The Rise and Fall of the Homoiousianism

Purpose

After Nicaea, the ‘Arian’ Controversy raged for another 55 years. During that period, ‘Arianism’ dominated the church. But ‘Arianism’ consisted of several strands. This article explains the theology of the Homoiousians, which was one of those strands. Homoiousian means ‘similar substance’ and was used to say that the Son’s substance is similar to the Father’s.

Sources

This article series is largely based on two books:

RH = Bishop RPC Hanson
The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God –

The Arian Controversy 318-381, 1987

LA = Lewis Ayres
Nicaea and its legacy, 2004

Ayres is a Professor of Catholic and Historical Theology

A Compromise

It is often claimed that Homo-i-ousianism (similar substance theology) arose as an attempt to reconcile two opposing teachings, namely: and Homo-ianism:

Homo-ousianism, which comes from the word homo-ousios in the Nicene Creed of the year 325. It means “same substance” and was used to say that the Son’s substance is the ‘same’ (แฝฮผฯŒฯ‚, homรณs) as the Father’s.ย  If the Son’s substance is the same as the Father’s, then the Son must be co-equal and co-eternal with the Father.

Homo-ianism, on the other hand, refused to use the term substance (ฮฟแฝฯƒฮฏฮฑ, ousรญa). It believes that the Son is “like” (แฝ…ฮผฮฟฮนฮฟฯ‚, hรณmoios) the Father but subordinate to Him.

It is then proposed that similar substance theology (Homo-i-ousian) was an attempt to reconcile the same substance theology (Homo-ousian) theology with the Homoian notion of similarity. For example, โ€œGwatkin described the group as a ‘Semi-Arian position modified by an Athanasian influence.โ€ (RH, 349) (Athanasius was the great defender of the same substance theology.)

A Persistent Strand

However, recent scholarship does not accept that Homo-i-ousianism was an attempt to reconcile the two other theologies. Homo-i-ousianism was โ€œmost prominently associated with โ€ฆ Basil of Ancyraโ€ (RH, 349) and “the term homoiousios plays no role in Basil’s surviving texts” (LA, 150). This implies that such a compromise was not the purpose. More recently, Lewis Ayres proposed that Homo-i-ousianism was not merely a compromise but “a significant and persistent strand in earlier eastern theology.” (LA, 150)

There are indications that this theology was a restatement or development of the theology of Eusebius of Caesarea, as stated in the letter he wrote to his home church after the Nicene Council, to explain why he accepted that Creed:

Ritter described Homoiousianism “as the right wing of the Eusebian party.โ€ (RH, 349)

โ€œBasil โ€ฆ prefers the term ‘image of the ousia’ to define the Son’s relationship to the Father; it is worth noting that this term was favoured by Eusebius of Caesarea โ€ฆ and also is found in the Second (‘Dedication’) Creed of Antioch 341.โ€ (RH, 353)

Eusebius was โ€œuniversally acknowledged to be the most scholarly bishop of his day.โ€ (RH, 46) Eusebius was the most influential theologian present at the Council of Nicaea in AD 325.

A Response to Neo-Arianism

Both Lewis Ayres and R.P.C. Hanson stated that the formulation of Homoiousian theology in 358 by a council of bishops called by Basil of Ancyra was a response to, what Ayres calls, “the emerging shape of Heterousian theology” in the form of the creed of โ€œSirmium 357,โ€ which was based on the teachings of Aetius. Hanson refers to this as “Neo-Arianism” and as โ€œa new and radical theologyโ€ that appears for the first time in the extant ancient records in the form of the โ€œSecond Creed of Sirmium of 357,โ€ afterward approved by a larger synod at Antioch (probably in AD 358). ‘Neo-Arianism’ may be an appropriate name because it was โ€œa development” of Arius’ theology. (RH, 348; LA, 149-150)

โ€œBasil’s council sent a delegation to the Emperor Constantius โ€ฆ and this embassy met with success.โ€ The Emperor condemned โ€œAetius and his teachingโ€ and exiled Aetius and his supporters. This supports the view that this formulation of homo-i-ousianism was particularly intended to oppose the Neo-Arians. (LA, 152-153)

Homo-i-ousian Theology

โ€œThe statement which emerged from this council โ€ฆ marks the emergence of a new and coherent theological point of view. This is the theology of those whom Epiphanius, quite undeservedly, calls ‘Semi-Arians’, but who are usually today thought of as Homoiousians, a designation which is more accurate.โ€ (RH, 348-9)

This statement was written by Basil of Ancyra himself (LA, 150) and โ€œis of the highest importance for an understanding of Homoiousian theology.โ€ (RH, 350) It includes โ€œnineteen anathemas which reveal more clearly the position which Basil is attacking.” (RH, 355)

Against Homoian Theology

Homoianism was a dominant Christology during the mid-fourth century. For example, the creeds of the councils of Sirmium in 358, Ariminum in 359, and the key council at Constantinople in 359 / 360 were homoian. It refused to use ousia (substance) language in the formulation of any statement of faith because the Bible does not say anything about God’s substance. Against them, Basil insisted that substance language is necessary to reflect the closeness of the Father and Son expressed by the concepts โ€œFather/Sonโ€ and โ€œbegotten.โ€ He wrote:

โ€œGod must be both Father and creatorโ€ (of His Son) (RH, 353). โ€œIf we remove this resemblance of ousia,โ€ the Son is merely a created being; โ€œnot a Son.โ€ (RH, 353, 354)

Since human sons are like their fathers, the Son of God is like His Father (RH, 352). โ€œThe salient irreducible elementโ€ in a father/son relationship is โ€œthe begetting of a living being that is like in ousia.โ€ (RH, 352-3)

โ€œIf the Father gives the Son to have life in himself (John 5:26) โ€ฆ then the Son must have the same life and thus have โ€˜everything according to essence and absolutely as does the Fatherโ€™.โ€ (LA, 152)โ€œ

Against Homoousian Theology

It is often claimed that the term homo-ousios in the Nicene Creed means “one substance,” namely, that the substance of the Son is one and the same as the Father’s substance. It is on this basis alone that we can argue that the Son is co-eternal and co-equal with the Father. However:

Hanson concluded that โ€œwe can โ€ฆ be pretty sure that homoousios was not intended to express the numerical identity of the Father and the Son.โ€ (RH, 202)

Philip Schaff stated: “The term homoousion … differs from monoousion. … and signifies not numerical identity, but equality of essence or community of nature among several beings. It is clearly used thus in the Chalcedonian symbol, where it is said that Christ is โ€œhomoousios with the Father as touching the Godhead, and homoousios with us [and yet individually distinct from us] as touching the manhood.โ€1Philip Schaff, History of the Church volume 3 (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1981 edition) pp.672-673.

The idea of “one substance,” therefore, developed later. In the Homo-ousianism of the Nicene Creed, the Son’s substance is identical with the Father’s, meaning two substances that are identical.ย 

This is based on a material interpretation of the terms โ€œFather,โ€ Son,โ€ and โ€œonly-begotten,โ€ as if God has a body and bodily gave existence to the Son, comparable to how human sons are brought forth. Consequently, the Sonโ€™s substance is identical to the Fatherโ€™s. For example:

โ€œAnathema 13 links the error of thinking of the Father/Son relationship in corporeal terms with that of making the Son identical with the Father.โ€ (RH, 356)

Homo-i-ousianism did not accept this notion. (RH, 352-3) In Homo-i-ousianism, the Son is subordinate to the Father. (RH, 355) If this is true, then the Son’s substance cannot be identical to the Father’s. Basil explained:

โ€œThe Son is like the Father in ousia but not identical with him.โ€ (RH, 352-3).ย 

โ€œAs He โ€ฆ was in the likeness of men (John 1:14) โ€ฆ yet not a man in all respects;โ€ โ€œnot identical with human nature,โ€ for example. He was not born through natural conception,ย โ€œso the Son โ€ฆ is God in that he is Son of God,โ€ was โ€œin the form of God,” and is “equal to God (Phil 2:6, 7),โ€ โ€œbut not identical with the God and Father.โ€ (RH, 354)

Anathema 13 โ€œdamns him who declares … that the Son is identical with the Father โ€ฆ This is manifestly directed against N (the Nicene Creed).โ€ (RH, 355)

Against Sabellian Theology

In Sabellianism, the Son is not a distinct Person. Rather, the Father and Son are parts of one Person. Basil responded:

โ€œThis argument that God must be both Father and creator and that the likeness in ousia is necessary โ€ฆ as a safeguard against Sabellianism: that which is like can never be the same as that to which it is like’.โ€ (RH, 353)

The anathemas also attack the apparent Sabellianism of Marcellus of Ancyra. (RH, 355)

Against Neo-Arian Theology

In Neo-Arianism, which was โ€œa new and radicalโ€ (RH, 348) adaptation of Ariusโ€™ theology, the terms โ€œFather,โ€ Son,โ€ and โ€œonly-begottenโ€ symbolize that the Son is the very image of the Father, but not in a corporeal (material) sense. For that reason, in this view, “the Son is ‘unlike(anhomoios) in ousia to the Fatherโ€ Ayres refers to this as “Heterousian (different substance) theology.” (LA, 149) For example, Basil’s โ€œAnathema 12 strikes him who declares that the Son’s likeness to the Father consists in power but not in ousia.โ€ (RH, 355)

Homo-i-ousianism was somewhere between the Homoousian (same substance) view and the Neo-Arian (different substance) view.ย 

The End of this Theology

โ€œIn AD 359 Constantius decided to emulate his father’s action in calling Nicaea and summon a general council. โ€ฆ A small group of bishops met at Sirmium to draw up a draft creed for discussion. Those present included not only Basil, but also some who were far more suspicious of ousia language. The creed on which they finally agreed โ€ฆ asserts that all ousia language should be avoided. โ€ฆ โ€ฆ Thus, although Basil of Ancyra was influential with the imperial authorities at one point during 358โ€“9, it was not for long, and he never seems fully to have overcome long-standing Homoian influence at court. (LA, 157-8)

Constantius was becoming somewhat hostile to the influence of all of the new movements which had sprung up after the Nicene council. The result was that the Homoiousians disappeared from the stage of history and the struggle to define Church dogma became a two-sided battle between the Homo-ousians and the Homo-ians.


Summary

The 55 years of Controversy after the Nicene Creed of 325 revolved specifically around the word homoousios. Since, in the Nicene Creed, this term was an interpretation of the term “begotten,” the differences between the various Christological views are essentially different interpretations of the terms โ€œFather,โ€ “Son,โ€ and โ€œonly-begotten.โ€ These interpretations result in different views with respect to the substance of the Son, on the basis of which the five views may be summarized:

      • Sabellianism = One and the same substance
      • Homoousian = Distinct but identical substance
      • Homoiousian = Similar in substance
      • Neo-Arianism or Heteroousians = Unlike in substance
      • Homo-ianism refuses to refer to substance.

OTHER ARTICLES

FOOTNOTES

  • 1
    Philip Schaff, History of the Church volume 3 (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1981 edition) pp.672-673.
  • 2
    Overview of the history, from the pre-Nicene Church Fathers, through the fourth-century Arian Controversy

Athanasius invented Arianism.

Purpose

The ‘Arian’ Controversy is named after Arius, implying he played a huge role. In reality, he was insignificant. This article explains why it is called ‘Arian’.

The โ€˜Arianโ€™ Controversy began in 318; only five years after Christianity was legalized. It began a dispute between Arius, who was in charge of one of the churches in Alexandria, and his bishop Alexander. It continued until Emperor Theodosius in 380 – 62 years later – made Trinitarian Christianity the State Religion of the Roman Empire and outlawed all other versions of Christianity.

The term โ€˜Arianโ€ is derived from the name Arius. This implies that he was the founder and teacher of โ€˜Arianismโ€™, and that his teachings prevailed for most of the fourth century. However, “in the first few decades of the present (20th) century โ€ฆ seminally important work was โ€ฆ done in the sorting-out of the chronology of the controversy, and in the isolation of a hard core of reliable primary documents.” (Williams, p. 11-12) Consequently, “the four decades since 1960 have produced much revisionary scholarship on the Trinitarian and Christological disputes of the fourth century.” (Ayres, p. 11) Based on this research, this article shows that Arius was of no great significance and that it is called the โ€˜Arianโ€™ Controversy because Athanasius invented the term ‘Arian’ to insult his opponents by describing them as followers of Arius’ already rejected theology.

Summary

The First Seven Years

Arius was of some significance during the first 7 years of the Controversy until the Nicene Council in 325 decidedly rejected his theology. However, his importance was limited. He was not the founder or leader of โ€˜Arianismโ€™:

โ€œArius was part of a wider theological trajectory; Many of his ideas were opposed by others in this trajectory: he neither originated the trajectory nor uniquely exemplified it.โ€ (Ayres, p. 2)

โ€œMany of the issues raised by the controversy were under lively discussion before Arius and Alexander publicly clashedโ€ (RH, 52). Arius โ€œwas the spark that started the explosion. But in himself he was of no great significance.โ€ (RH, xvii)

โ€œMany of Arius’ earliest supporters appear to have rallied to him because they, like him, opposed Alexander’s theologyโ€ (Ayres, p. 14).

The Next 55 Years

During the next 55 years of the โ€˜Arian Controversyโ€™, Arius and his theology were no longer of any significance.ย The Controversy of those 55 years was not caused by Arius. It was caused by the inclusion in the Nicene Creed of “new terms borrowed from the pagan philosophy of the day.” (RH, 846) The Controversy revolved specifically around the term homoousios, meaning โ€œsame substance.โ€ This was a new and different dispute. As discussed in another article:

The Homo-ousians, with Athanasius on the forefront, defending the term against the anti-Nicene majority, argued that the Sonโ€™s substance is identical to the Fatherโ€™s.

The homo-i-ousians claimed that His substance is similar to the Fatherโ€™s, but not identical.

The hetero-ousians (the Neo-Arians) said that the Sonโ€™s substance is different from the Fatherโ€™s.

The homo-ians refused to talk about God’s substance because the Bible does not say anything about it.

The point is that โ€œAriusโ€™ own theology is of little importance in understanding the major debates of the rest of the centuryโ€ (after Nicaea) (Ayres, p. 56-57):

โ€œAriusโ€™ role in โ€˜Arianismโ€™ was not that of the founder of a sect. It was not his individual teaching that dominated the mid-century eastern Church.โ€ (Williams, p. 165)

โ€œThose who suspected or openly repudiated the decisions of Nicaea had little in common but this hostility … certainly not a loyalty to the teaching of Arius as an individual theologian.โ€ (Williams, p. 233)

Athanasius invented Arianism.

So, if the word “Arian” is derived from Arius’ name, and if Arius “in himself … was of no great significance” (RH, xvii), why is it called the ‘Arian Controversy’? The reason is that, while the anti-Nicenes sometimes accused Athanasius and the Nicene Creed of Sabellianism, Athanasius invented the term โ€˜Arianโ€™ “to tar” his opponents with the name of another theology that was already then formally rejected by the church:

โ€œ’Arianism’ as a coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciples, is a fantasy โ€ฆ based on the polemic of Nicene writers, above all Athanasius.โ€ (Williams, p. 82)

But, since Athanasius’ opponents were NOT followers of Arius:

โ€œTheologians who criticized the Creed of Nicaea had very diverse attitudes to Arius himself.โ€ (Williams, p. 247)

โ€˜Arianismโ€™ is a serious misnomer.

Since the term ‘Arianism’ implies โ€œa coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciplesโ€ (Williams, p. 82), Hanson concludes that “the expression ‘the Arian Controversy’ is a serious misnomerโ€ (RH, xvii-xviii):

โ€œThis controversy is mistakenly called Arian.โ€ (Ayres, p. 13)

โ€œIf Athanasiusโ€™ account does shape our understanding, we risk misconceiving the nature of the fourth-century crisis.โ€ (Williams, p. 234)

– END OF SUMMARY –


Authors / Sources

This article series is based largely on the books of three world-class scholars who are regarded as specialists in the fourth-century Arian Controversy, namely:

Hanson, bishop R.P.C.
The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God –

The Arian Controversy 318-381, 1987

Williams, Archbishop Rowan
Arius: Heresy and Tradition, 2002/1987

Ayres, Lewis
Nicaea and its legacy, 2004

Ayres is a Professor of Catholic and Historical Theology

ARIUS’ WRITINGS

Very little of Arius’ writings remained, mostly in the writings of his bitterest enemy; Athanasius. Constantine ordered that all copies of Arius’ writings be destroyed. However, if Arius’ teachings dominated the church for another 55 years, his supporters would have kept copies of his writings despite Constantineโ€™s severe warnings. The real reason is that Arius’ fellow ‘Arians’ did not regard his writings worth preserving.

Little of Ariusโ€™ writings survived.

โ€œAs far as his own writings go, we have no more than three letters, (and) a few fragments of another” (RH, 5-6). The three are:

      1. The confession of faith Arius presented to Alexander of Alexandria,
      2. His letter to Eusebius of Nicomedia, and
      3. The confession he submitted to the emperor. (RH, 5-6; Williams, p. 95)

โ€œThe Thalia is Arius’ only known theological workโ€ (RH, 10) but โ€œwe do not possess a single complete and continuous text.โ€ (Williams, p. 62) We only have extracts from it in the writings of Ariusโ€™ enemies, โ€œmostly from the pen of Athanasius of Alexandria, his bitterest and most prejudiced enemy.โ€ (RH, 6)

Why did so little survive?

If Arius was such an important person that the whole Fourth Century Controversy was named after him, why did so few of his writings survive?

Constantine destroyed Ariusโ€™ writings.

The usual explanation is that, a few years after the Nicene Council in 325, when Emperor Constantine thought that Arius threatened to split the church, he ordered that all copies of the Thalia be burned so that “nothing will be left even to remind anyone of him.” He even commanded that those who do not immediately destroy Arius’ writings must be put to death (Constantine’s Edict)1Fourthcentury.com. 23 January 2010.

Arius was not regarded as a great theologian.

But that is not the real reason. The church remained โ€˜Arianโ€™ for about 55 years after the Nicene Council. If Arius had that much support that his teachings would continue to dominate the church for another 55 years, then his supporters would have kept copies of his writings despite Constantineโ€™s severe warnings.

The real reason is that Arius was not a great theologian and that not even his fellow ‘Arians’ regarded his writings as worth preserving. For example:

“It may be doubted … whether Arius ever wrote any but the most ephemeral works.โ€ (RH, 6)

โ€œThe people of his day, whether they agreed with him or not, did not regard him (Arius) as a particularly significant writer.โ€ (RH, xvii)

โ€œHe did not write anything worth preserving.โ€ (RH, xvii-xviii)

The Arian Controversy had two phases.

To explain Ariusโ€™ relevance in the Arian Controversy, we must realize that the events of the Nicene Council in the year 325 divided the Arian Controversy into two parts:

The first phase focused on Arius.

The first phase began around AD 318 in Alexandria with a dispute between Presbyter Arius and his bishop Alexander.ย  After this dispute had spread to some African regions, Emperor Constantine called the Council of Nicaea in AD 325 to bring an end to the controversy. This phase came to an end when the Council of Nicaea discussed and very soon rejected Arius’ theology:

โ€œIt became evident very early on (during the council meeting) that the condemnation of Arius was practically inevitable.โ€ (Williams, p. 68)

The second phase focused on Homoousios.

Thereafter, however, the council meeting continued and became a dispute between the two other parties at Nicaea over how the creed must be formulated. As Eusebius of Caesarea explained, the minority party of Alexander of Alexandria, because they were protected by the emperor, was able to insert “new terms borrowed from the pagan philosophy of the day” (RH, 846) (substance – ousia, same substance – homoousion, and hypostasis) into the Creed against the will of the majority:

“The decisions of Nicaea were really the work of a minority.โ€ 2Bettenson, Documents of the Christian Church, 2nd Ed 1963, p 41

The reformed website Bible.ca states:ย “We will grant โ€ฆ that a majority opposed the Nicene creed. โ€ฆ The majority who opposed the creed were not aligned with Arius!”

These terms “borrowed from the pagan philosophy” were only infrequently heard in debates before Nicaea. They were never before used in any Christian profession of faith. Since they were key words in Greek philosophy, they created a new and different problem and became the main focus of the Controversy during the second and main phase of the Arian Controversy that continued after Nicaea for more than 50 years.

โ€œThe radical words of Nicaea became in turn a new set of formulae to be defendedโ€ (Williams, p. 236).

Williams, as a Trinitarian, accepts these words but he admits that these words were not used before Nicaea and they are an untraditional innovation:

โ€œIt was โ€ฆ impossible โ€ฆ to pretend that the lost innocence of pre-Nicene trinitarian language could be restored. … to reject all innovation was simply not a real option; and thus the rejection of homoousios purely and simply as unscriptural or untraditional could no longer be sustained.โ€ (Williams, p. 234-5)

This second phase lasted for a further 55 years after Nicaea. The point is that, in this second phase, the controversy was now no longer about Ariusโ€™ theology. Arius was now irrelevant.

Homoousios divided the church into several sides.

Arius was irrelevant in the second and main phase of the Arian Controversy. During that phase there was no such thing as a single Arian movement. While the first phase of the Controversy focused on the dispute between Arius and Alexander, the 55 years of the second phase became a dispute between several different views of the ontological relationship between the Father and the Son:`

The homo-ousians were the pro-Nicenes. They accepted the statement in the Nicene Creed that the Son is homoousios (of the same substance) as the Father. But there were two camps:

People like bishop Damasis of Rome thought that homoousios means that Father and Son are one single Reality (Person).

People like Basil of Caesarea understood that Father and Son are two distinct Realities. (See – Meletian Schism)

The anti-Nicenes were divided as follows:

The homo-i-ousians claimed that the Sonโ€™s substance is similar to the substance of the Father but not the same.

The hetero-ousians said that the substance of the Son is different from the Fatherโ€™s. This was also Arius’ view but Heterousianism was significantly different from Arius’ theology.

The homoians (homo-eans) said that the Son is like the Father but rejected all uses of the word ousia (substance), including homo-ousios and homoi-ousios because the Bible does not say anything about Godโ€™s substance. For example:

The Homoeans made โ€œattempts in the credal statements of conservative synods in the 350sโ€™ to bracket the whole Nicene discussion by refusing to allow ousia-terms of any kind into professions of faithโ€ (Williams, p. 234).

Arius and Athanasius were the extremists.

Ariusโ€™ theology approximated that of the hetero-ousians. But the homo-i-ousians and the homo-ians dominated in the years after Nicaea. For example, several councils were held in which homo-i-ousian or homo-ian creeds were accepted to replace the Nicene Creed (e.g., the Long Lines Creed).ย In the mid-fourth century, the anti-Nicenes were the โ€œmainstream Christiansโ€ and regarded both Athanasius and Arius as extremists:

โ€œThe very wide spectrum of non-Nicene believers thought of themselves as mainstream Christians, and regarded Athanasius and his allies as isolated extremists – though increasingly they also looked on the more aggressive anti-Nicenes (Aetius, Eunomius, and the like) as no less alien to the mainstream of Catholic tradition.โ€ (Williams, p. 82)

In the Second Phase,
Arius was irrelevant.

So, Arius was important in the first 7 years of the Controversy, but in the second and main part of the Controversy, which raged for another 55 years, the focus was on the new words from pagan philosophy. In this phase, Arius was irrelevant. The following is further evidence of this:

His theology was irrelevant.

โ€œAriusโ€™ own theology is of little importance in understanding the major debates of the rest of the century.โ€ (Ayres, p. 56-57)

โ€œThose who suspected or openly repudiated the decisions of Nicaea โ€ฆ certainly (did not have) a loyalty to the teaching of Arius as an individual theologianโ€ (Williams, p. 233).

The so-called โ€˜Ariansโ€™ opposed Arius.

โ€œArius was suspect in the eyes of the Lucianists and their neo-Arian successors.โ€ (Williams, p. 234)

โ€œArianism (was) the โ€ฆ long-lasting hostility to or unease with Nicaea among those who would have found the Thalia puzzling and none too congenialโ€ (Williams, p. 167).

โ€œHolger Strutwolf (1999) โ€ฆ concludes that Eusebius initially misunderstood Arius as saying something similar to himself, and then distanced himself more and more from the Alexandrian as he realized his error, while still opposing the theology โ€ฆ advanced by Alexanderโ€ (Williams, p. 261).

The so-called โ€˜Ariansโ€™ never quoted Arius.

โ€œThe Arians could and did appeal to great names in the past … but not Arius!โ€ (RH, 828).

โ€œWe have no knowledge of later Arian use of the Thalia [Ariusโ€™ book] โ€ฆ which suggests that it was not to the fore in the debates of the mid-century.โ€ (Williams, p. 65)

โ€œHe may have written a lot of works โ€ฆ but (not even) โ€ฆ his supporters โ€ฆ thought them worth preserving. Those who follow his theological tradition seldom or never quote him.โ€ (RH, xvii)

Bishops did not support Arius; they opposed Alexander.

Arius was supported by several bishops; not because they agreed with Arius, but because they opposed also Alexander:

โ€œMany of Arius’ earliest supporters appear to have rallied to him because they, like him, opposed Alexander’s theologyโ€ (Ayres, p. 14).

โ€œArius gained support from some bishops โ€ฆย  Although these supporters may have been wary of some aspects of Arius’ theology … they joined in opposition to Alexander.โ€ (Ayres, p. 17)

Eusebius of Caesarea โ€œthought the theology of Alexander a greater menace than that of Arius.โ€ (Williams, p. 173)

Arius was not the leader of the ‘Arians’.

โ€œWe are not to think of Arius as dominating and directing a single school of thought to which all his allies belonged.โ€ (Williams, p. 171)

โ€œThose who suspected or openly repudiated the decisions of Nicaea had little in common but this hostility … certainly not a loyalty to the teaching of Arius as an individual theologian.โ€ (Williams, p. 233)

โ€œThe bishops at Antioch in 341 โ€ฆ did not look on him as a factional leader, or ascribe any individual authority to him.โ€ (Williams, p. 82-83, cf. 166)

โ€œArius โ€ฆ was not an obvious hero for the enemies of Nicaea.โ€ (Williams, p. 166)

Arius was an academic.

โ€œArius, like his great Alexandrian predecessors, is essentially an ‘academic’.โ€ (Williams, p. 87)

โ€œHe (Arius) is not a theologian of consensus, but a notably individual intellect.โ€ (Williams, p. 178)

He did not leave behind a school of disciples.

โ€œArius evidently made converts to his views โ€ฆ but he left no school of disciples.โ€ (Williams, p. 233)

โ€œAriusโ€™ role in โ€˜Arianismโ€™ was not that of the founder of a sect. It was not his individual teaching that dominated the mid-century eastern Church.โ€ (Williams, p. 165)

โ€œThe later ‘neo-Ariansโ€™ of the mid-century traced their theological ancestry back to the Lucianists rather than Ariusโ€ (Williams, p. 31).

Arius was part of a wider theological trajectory.

โ€œArius was part of a wider theological trajectory; many of his ideas were opposed by others in this trajectory: he neither originated the trajectory nor uniquely exemplified it.โ€ (Ayres, p. 2)

Arius was only the spark.

โ€œMany of the issues raised by the controversy were under lively discussion before Arius and Alexander publicly clashedโ€ (RH, 52).

โ€œThe views of Arius were such as โ€ฆ to bring into unavoidable prominence a doctrinal crisis which had gradually been gathering. โ€ฆ He was the spark that started the explosion. But in himself he was of no great significance.โ€ (RH, xvii)

โ€œIn the fourth century there came to a head a crisis โ€ฆ which was not created by โ€ฆ Arius.โ€ (RH, xx)

The fuel for the Controversy has been gathering over the previous centuries as writers expressed conflicting views about how the Son relates to the Father. Before Christianity was legalized, Christians were simply too busy just trying to survive to do much wrestling on this topic. But, as soon as the persecution came to an end, this explosion was inevitable. And Arius, as Hanson stated, was only the spark that ignited the fire.

Why, then, the name โ€˜Arianโ€™?

If the word “Arian” is derived from Arius’ name, and if Arius “in himself … was of no great significance” (RH, xvii) during the second and main phase of the ‘Arian Controversy’, why is it called the ‘Arian Controversy’?

Athanasius invented Arianism.

The only reason we today use the terms โ€œArianโ€ and โ€œArianismโ€ is because:

โ€œThe textbook picture of an Arian system โ€ฆ inspired by the teachings of the Alexandrian presbyter, is the invention of Athanasiusโ€™ polemic.โ€ (Williams, p. 234)

โ€œ’Arianismโ€™ is the polemical creation of Athanasius above all.โ€ (Williams, p. 247) (Athanasius was the main defender of Nicene theology against the anti-Nicene majority.)

โ€œ’Arianism’ as a coherent system, founded by a single great figure and sustained by his disciples, is a fantasy โ€ฆ based on the polemic of Nicene writers, above all Athanasius.โ€ (Williams, p. 82)

What was Athanasius’ purpose?

Athanasius’ purpose was to create the impression that, although the various anti-Nicene views seem to differ, they all constituted a single coherent system; all based on Arius’ teachings. For example:

โ€œAthanasiusโ€™ controversial energies โ€ฆ are dedicated to building up the picture of his enemies as uniformly committed โ€ฆ to a specific set of doctrines advanced by Arius and a small group of confederatesโ€ (Williams, p. 82-83).

โ€œThe professed purpose of Athanasius โ€ฆ is to exhibit the essential continuity of Arianism from first to last beneath a deceptive appearance of variety, all non-Nicene formularies of belief really lead back to the naked โ€˜blasphemies of Ariusโ€™.โ€ (Williams, p. 66)

โ€œAthanasius … was determined to show that any proposed alternative to the Nicene formula collapsed back into some version of Arius’ teaching, with all the incoherence and inadequacy that teaching displayed.โ€ (Williams, p. 247)

Athanasius’ purpose, therefore, was to argue, since Arius’ theology was already formally rejected by the church, that all opposition to the Nicene Creed was also already rejected.

Athanasius was accused of Sabellianism.

After Nicaea, the anti-Nicenes accused Alexander, Athanasius, and the Nicene Creed of submitting to Sabellianism; a theology which was already formally rejected during the previous century. For example:

โ€œThe so-called Semi-Arians in particular objected to this Greek term homoousios on the grounds that it has a Sabellian tendency.”3St. Athanasius (1911), “In Controversy With the Arians”, Select Treatises, Newman, John Henry Cardinal trans, Longmans, Green, & Co, p. 124, footn.

It was to counter this accusation, and “to tar” his opponents with the name of another theology that was already rejected, that Athanasius referred to his opponents as โ€˜Ariansโ€™.

โ€œHeresiological labels enabled early theologians and ecclesiastical historians โ€ฆ to tar enemies with the name of a figure already in disrepute. Most famously some participants in the debate described loosely related but clearly distinct thinkers as Arians.โ€ (Ayres, p. 2)

The term ‘Arian’ was intended to insult.

Athanasius was fond of insulting his opponents by calling them all sorts of names. (See Tuggy’s podcasts 169, 170, 171.) The name ‘Arian’ fits this pattern:

โ€œ’The Arians’, (and a variety of abusive names whereby he [Athanasius] distinguishes them.โ€ (RH, 19)

Athanasius quotes Arius because he โ€œrelies on such texts being a positive embarrassment to most of his opponentsโ€ (Williams, p. 234).

A Serious Misnomer.

There was no single, coherent ‘Arian’ party.

The term โ€œArianโ€ creates the impression that there was only one anti-Nicene view. However:

As already shown above, the term homoousios divided the church into several different branches, including several very different anti-Nicene views.

โ€œโ€˜Arianism,โ€™ throughout most of the fourth century, was in fact a loose and uneasy coalition of those hostile to Nicaea in general and the homoousios in particularโ€ (Williams, p. 166).

โ€œScholars continue to talk as if there were a clear continuity among non-Nicene theologians by deploying such labels as Arians, semi-Arians, and neo-Arians. Such presentations are misleading.โ€ (Ayres, p. 13-14)

โ€œThere was no such thing in the fourth century as a single, coherent ‘Arian’ party.โ€ (Williams, p. 233)

Arius was not the dominant teacher.

Furthermore, the term โ€œArianโ€ creates the impression that Arius was the dominant teacher of the ‘Arian’ movement and that his disciples propagated his theology later in the century. However:

โ€œNo clear party sought to preserve Arius’ theology. Many … are termed Arian … (but) their theologies often have significantly different concerns and preoccupations.โ€ (Ayres, p. 13)

โ€œThere was no single โ€˜Arian’ agenda, no tradition of loyalty to a single authoritative teacher. Theologians who criticized the Creed of Nicaea had very diverse attitudes to Arius himself.โ€ (Williams, p. 247)

โ€œThe fourth-century crisis โ€ฆ is very far from being a struggle by ‘the Churchโ€™ against a ‘heresyโ€™ formulated and propagated by a single dominated teacherโ€ (Williams, p. 234).

โ€œIt is virtually impossible to identify a school of thought dependent on Arius’ specific theology.โ€ (Ayres, p. 2)

A Serious Misnomer

Since Arius was not the dominant teacher but, actually, a relatively unimportant person, and since there was no single ‘Arian’ party, our authors concluded that:

“The expression ‘the Arian Controversy’ is a serious misnomer.โ€ (RH, xvii-xviii)

โ€œ’Arianism’ is a very unhelpful term to use in relation to fourth-century controversy.โ€ (Williams, p. 247)

โ€œThis controversy is mistakenly called Arian.โ€ (Ayres, p. 13)

Rowan Williams concluded, โ€œI was still, in 1987, prepared, even with reservations, to use the adjective ‘Arianโ€™ in a way I should now find difficultโ€ (Williams, p. 248).

And Lewis Ayres said, โ€œFor these reasons some scholars now simply refrain from using the term Arian other than as an adjective to describe Arius’ own theology and I shall follow that practice.โ€ (Ayres, p. 14)

A Complete Travesty

Hanson stated that the traditional account of the Arian Controversy, which stems originally from the version given of it by the victorious party, is now recognized by a large number of scholars to be a complete travesty. Our authors confirm:

The โ€œolder accounts (of the Arian Controversy) are deeply mistaken.โ€ (Ayres, p. 11)

โ€œThe accounts of what happened which have come down to us were mostly written by those who belonged to the school of thought which eventually prevailed and have been deeply coloured by that fact.โ€ (RH, xviii-xix).

This message, however, has yet to fully reach the level of preachers and ordinary Christians due to, as Williams indicated, the prejudice caused by the long history of ‘demonizingโ€™ Arius is extraordinarily powerful. (Williams, p. 2)

Athanasius distorts.

In the view of the Catholic Church and many, many Protestants, Athanasius is the hero of the Arian Controversy and they believe whatever he wrote. But, apart from Jesus, nobody is without sin, and the above shows that Athanasiusโ€™ writings distort the nature of that Controversy:

โ€œIf Athanasiusโ€™ account does shape our understanding, we risk misconceiving the nature of the fourth-century crisis.โ€ (Williams, p. 234)

โ€œThis book has attempted to view Arius without the distorting gloss of Athanasian polemic intervening and determining our picture of the heresiarch.โ€ (Williams, p. 234)

The article titled Complete Travesty lists several aspects of the traditional account that are blatantly wrong but the fact that ‘Arianism’ is a serious misnomer is one of the more important aspects.

Trinitarian Christianity continued the deception.

Unfortunately, after Emperor Theodosius, in the year 380, made the Trinitarian version of Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire and ruthlessly eliminated all other versions of Christianity from amongst the Roman people, the victorious Trinitarian Christianity accepted and continued Athanasiusโ€™ description of the Arian Controversy.

Even today, any person who opposes the Trinity doctrine is labeled as an ‘Arian’, irrespective of what the person believes.

It was only after the ancient documents became more readily available in the 20th century that scholars realized that the textbook account of the Arian Controversy is a complete travesty. But this realization is slow to work its way through to the rank and file of Christianity.ย 


OTHER ARTICLES

FOOTNOTES

  • 1
    Fourthcentury.com. 23 January 2010.
  • 2
    Bettenson, Documents of the Christian Church, 2nd Ed 1963, p 41
  • 3
    St. Athanasius (1911), “In Controversy With the Arians”, Select Treatises, Newman, John Henry Cardinal trans, Longmans, Green, & Co, p. 124, footn.
  • 4
    Overview of the history, from the pre-Nicene Church Fathers, through the fourth-century Arian Controversy