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The Making of Nestorius

The Making of Nestorius
  • Early Ideas about the Son of God
    • Some referred to the Son as one intimately related in dependence on the eternal God
    • Some to God himself in his relation to the world of nature
    • Some to a man like us who had the spirit of God working pre-eminently in him
    • Some to a perfect creature whom God brought into being before everyone else
  • Paul of Samosata (200-275 AD)
    • Pre-Nicaea
    • Patriarch of Antioch
    • Possibly the earliest origin of dyophysitism
    • Taught that Jesus was adopted to be God's son in the baptism - the Holy Spirit came on Him and then the Father said "Today you are My Son" - adopting Him
  • Lucian of Antioch (240-312 AD)
    • Priest
    • Nephew of Paul of Samosata
    • Teacher of Arius, Diodorus of Tarsus, Eusebius of Nicomedia
  • Arius (256-336 AD)
    • Priest in Alexandria
    • Main heretic of the Council of Nicaea
  • Diodorus of Tarsus (?-390AD)
    • Bishop
    • Supporter of the Council of Nicaea
    • One of the 150 at Constantinople who opposes Apollinaris
    • Friend of St Basil, St Meletius of Antioch - they are all united against Arianism.
    • Like Paul of Samosata, Jesus and the Logos are uniting - but it's at conception, not at the baptism. It is not God becoming Man, but rather God adopting the man.
    • Gregory writes 8 statements/anathemas towards Diodorus (not-named). Word Theotokos is used in one. St Cyril's 12 anathemas will later be based on these.
    • Teachings, taken to an extreme, lead to Nestorianism
    • Started a school in Antioch
      • Theodore of Mopsuestia
      • St John Chrysostom
  • Apollinaris (?-382 AD)
    • Bishop of Laodicea
    • Opponent of Arianism
    • In his eagerness to emphasize the divinity of Jesus, he denies the existence of a rational human soul in Christ. He believes that Christ is fully human but instead of a soul, it's the Divinity. His Divinity united with His Body (not with His Humanity).
  • Eusebius of Nicomedia (?-341 AD)
    • Arian Priest & Bishop
    • One of the 318 at Nicaea - it is said he "signed by hand, but not by heart" against Arianism
    • Exiled St Athanasius
    • Baptized Constantine the Great on his deathbed
  • Theodore of Mopsuestia (350-428 AD)
    • Bishop of Mopsuestia
    • The teacher of Nestorius, Theodoret of Cyrus, Ibas of Edessa, John of Antioch, Domnus II of Antioch
    • Was the most popular student of the School of Antioch - even as a contemporary of John Chrysostom
    • Teaching: There is One Person in Christ, in Two Natures
      • In order for humanity to have salvation, God needs to restore Adam. How? By putting Adam on and leaping back into Paradise
      • If He merely unites Himself to a man, then He does not become man. He only saves Jesus of Nazareth. How am I saved? How are you saved?
      • St Cyril says that what is described here is no more than what happens in the Prophets... "The Spirit of the Lord came upon me."
  • Nestorius of Constantinople (386-451 AD)
    • Patriarch of Constantinople
  • Theodoret of Cyrus (393-458 AD)
    • Bishop of Cyrus
    • Successor of Theodore of Mopsuestia
  • Ibas of Edessa (?-457 AD)
    • Bishop of Edessa
    • Edessa is the Syriac See of the Church bridging the Church of the East with the Church of Antioch
  • John I of Antioch
  • Domnus II of Antioch
    • Nephew of John I of Antioch
    • Student of Theodore of Mopsuestia and friend of Theodoret of Cyrus
St Cyril & Nestorius
  • Visiting Bishop (student of the School in Antioch) gives a sermon (in the presence of Nestorius) cautioning the use of the word Theotokos.
  • The people of Antioch write to St Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria.
    • In those days, Alexandria has primacy in the East...
    • There are conflicts & rivalry with Constantinople
    • Alexandria deposed patriarch of Constantinople 7 times (Athanasius: 3 times?, Timothy deposed Macedonius, Theophilus deposed St John Chrysostom, Cyril deposes Nestorius, Dioscorus will depose Flavian
  • Cyril's First Letter to Nestorius
  • Nestorius' First Letter to Cyril
  • Cyril's Second Letter to Nestorius
Relevant Context from the Council of Ephesus

Home Synod of Constantinople (448 AD)
Second Council at Ephesus (449 AD)
Death of Emperor Theodosius