12.
In what
way did Nestorius precipitate the controversy which led to the Third Ecumenical
Council?
Nestorius declined to call the
Virgin Mary Theotokos (Greek for
Birthgiver of God or God-Bearer). To him, this popular title seemed to imply a
confusion of the manhood and Godhood of Christ. He argued that Mary can only be
called the Mother of Man (Anthropotokos), or at most the Mother of Christ (Christotokos),
since she is the mother of Christ's humanity but not His Divinity. History
shows that for this blasphemy, worms devoured the tongue of this God-fighting
heresiarch while he was still alive.
Modern fellow-travelers with
Nestorius include some Protestants, who deny that God could have a mother, and
who can only bring themselves to acknowledge that Mary was the mother of
Christ's human nature. Michael Whelton points out that Protestant reaction to
the title of Theotokos runs from a self-conscious uneasy acceptance to outright
denial. He adds that the respective responses clearly demonstrate a graded
scale within the Protestant community, from superficial to outright
Nestorianism. However, the denial of the title Theotokos centers not on Mary, he
explains, but on Christ Himself and the Incarnation. He further explains that
when most of these people think it through, they readily understand that
Christ's human and divine nature cannot be separated.
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