H. Wace, (repr. Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 974 5 | their most pious and humane grandfathers and fathers of holy memory 975 6 | which John speaks in such grandiloquent terms, numbered only forty-three 976 3,4 | Sunday, December 14, 430, he grants that "Theotocos" might be 977 3,4 | theology cannot fail to grasp the enormous difference 978 6,1 | for the right faith, so grateful and highly pleasing to God 979 6 | circa univers. materiam gratioe. Petavius, De Pelag. et 980 6 | suitably punished for such grave offences, and that the bishops 981 6,1 | Church would fall into the greatest confusion. But when those 982 3,4 | pneumatikws)." Cf. St. Gregory Nazianzen (Orat. 51). ~Theodoret 983 5 | attacked. Let the whole body grieve and mourn in common with 984 3,1 | when the multitude of those grieved is so great, so that we 985 6 | Habert, P. L., Theologioe Groecorum Patrum vindicatoe circa 986 3,4 | Tatian of a Qeos paponqws (Ad Groecos, c. 13); Barnabas teaches ( 987 6,1 | Besides this chief dogma, gross errors, contrary to the 988 5 | which things peace has guarded for a long time with pious 989 5 | Paul! To Coelestine the guardian of the faith! To Coelestine 990 3,4 | far less need he be a safe guide in matters of theological 991 3,3 | and give heed, without any guile. And what it is necessary 992 Intro | Canonical Epistle of St. Cyril, Gum Salvator noster. ~The XII. 993 6 | Pat. de peccato orig. ~Habert, P. L., Theologioe Groecorum 994 6 | delayed his coming so as to hamper the meeting of the synod. 995 5 | less dignified than that of handing it down. ~They sowed the 996 4 | said to his disciples, "Handle me and see; for a spirit 997 6,1 | that if anything should happen to delay him, not to put 998 3,4 | that connexion alone, which happens according to worthiness, 999 3,4 | who, delighting in the happy compositions of that language, 1000 6 | Celestius found a fitting harbour of refuge with Nestorius


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