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The Ecumenical Councils and their Chief Doctrines

Scott1

Well-Known Member
The twenty one General Councils are presented here in their
chronological order. Several General Councils were held in the same
places at different times and so are named first, second, etc., after
the particular place where they were held. Of necessity only a very
general statement can here be made of the various actions of the
Councils and we limit this to the more important doctrinal questions.

1. The First Council of Nicaea (A.D. 325)
This Council, the first Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church, was
held in order to bring out the true teaching of the Church as opposed
by the heresy of Arius. It formally presented the teaching of the
Church declaring the divinity of God the Son to be one substance and
one nature with that of God the Father. There were twenty canons drawn
up, in which the time of celebrating Easter was clarified and a
denunciation of the Meletian heresy made, also various matters of
discipline or law were dealt with and several decisions advanced. From
this Council we have the Nicene Creed.

2. The First Council of Constantinople (A.D. 381)
Again the true faith was maintained against the Arians. Answer was
also given against the Apollinarian and Macedonian heresies. In
answering the latter which denied the Godhead of the Holy Spirit, the
dogma of the Church was again stated and the words inserted into the
Nicene Creed declaring the truth that the Holy Spirit proceeded from
both the Father and the Son.

3. The Council of Ephesus (A.D. 431)
The third General Council of the Church defined the Catholic dogma
that the Blessed Virgin is the Mother of God and presented the
teaching of the truth of one divine person in Christ. The Council was
convened against the heresy of Nestorius.

4. The Council of Chalcedon (A.D. 451)
Held twenty years after the third General Council, this was to answer
the Eutychian or Monophysite heresy and affirm the doctrine of two
natures in Christ. This followed as a result of the growing
controversy among the early theologians who were being led into error
by a confused idea of the one divine person being both God and man or
that there are two natures, human and divine, in the one person of the
Word.

5. The Second Council of Constantinople (A.D. 553)
This Council is sometimes referred to as the Council of the Three
Chapters because its chief work was to condemn the writings and
teaching of Theodore of Mopsuestia, the erroneous portions in the
writings of Theodoret, and the letters of Ibas. It reaffirmed the
dogmas stated by the third and forth General Councils.

6. The Third Council of Constantinople (A.D. 680)
This Council gave the definition of two wills in Christ as the true
teaching against the Monothelite heresy which claimed only one will.

7. The Second Council of Nicaea (A.D. 757)
Here was defined the veneration due to holy images, that we give honor
only to those they represent and not to the image itself as such; it
presented the answer to the image breakers or iconoclasts. It also
gave twenty-two canons regarding the clergy.

8. The Forth Council of Constantinople (A.D. 869)
This was a disciplinary Council to heal the threat of schism which was
separating the East and Rome. This was done by deposing the usurper,
Photius, and restoring the patriarch, Ignatius. The Greeks finally
refused acknowledgment of the Council.

9. The First Council of the Lateran (A.D. 1123)
The Lateran is the Cathedral Basilica of Rome. This was the first
General Council held in the West. It was convened to confirm the peace
between the Church and State and to give final settlement to the
problem of Investiture between Emperor Henry V and the Holy See. It
was agreed that the Church has all rights to choose and consecrate
prelates and invest them, and Church goods were restored to the
Church.

10. The Second Council of the Lateran (A.D. 1139)
This Council took disciplinary action and excommunicated Roger of
Sicily who championed the anti-pope. Anacletus II, and imposed silence
on Arnold of Brescia. Canons against simony, incontinence, breaking
the "Truce of God," dueling or group feuding were advanced, and
regulations concerning clerical dress were given.

11. The Third Council of the Lateran (A.D. 1179)
After forty years again the General Council took actions against
simony and abuses of the clergy. Also defense of the true teaching was
made in answer to the Albigenses and Waldenses.

12. The Forth Council of the Lateran (A.D. 1215)
Besides disciplinary action the seventy decrees of this Council
answered prevailing heresies, gave pronouncements in favor of the
Crusades, prescribed the duty of annual confession and Easter
Communion, offered additional definitions on the absolute unity of
God, and presented definition of the doctrine of the Church regarding
sacraments, and in particular that the bread and wine, by
transubstantiation, become the Body and Blood of Christ.

13. The First Council of Lyons (A.D. 1245)
This Council was called to bring disciplinary action against Emperor
Frederick II and at the same time sentence of the solemn renewal of
excommunication was passed on the emperor.

14. The Second Council of Lyons (A.D. 1274)
Effort was made at this Council under Pope Gregory X to bring about
union between the East and West. It also defined that the Holy Spirit
proceeds eternally from the Father and the Son. The discipline
governing the election of the pope was formulated.

15. The Council of Vienne (A.D. 1311 and 1312)
The purpose of this Council was to settle the affair of the Templars,
to advance the rescue of the Holy Land, and to reform abuses in the
Church. The doctrinal decrees of the Council were: condemnation that
the soul is not "in itself the essentially the form of the human
body",; that sanctifying grace is infused into the soul at baptism;
and denial that a perfect man is not subject to ecclesiastical and
civil law.

16. The Council of Constance (A.D. 1414 - 1418)
This Council can be regarded as ecumenical only in so far as it was in
union with the pope. The heretical teaching of John Huss and Wyclif
were answered. It was here that communion to the laity under one
species was prescribed as a cure to the make it understood that the
entirety of Jesus Christ is present under both or either species. In
transubstantiation all of the bread is changed into the body, blood,
soul and Divinity of Christ and all of the wine is changed into the
body, blood, soul and Divinity of Christ and reception of either
species was reception of the total; body, blood, soul and Divinity of
Jesus Christ.

17. The Council of Ferrara-Florence (A.D. 1438 - 1439)
This was convened to unite the Greeks and other oriental sects with
the Latin Rite. It was defined that "the Holy Apostolic See and Roman
Pontiff hold the primacy over all the world; that the Roman Pontiff is
the successor of Peter, prince of the Apostles; that he is the true
vicar of Christ, the head of the whole Church, the Father and teacher
of all Christians."

18. The Fifth Council of the Lateran (A.D. 1512 - 1517)
It defined the Pope's authority over all Councils and condemned errors
regarding the human soul, namely, that the soul with its intellectual
power is mortal.

19. The Council of Trent (opened under Pope Paul III in 1545,
continued under Pope Julius III, and concluded under Pope Pius IV (A.
D. 1563)
The doctrine of original sin was defined; the decree on Justification
was declared against the Lutheran errors that faith alone justifies
and that the merits of Christ; the doctrine of the sacraments of
Penance and Extreme Unction was defined; decrees relating to the
censorship of books were adopted; the doctrine of Christian marriage
was defined and decrees on Purgatory and indulgences adopted.
Besides many refutations against the so called reformers were given and
measures of true reform advanced.

20. The First Vatican Council (opened under Pope Pius IX in 1869 and
adjourned on October 20, 1870)
This General Council was never closed officially, but was suspended.
Technically, it continued until it was closed by Pope John XXIII. Of
this council the most important decree was that of the primacy of the
pope and of papal infallibility.

21. The Second Vatican Council (opened under Pope John XXIII in
1962, it continued under Pope Paul XI until the end in 1965)
Several important constitutions and decrees were promulgated, the most
far reaching being the Constitution on Sacred Liturgy.
 

No*s

Captain Obvious
Nice post Scott. Obviously, our agreement stops at the Seven, and some add another Eighth and Ninth. It is a nice post, though, and a good reference to them :).
 
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