NESTORIANISM

Christian heresy that held Jesus to be two distinct persons, closely and inseparably united. In 428, Emperor Theodosius II named an abbot of Antioch, Nestorius (d. 451?), as patriarch of Constantinople. In that year Nestorius, who had been a pupil of Theodore of Mopsuestia, outraged the Christian world by opposing the use of the title Mother of God for the Virgin on the grounds that, while the Father begot Jesus as God, Mary bore him as a man. This view was contradicted by Cyril, patriarch of Alexandria, and both sides appealed to Pope Celestine I. The Council of Ephesus (see Ephesus, Council of) was convened in 431 to settle the matter. This council (reinforced by the Council of Chalcedon in 451) clarified orthodox Catholic doctrine, pronouncing that Jesus, true God and true man, has two distinct natures that are inseparably joined in one person and partake of the one divine substance. Nestorius, deposed after the Council of Ephesus, was sent to Antioch, to Arabia, and finally to Egypt. A work believed to be by Nestorius, Bazaar of Heraclides, discovered c.1895, gives an account of the controversy. The patriarch of Antioch and his bishops, accusing Cyril of unscrupulous action, stayed out of communion with Alexandria until a compromise was reached in 433, but though the subject was discussed in 553 at the Second Council of Constantinople (see Constantinople, Second Council of), Nestorianism was practically dead in the empire after 451. Nestorianism survived outside the Roman Empire through missionary expansion into Arabia, China, and India from the 6th cent., but declined after 1300. The doctrines that continued in the Nestorian Church had diminishing connections with those of Nestorius. The teachings of Eutyches and Monophysitism developed partially in reaction to Nestorianism. J. Pelikan, The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (1971); and R. Norris, ed. and tr., The Christological Controversy (1980).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Nestorianism  - 352 results

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journal articles on: Nestorianism  - 15 results

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...enemies assailed him as the "Father of Nestorianism." After the council, the Emperor Justinian...rightly be labeled as the "Father of Nestorianism."(5) Kevin McNamara had arrived at...the view of Wilhelm de Vries, "Der `Nestorianismus Theodors yon Mopsuestia in seiner Sakramentenlehre...
...the conference titled "Research on Nestorianism in China" held in Salzburg, Austria...should no longer be translated as "Nestorianism" (p. 12). The Church of the East fled...misunderstandings resulted in the use of "Nestorianism" as a heresy opposed to the teaching...
...for all from public taxation. 18 The struggle against Nestorianism increased monastic prestige, since it was the patron of...opposition to Nestorius. In 431 at the Council of Ephesus, Nestorianism was quashed and Alexandria glowed in victory. As the years...
...an independent human hypostasis or person (which would be Nestorianism); nor is it simply without a hypostasis (anhypostasia, which...of some hypothetical human person (which would however be Nestorianism), but hardly a nature in respect of the divine Word. In my...
...191-192; and Hirschfeld, Judean Desert Monasteries , pp. 130-143. vulsed the world of the Palestinian monks, battles over Nestorianism, Monophysitism, and perhaps most importantly, Origenism, to which the precocious Cyril had been initially attracted. 26...
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magazine articles on: Nestorianism  - 6 results

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...Brilliant or Admirable Religion. As a religion from the West, Nestorianism was taken as a sect of Buddhism, and satisfied the curiosity...major persecution of |foreign religions was carried out and Nestorianism was, partly due to their actual or alleged relation with...
...could be saved. Christ must therefore be human in every respect apart from sin. In its extreme form, this Christology became Nestorianism, which minimized the force of the conviction that "God was in Christ." Stimulated by the Tome of Pope Leo the Great in 449...
...touchstone indicating whether or not the Christological substance is fully present. Nestorianism involves the fabrication of a Christology from which the nativity and the...
...I am afraid, doesnt quite work and never has. Notable heresies of Christian history--Arianism, Docetism, Monophysitism, Nestorianism, Tritheism--appealed earnestly to the supreme authority of Scripture without reference to what Catholics understand as tradition...
...means of grace; or, in the area of Christology, the Reformed temptation to separate the divine and human natures of Christ (Nestorianism) and the Lutheran temptation to affirm that Christ had only one nature (Monophysitism); or, in worship patterns, the respective...
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encyclopedia articles on: Nestorianism  - 18 results

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NESTORIANISM Christian heresy that held Jesus to be two distinct persons, closely and inseparably...at the Second Council of Constantinople (see Constantinople, Second Council of ), Nestorianism was practically dead in the empire after 451. Nestorianism survived outside the Roman Empire through missionary expansion into Arabia, China, and...
...5th and 6th cent., which grew out of a reaction against Nestorianism . It was anticipated by Apollinarianism and was continuous...based on the assertion that these writings were tainted with Nestorianism. Since parts of the Three Chapters were considered orthodox...
...in a difficult see. At the time of the controversy over Nestorianism , Theodoret felt that Nestorius was misunderstood. As a result...451), Theodoret reluctantly joined in the condemnation of Nestorianism, still holding that it misrepresented his friend. His writings...
...sel stin, d. 432, pope (422 32), an Italian; successor of St. Boniface I. The opposition of St. Cyril of Alexandria to Nestorianism inspired both sides to appeal to the pope, who judged that Nestorius should be excommunicated if he refused to retract...
...The great episode in his career was his struggle against Nestorianism , which culminated in the Council of Ephesus in 431 (see...to be opposed by the Antiochene bishops, who tended toward Nestorianism; consequently, they stayed out of communion with Alexandria...
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