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| A HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN COUNCILS
 BOOK I.ANTE-NICENE COUNCILS.CHAPTER I.COUNCILS OF THE FIRST TWO CENTURIES.
 THE first Christian Council, the type
          and model of all the others, was held at Jerusalem by the apostles between the
          years 50 and 52 A.D., in order to solve the question
          of the universal obligation of the ancient law. No other councils were probably
          held in the first century of the Christian era; or if they were, no trace of
          them remains in history. On the other hand, we have information of several
          councils in the second century. The authenticity of this information is not, it
          is true, equally established for all; and we can acknowledge as having really
          taken place only those of which Eusebius Pamphili, the father of Christian Church history,
          speaks, or other early and trustworthy historians. To these belong, first of all:
            
           Sec. 1. Synods relative to Montanism.
            
               Eusebius has
          given us, in his Church History, a fragment of a work composed by Apollinaris
          Bishop of Hierapolis in Phrygia, in which the following words occur: “The
          faithful of Asia, at many times and in many places, came together to consult on
          the subject of Montanus and his followers; and these
          new doctrines were examined, and declared strange and impious”. This fragment
          unfortunately gives no other details, and does not
          point out the towns at which these synods were held; but the Libellus Synodicus of
          Pappus tells us that Apollinaris, the holy Bishop of Hierapolis in Asia, and
          twenty-six of his colleagues in the episcopate, held a provincial council at
          Hierapolis, and there tried and condemned Montanus and Maximilla the false prophets, and at the same time
          Theodotus the currier (the celebrated anti-Trinitarian). Further on he adds: “A
          holy and particular synod, assembled under the very holy Bishop Sotas of Anchialus (in Thrace, on the Black Sea), and
          consisting of twelve other bishops, convicted of heresy the currier Theodotus, Montanus, and Maximilla, and
          condemned them”.
               The Libellus Synodicus, to which we are indebted for these
          details, it is true, can lay claim to no very early origin, as it was compiled
          by a Greek towards the close of the ninth century. But this Greek derived his
          statements from ancient authentic sources; and what he says of the two synods
          agrees so perfectly with the statement of Eusebius, that in this passage it is
          worthy of all confidence. We read in Eusebius' Church History (book v. cc. 16
          and 19), that Apollinaris of Hierapolis, and Sotas of Anchialus,
          contemporaries of Montanus,
          zealously opposed his errors, and wrote and preached against him. Sotas even wished to
          exorcise the evil spirit from Priscilla, a companion of Montanus; but these hypocrites,
          adds Eusebius, did not consent to it.
           The strong opposition which these two
          bishops made to Montanus makes
          it probable that they gave occasion to several of the numerous synods in which,
          according to the summaries of Eusebius, the Church rejected Montanism.
           The date of these synods is nowhere
          exactly pointed out. The fragment which is given in Eusebius proves that they
          were held shortly after the commencement of the Montanist agitations;
          but the date of the rise of Montanism itself
          is uncertain. The Chronicle of Eusebius gives 172; S. Epiphanius 126 in one
          place, and 156 or 167 in another. He says, besides, that Maximilla died about A.D.
          86. In this there is perhaps an error of a whole century. Blondel, relying on these passages, has shown that Montanus and his heresy
          arose about 140 or 141; and, more recently, Schwegler of Tubingen has expressed the same
          opinion. Pearson, Dodwell, and Neander, on the contrary, decide for 156 or 157; Tillemont and Walch for 171. As for our own opinion, we have
          adopted Blondel’s opinion (the year 140),
          because the Shepherd of Hermas,
          which was certainly anterior to 151, and was written when Pius I was Pope,
          seems already to oppose Montanism. In this
          case, the synods with which we are occupied must have taken place before 150 of
          the Christian Era. The Libellus Synodicus gives a
          contrary decision to this, although it attributes to the same synods the
          condemnation of the currier Theodotus, whose apostasy can be fixed only at the
          time of the persecution by M. Aurelius (160-180). In reality,
            Theodotus was excommunicated at Rome by Pope Victor towards the close of
          the second century (192-202). In allowing that sentence of condemnation had been
          pronounced against him before that time in certain synods of Asia Minor and of
          Thrace (he was living at Constantinople at the time of his apostasy), those
          synods which, according to the Libellus Synodicus, have also
          condemned Montanism could not have been
          held before M. Aurelius: they must therefore have been held under that Emperor.
          The supposition that Theodotus and Montanus were
          contemporary would oblige us to date doubtful whether these two were
          contemporaries, and the conclusion that they were so seems to result from a
          confusion of the facts. In reality, the author of the ancient fragment given us
          by Eusebius speaks also of a Theodotus who was one of the first followers
          of Montanus, and
          shared his fate, i.e. was anathematized in the
          same synods with Montanus and Maximilla. He depicts him as a
          well-known man. The author of the Lilellus Synodicus having read
          this passage, and finding that the ancient Synods of
          Hierapolis and Anchialus had condemned a
          Theodotus, easily identified the currier Theodotus with the Theodotus whom the
          author of the fragment declared to be celebrated in his time. If this is so,
          nothing will hinder our placing the rise of Montanism and
          the Synods of Hierapolis and Anchialus before
          A.D. 150.
            
               2. Synods concerning the Feast of
          Easter.
                
               The second series of councils in the
          second century was caused by the controversy regarding the time of celebrating
          Easter. It is not quite correct to regard the meeting of S. Polycarp of Smyrna,
          and Anicetus Bishop of Rome, towards the middle of the second century, as a
          synod properly so called; but it is certain that towards the close of the same
          century several synods were occasioned by the Easter controversy. Eusebius, in
          the passage referred to, only shows in a general way that these synods were
          held in the second half of the second century; but S. Jerome gives a more exact
          date, he says in his Chronicle, under the year 196:
           “Pope Victor wrote to the most eminent
          bishops of all countries, recommending them to call synods in their provinces,
          and to celebrate in them the feast of Easter on the day chosen by the Church of
          the West”.
           Eusebius here agrees with S. Jerome; for
          he has preserved to us a fragment of a letter written by Polycarp from Ephesus,
          in which this bishop says that Victor had required him to assemble the bishops
          who were subordinate to him; that he had done so, but that he and all the
          bishops present at this synod had pronounced for the practice of the Quartodecimans or of S.
          John; that these bishops, the number of whom was considerable, had approved of
          the synodical letter which he had drawn
          up, and that he had no fear (on account of the threats of Victor), “because we
          must obey God rather than man”. We see from this fragment, that at the moment when the synods convoked at the request of
          Victor in Palestine pronounced in favor of the Western practice in Palestine,
          Pontus, Gaul, and Osrhoene, a great synod of bishops
          from Asia Minor, held at Ephesus, the see of Polycarp, had formally declared
          against this practice; and it is precisely from the synodical letter
          of this council that we have the fragment given above.
           Bishop Victor then wished to exclude the
          bishops of Asia Minor from the communion of the Church; but other bishops
          turned him from his purpose. S. Irenaeus, in particular, addressed a letter to him on this occasion, in the name of the bishops of Gaul, over whom
          he presided; a letter in which, it is true, he defended the Western custom of
          celebrating Easter, but in which also he prayed Victor not to excommunicate “a
          great number of churches, who were only guilty of observing an ancient custom”,
          etc. This fragment has also been preserved to us by Eusebius; and we may
          consider it as a part of the synodical letter
          of the bishops of Gaul, since, as Eusebius makes him remark, Irenaeus expressly
          declared “that he wrote in the name of his brethren of Gaul, over whom he
          presided”. It may be asked if the synod here spoken of is the same as that
          mentioned by Eusebius in another place, and which we mentioned above. If it be
          the same, it must be admitted that, at the request of Victor, there was at
          first a synod of the Quartodecimans in
          Asia Minor, and that it was only later on, when the
          result was known, that other councils were also assembled, and especially in
          Gaul. It may be also that S. Irenaeus presided over two successive councils in
          Gaul, and that in the first he declared himself for the Western practice
          regarding Easter, in the second against the threatening schism. This is the
          opinion of the latest biographer of S. Irenaeus, the Abbé J. M. Prat. The Synodicon (Libellus Synodicus) only speaks of one
          synod in Gaul, presided over by Irenaeus, on the subject of
            the Easter controversy; and he adds that this synod was composed of
          Irenaeus and of thirteen other bishops.
           The Libellus Synodicus also gives information about the
          other councils of which Eusebius speaks, concerning the question of Easter. Thus:
           a. From the writing of the priests of Rome
          of which we have spoken, and which was signed by Pope Victor, the Libellus Synodicus concludes, as
          also does Valesius in
          his translation of the Eccles. Hist. of Eusebius, that there must
          have been a Roman synod at which, besides Victor, fourteen other bishops were
          present This is opposed by Dom Constant in his excellent edition of the Epistolae Pontif. p. 94, and after him
          by Mosheim in his book De Rebus Christianorum ante Constant. M. p. 267,
          who remarks that Eusebius speaks of a letter from the Roman priests and Pope
          Victor, and not of a synod. But it has often happened, especially in the following
          centuries, that the decrees of the synods, and in particular
            of the Roman synods, have only been signed by the president, and have
          been promulgated by him under the form of an edict emanating from him alone.
          This is what is expressly said by a Roman synod held by Pope Felix II in 485.
           b. According to the Synodicon, two synods
          were held in Palestine, on the subject of the Easter
          controversy: the one at Jerusalem, presided over by Narcissus, and composed of
          fourteen bishops; and the other at Caesarea, comprising twelve bishops, and
          presided over by Theophilus.
           c. Fourteen bishops were present at the
          Asiatic Synod of Pontus, under the presidency of Bishop Palmas, whom
          the Synodicon calls Plasmas.
           d. Eighteen bishops were present at that
          of Osrhoene; the Libellus Synodicus does not mention who presided.
           e. It speaks also of a synod held in
          Mesopotamia, on the subject of Easter, which also
          counted eighteen bishops (it is probably the same synod as that of Osrhoene).
           f. And, lastly, of a synod at Corinth,
          presided over by Bishop Bacchyllus;
          whilst Eusebius says expressly that Bacchyllus of Corinth did not publish
          any synodical letter on
            the subject of the celebration of Easter, but simply a private letter.
            
               3. Doubtful Synods of the Second
          Century.
                
               The anonymous author of the Praedestinatus speaks of
          three other synods of the second century. According to him:
           a. In A.D. 125 a synod was held of all the
          bishops of Sicily, presided over by Eustathius of Libybaeum and Theodoras of Palermo. This
          synod considered the cause of the Gnostic Heraclionites, and sent its acts to Pope Alexander,
          that he might decide further in the matter.
           b. In 152 the heresy of the Colarbasians, another Gnostic
          sect, was anathematized by Theodotus Bishop of Pergamum in Mysia, and by seven other
          bishops assembled in synod.
           c. In 160 an Eastern synod rejected the
          heresy of the Gnostic Cerdo.
           The Libellus Synodicus mentions, besides:
           a. A synod held at Rome, under Pope Telesphorus (127 139), against the currier Theodotus, the
          anti-Trinitarian.
           b. A second synod at Rome, held under Pope
          Anicetus, upon the Easter question, at the time when Polycarp Bishop of Smyrna
          visited the Pope.
           c. A third Roman synod under Victor, and
          which condemned Theodotus, Ebion,
          and Artemon.
           d. A fourth Roman synod, also held under
          Victor, and which anathematized Sabellius and Noetus.
           e. Finally, a synod of the confessors of
          Gaul, who declared against Montanus and Maximilla in a letter
          addressed to the Asiatics
               These eight synods mentioned by the author
          of Praedestinatus and
          by the Libellus Synodicus are
          apparently imaginary: for, on one side, there is not a single ancient and
          original document which speaks of them; and on the other, the statements of
          these two unknown authors are either unlikely or contrary to chronology. We
          will instance, for example, the pretended Roman synod, presided over by Victor,
          which anathematized Sabellius.
          In admitting that the usual date, according to which Sabellius would have lived a full half-century
          later (about 250), may be inexact, as the Philosophoumena recently discovered
          have proved, yet it is clear from this document that Sabellius had not yet been excluded from the
          Church under Pope Zephyrinus (202-218),
          the successor of Victor, and that he was not excommunicated until the time of
          Pope Calixtus.
           It is also impossible that Theodotus the
          currier should have been condemned by a Roman synod held under Telesphorus, since Theodotus lived towards the close of the
          second century. It is the same with the pretended Sicilian Council in 125.
          According to the information afforded to us by the ancients, especially S.
          Irenaeus and Tertullian, Heracleon changed
          the system of Valentine. He could not then have flourished till after 125. As
          to Pope Alexander, to whom this synod is said to have rendered an account of
          its acts in 125, he died a martyr in 119.
           It is also by mistake that we have been
          told of a synod in which Pope Anicetus and Polycarp both took part. The
          interview of these two bishops has been confounded with a synod: it is the same
          with the pretended Synod of Gaul, held against Montanus.
           The author of the Libellus Synodicus has evidently misunderstood
          Eusebius, who says on this subject: “The news of what had taken place in Asia
          on the subject of Montanus (the
          synod) was known to the Christians of Gaul. The latter were at that time
          cruelly persecuted by Marcus Aurelius; many of them were in prison. They,
          however, gave their opinion from their prison on the matter of Montanus, and addressed letters
          to their brethren of Asia, and to Eleutherus Bishop
          of Rome”. It will be seen that the question here is not of a synod, but of
          letters written by confessors (the Libellus Synodicus also mentions
          confessors).
           Finally, a ninth council, which is said to
          have conveyed to the Bishop of Seleucia a patriarchal right over the whole of
          Assyria, Media, and Persia, is evidently an invention; and the mention of a
          Patriarchate on this occasion is a patent anachronism, as has been proved by Assemani in his Bibliothéque Orientale.
               
           SYNODS OF THE THIRD CENTURY
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