Pro-Nicene theology did not exist in 325.

Summary

In the traditional account of the Arian Controversy, the Trinity doctrine was established orthodoxy when the fourth-century Arian Controversy began and is reflected in the Nicene Creed of 325. Consequently, the later Nicene theology was simply a clearer restatement of the Nicene Creed.

However, the Nicene Creed was a drawn battle. On the one hand, there are several indications in it of the Arian view that the Son is subordinate to the Father. (See here) On the other hand, the inclusion of the term homoousios implies a strong Sabellian influence. (See here)

In reality, Nicene theology, as we know it today, did not exist when the Controversy began or when the Nicene Creed was formulated:

“Orthodoxy on the subject of the Christian doctrine of God did not exist at first.” (RH, 870)

“There is no one original Nicene theology that continues unchanged through the century.” (LA, 237)

The ‘orthodoxy’ as we know it today was worked out through that struggle as one way of interpreting the Nicene Creed:

“The century is understood as one of evolution in doctrine.” (LA, 13)

“This is not the story of a defence of orthodoxy, but of a search for orthodoxy.” (RH, xix-xx)

“In the period after 360, we also begin to see the emergence of what I have termed throughout the book so far ‘pro-Nicene’ theology.” (LA, 167)

One important aspect in which Nicene theology evolved was the number of Persons (hypostases) in God. For the first 40 years after Nicaea, the Nicenes taught that the Father and Son are a single Person (hypostasis). (Read more) Only in the 360-370s, following the Cappadocians, did Nicenes accept that God exists as three Persons.

Athanasius wrote his De synodis over the years 359–61. “For the first time we have considered a text that offers the logic of unity at one ‘level’ and distinction at another.” (LA, 175)

“During these two decades (360-380) we also see the beginnings of an evolution of terminologies that will distinguish what in God is one from what is three.” (LA, 434)

“The Cappadocian Fathers presented the Church with the doctrine of the Trinity.” (Hanson).

In conclusion, pro-Nicene theology deviated from the orthodoxy of the first three centuries. 

“The break with the past which the evolution of the doctrine of the Trinity made … that it was a change can hardly be denied” (RH, 871-2).

“Those whose views finally prevailed … what was a bold and creative new formulation of the truth” (RH, 873).


Authors Quoted

This article series is based on books by world-class scholars of the last 50 years. 

Due to research and a store of ancient documents that have become available over the last 100 years, scholars today conclude that the traditional account of the Controversy – of how and why the church accepted the Trinity doctrine – is history written by the winner and fundamentally flawed. In some instances, it is the opposite of the true history.

Following the last full-scale book on the fourth-century Arian Controversy in English, written by Gwatkin at the beginning of the 20th century, only a handful of full-scale books on the Arian Controversy have been published. This article series is largely based on the following books:

RH Bishop RPC Hanson
The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God –
The Arian Controversy 318-381 (1987)

RW Archbishop Rowan Williams
Arius: Heresy and Tradition (2002/1987)

LA = Lewis Ayres
Nicaea and its legacy (2004)
Ayres is a Professor of Catholic and Historical Theology

KA = Khaled Anatolios
Retrieving Nicaea (2011)

Purpose

There were many different views of the nature of Christ during the fourth-century Arian Controversy but we can group them into two broad categories: Arian and Nicene.

Explain more

The term ‘Arian’ is a serious misnomer because Arius did not have followers, was not regarded as an important writer, and was irrelevant after the Council of Nicaea. (See here) Nevertheless, this article uses the term ‘Arian’ for the anti-Nicenes because most readers are familiar with that term.

The purpose of this article is to show that Nicene theology evolved during the Controversy, meaning that the Nicene Creed is not equivalent to what eventually became accepted as orthodox.

The purpose of this article is to show that Nicene theology evolved during the Controversy, meaning that the Nicene Creed is not equivalent to what eventually became accepted as orthodox. For this purpose, in the quotes below, Lewis Ayres distinguishes between Nicene and pro-Nicene theology:

    • Nicene refers to the theology of the Nicene Creed.
    • Pro-Nicene is the form of Nicene theology that became accepted at the end of that century.

The Meaning of ‘pro-Nicene’

In pro-Nicene theology, the three Persons are one Being. 

Ayres explains pro-Nicene theology as teaching that the Father, Son, and Spirit not only have the same type of nature; they are one undivided nature or Being and work as one. Since they are one Being, the generation of the Son and the Spirit did not divide the one divine Being. This is more or less the traditional Trinity doctrine.

Show Ayres' definition

Traditional Account

In the traditional account, pro-Nicene theology is simply the clearer restatement of an original Nicene theology. 

In the older account, “a clear Nicene doctrine (was) established in the controversy’s earliest stages.” (LA, 11-12)

“My use of the term pro-Nicene is initially defined against those accounts that present the fourth-century Trinitarian controversies as having one solution: the clearer restatement of an original Nicene theology.” (LA, 236)

“This (original Nicene) theology is understood as defended (if not defined) by Athanasius (and) taken up and given more precision by the Cappadocians.” (LA, 236-7)

Pro-Nicene theology evolved.

In reality, ‘pro-Nicene’ theology, as defined, did not exist when the Nicene Creed was formulated. 

The ‘orthodox view’ as we know it today did not exist at the beginning of the Arian Controversy but evolved over the 62 years of that struggle. There was no one original Nicene theology that continued unchanged through the century:

“There is no doubt, however, that the pro-Nicene theologians throughout the controversy were engaged in a process of developing doctrine and consequently introducing what must be called a change in doctrine” (RH, 872).

“In the period after 360, we also begin to see the emergence of what I have termed throughout the book so far ‘pro-Nicene’ theology: theologies which contain new arguments for or pro Nicaea.” (LA, 167)

“There is undeniably a development of a theology of the triune being of God from Alexander to the Cappadocians and Augustine, as there is a development of the theology of the divine will from Arius to Eunomius.” (Anatolios, p. 35)

Show more quotes

Aspects that changed

These include the Holy Spirit, the distinction between ousia and hypostasis, and the Persons of God. 

Holy Spirit – The Nicene Creed does not describe the Holy Spirit as God or as homoousios. In the beginning, the Controversy focused on the Son of God.

Hypostasis and Ousia – At the time of the Creed, and in the Creed itself, the terms hypostasis and ousia functioned as synonyms. The Cappadocians, in the 360s and 370s, proposed a distinction. (Read more) Without this distinction the Trinity doctrine does not exist for it describes God as three hypostases (Persons) but one ousia (Being).

Persons of God – For the first 40 years after Nicaea, the Nicenes, including Alexander, the Sabellians, and Athanasius, taught that the Father and Son are a single Person (hypostasis) with a single mind. (Read more) The final form of Nicene theology, to which the Cappadocians in the 360s and 370s contributed significantly, was that God is one Being but three Persons. 

An Explanation of Nicaea

Pro-Nicene theology is one possible interpretation of the Nicene Creed. 

“By ‘pro-Nicene’ I mean those theologies, appearing from the 360s to the 380s … of how the Nicene creed should be understood. … All of these theologies build closely on and adapt themes found earlier in the century, but none is identical with any original ‘Nicene’ theology apparent in the 320s or 330s.” (LA, 6)

Show more quotes

Athanasius was not a Trinitarian.

Athanasius was Trinitarian at first. He was a Unitarian. 

“I also use pro-Nicene to refer to theologians who seem to be the direct precursors of that later orthodoxy but whose theology still falls short of it in some respects. The most important Greek example is the later Athanasius while in Latin we might point to Hilary.” (LA, 239)

Athanasius wrote his De synodis over the years 359–61. “For the first time we have considered a text that offers the logic of unity at one ‘level’ and distinction at another.” (LA, 175)

This is important. During the previous decades, Alexander, Athanasius, the Sabellians, and the Western Church argued that the Father, Son, and Spirit are a single hypostasis. In other words, they explained God as only a single Person. (Read more) But Ayres says that, around the year 360, Athanasius for the first time explained God as both one and three. This was the first time anybody did this, preparing the way for the development of the Trinity doctrine. It was to support this notion that the Cappadocians proposed a distinction between hypostasis and ousia:

“During these two decades (360-380) we also see the beginnings of an evolution of terminologies that will distinguish what in God is one from what is three: a statement that God is one in nature, power, glory, or essence is combined with a statement that there are three persons, hypostases, or ‘things’. This balance of statements is understood as the context for interpreting Nicaea’s terminology, and marks the full emergence of ‘pro-Nicene’ theology.” (LA, 434)

The Cappadocians were pro-Nicene.

Ayres describes the Cappadocians as pro-Nicenes. 

“The theologies of Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory Nazianzen are three key examples of pro-Nicene theologies.” (LA, 434)

A previous article concluded that the Cappadocians described the Persons as three distinct Beings with three distinct minds but with the same type of substance, like three human persons also have the same type of substance. (See here) This is not consistent with the Trinity doctrine in which the three ‘Persons’ are one Being with a single mind and will. Such a theology is also open to the accusation of tri-theism.

However, other carefully worded evaluations of Cappadocian theology emphasize the one-ness of the three Persons more.

Show Ayres’ explanation

Pro-Nicene deviates from Tradition.

In conclusion, pro-Nicene theology deviates from the orthodoxy of the first three centuries. 

“In order to perceive the full genius and drive of the Christian faith it was necessary for them to some extent to emancipate [liberate] themselves from the tradition, even from the orthodoxy of the past” (RH, 873).

“The break with the past which the evolution of the doctrine of the Trinity made … that it was a change can hardly be denied” (RH, 871-2).

“Those whose views finally prevailed … what was a bold and creative new formulation of the truth” (RH, 873).

“The theologians who contributed to form the doctrine of the Trinity were carrying out, whether they knew it or not, a kind of theological revolution, and one that left to the next century the task of squaring this new understanding of God with a belief in the Incarnation” (RH, 875).


Other Articles

The Macrostich (Long Lines Creed) reveals the heart of Arianism.

Christianity in the Fourth Century

This is an article in the series on the fourth-century Arian Controversy. It describes the events of the 340s after the failed Council of Serdica in 343 but focuses mostly on the Macrostich (the Long Liner Manifesto) as perhaps the most significant event of that period. At the Council of Serdica, the Western delegation formulated an explicitly one-hypostasis view. It says:

“We have received and have been taught this … tradition: that there is one hypostasis, which the heretics (also) call ousia, of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” (Hanson, p. 301)

Against this view, the East, through the Macrostich, asserts three hypostases. These articles may seem complex and even unimportant but they are important for a proper understanding of the prophecies of Daniel and Revelation.

AUTHORS QUOTED

Ayres, Lewis, Nicaea and its Legacy, An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitarian Theology, 2004

Hanson RPC, The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God: The Arian Controversy, 318-381. 1988

Due to discoveries of ancient documents and significant additional research, the scholarship of the past hundred years has concluded that the traditional account of the fourth-century Arian Controversy presents history from the winner’s perspective and is a complete travesty. These books reflect the revised account of that Controversy.

THEOLOGY CATEGORIES

One-hypostasis and three-hypostases theologies are key concepts in this article and, therefore, first explained.

One Hypostasis means one Person.

To say that Father, Son, and Spirit are one hypostasis is to say that they are a single Person with one single mind. There are variations of this view:

Three Names – The second-century Monarchians said that the Father, Son, and Spirit are three names for the same one God.

Three Parts – The third-century Sabellians taught that Father, Son, and Spirit are three parts of the one hypostasis (Person). Sabellius had many followers, but his teaching was formally condemned.

Part of the Father – Alexander and Athanasius maintained that the Son is part of the Father, namely, His only Word and Wisdom. Tertullian similarly said that the Father is the whole, and the Son is part of the whole. 

Three Hypostases means three Persons.

In the ‘three hypostases’ view, the Father, Son, and Spirit are three distinct Persons with three distinct minds. There are also variations of the ‘three hypostases’ theory:

In contrast to the ‘same substance’ (homoousios) of the Nicene Creed, some said their substances are unlike (heterousios), others said their substances are similar (homoiousios) and others refused to talk about substance (the Homoians).

Generally, in the ‘three hypostases’-view, the Son is subordinate to the Father. However, the Cappadocians had a three-hypostases view in which the substances are the same in all respects so that they are equal.

Hypostases in the Traditional Trinity Doctrine

There are various Trinity theories. (See – Tuggy) In the modern era, for example, some scholars propose a social Trinity in which the three hypostases are real Persons with real distinct minds. Similar to the Cappadocian view, this is open to the charge of tritheism. For that reason, the traditional Trinity doctrine, as taught by the Roman Church, retained Basil of Caesarea’s verbal formula of three hypostases but also describes the Father, Son, and Spirit as one Being. But it is important to note that the traditional Trinity doctrine uses the term hypostasis differently from how the ancients used it. In this doctrine, hypostasis does not mean ‘Person’ because each Person does not have a distinct mind. Rather, the three hypostases share a single mind. Therefore Hanson says: “I refrain from using the misleading word’ Person.” He describes the Three as “three ways of being or modes of existing as God.” The challenge would be to show how the traditional Trinity doctrine differs from Modalism, which is the name Von Harnack gave to second-century Monarchianism. 

OVERVIEW OF EARLIER HISTORY

Arius and Alexander

In 318, only five years after Christianity was legalized, a dispute broke out between bishop Alexander of Alexandria and one of his presbyters, Arius, about the nature of the Son of God:

Alexander believed that the Son is part of the Father. Consequently, they are a single hypostasis (Person). It follows that the Son is as immutable and eternal as the Father.

In contrast, Arius followed the traditional teaching in which Father and Son are two distinct Persons. However, he had some extreme teachings. For example, he said that the Son was begotten out of nothing.

Arius has several important supporters, not because they supported everything that he taught, but because they viewed Alexander’s one-hypostasis theology as a greater evil.

The Nicene Council

Nicene Creed
The emperor standing behind the church fathers

Emperor Constantine attempted to reconcile the quarreling parties by a letter and by sending Ossius, his religious advisor, to Alexandria. But his efforts failed. Probably based on Ossius’ recommendation, he took Alexander’s part in the dispute. Early in 325, Ossius chaired an “anti-Arian Council” in Antioch (Hanson, p. 131). That meeting provisionally excommunicated Eusebius of Caesarea, a supporter of Arius and perhaps the most respected theologian at the time.

This was followed by the Nicene Council later that same year. At that council, Alexander allied with the Sabellians because they all taught that Father and Son are one single hypostasis. And since Constantine had taken Alexander’s part in the dispute, this alliance dominated and managed to include in the Creed at least a hint of one-hypostasis theology.

After Nicaea, Sabellians claimed that the Nicene Creed identifies Sabellianism as the formally approved religion of the church. This resulted in a decade of conflict in which the main Sabellians were removed from their positions. (See – Post-Nicaea Correction.) Thereafter, Nicaea and the term homoousios were not mentioned by anybody for about 20 years. (See – Homoousios)

Athanasius

While the first crisis (the dispute between Arius and Alexander) seems to be put to rest, a second crisis was brewing, namely, Athanasius:

Alexander died in 328 and Athanasius was elected in his place as bishop of Alexandria. Seven years later, in 335, he was also exiled; not for his theology but for violence against the Melitians in his see. (See – Council of Tyre.) In 337, when Constantine died, all exiled bishops were allowed to return, including Athanasius.

However, the church soon again accused him before the emperor. Consequently, Athanasius then developed his polemical strategy, claiming that he was, in fact, exiled for his opposition to Arianism and that all his enemies were Arians, meaning followers of Arius. Using these arguments, he appealed to the bishop of Rome and was successful because the West, which was not initially part of the Controversy and not represented at the Council of Nicaea, traditionally had a one-hypostasis theology; just like Athanasius. (See – Vindicated.) At the Council of Rome in 340, the West vindicated both Marcellus and Athanasius. Marcellus was the best-known Sabellian at the time and was, for that reason, previously condemned and exiled by the Eastern Church. In 341, the bishop of Rome attacked the East by writing a letter, claiming that Marcellus and Athanasius are orthodox in their teachings and that the East follows Arius, who was condemned at Nicaea.

Dedication and Serdica Councils

Later in that same year (341), the East met to discuss the letter from the bishop of Rome and formulated the Dedication Creed, which condemned some of Arius’ teachings but particularly condemned the West’s one-hypostasis theology.

This was followed in 343 by the Council of Serdica. This council was supposed to reconcile the West and the East but the two parties never met as one because of their dispute over Athanasius and Marcellus. The West brought these two men with as part of its delegation and demanded that they be allowed to participate in the Council. But the Eastern Church refused because it had already condemned both men. The Western delegation then formulated a creed that explicitly presents a one-hypostasis theology:

“We have received and have been taught this … tradition: that there is one hypostasis, which the heretics (also) call ousia, of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” (Hanson, p. 301)1Hanson refer to “`the suspicion of Sabellianism which hung around the one Western theological statement which had appeared since the controversy began, the Formula accompanying the Encyclical of the Western bishops at Serdica.” (Hanson, p. 311)

End of the Controversy

Various other articles describe the events of the 350s, 360s, and 370s. The Controversy ended when emperor Theodosius, in 380, put the Trinity doctrine into law and made the Trinitarian version of Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire. (See – Emperor Theodosius). The next year, in 381, he called the Council of Constantinople, which ratified his decisions. (See – Constantinople,)

The most important conclusion of this series of articles is that the emperor was the final judge in the church’s doctrinal disputes. Furthermore, the Roman Empire selected the Trinitarian version of Christianity as the state religion of the Empire and exterminated other forms of Christianity. It is often said that the Empire made Christianity its state religion. No. It made the majority view in the West the state religion and persecuted all other views, including the majority view in the East. The Controversy began soon after persecution ended and ended when persecution was resumed.

Consequently, the church that entered the Middle Ages was a remnant of the Roman Empire; the ‘Roman Church’, meaning, the Church of the Roman Empire. The Trinity doctrine was its identifying mark.

RECONCILIATION ATTEMPTS

Serdica in 343 was perhaps intended to bring reconciliation but failed. In the 340s, the Empire remained divided between Emperor Constans in the West and his brother Constantius in the East. This allowed the church in the two halves of the Empire to revert to their traditional positions: While the Latin-speaking West depended on Tertullian, the Greek-speaking East relied heavily on Origen. After the failure of Serdica, little happened during the remainder of the 340s, except some attempts at rapprochement.2“The remainder of the 340s requires much less discussion. Richard Hanson rightly characterizes this period as one in which the failure of Serdica eventually prompted attempts at rapprochement.” (Ayres, p. 126)

Western Attempt

“After Serdica … both sides were ready for peace feelers. (Hanson, p. 306-7)

The three main Christian centers in the Fourth Century

In 344, “a Western delegation consisting of two bishops” arrived in Antioch. “This visit unfortunately proved abortive owing to the mischiefmaking proclivity of Stephen bishop of Antioch. He attempted to ensnare Euphrates (one of the two Western bishops) in a false charge of fornication by planting a prostitute in his bedroom. The plot miscarried and the instigator of it was exposed. Stephen was deposed from his see. … The two Western bishops returned home in understandable umbrage.” (Hanson, p. 307)

Athanasius Recalled

“Constans was at this point pressing his brother strongly to recall Athanasius to his see of Alexandria.” (Hanson, p. 307) “Constans was keen to assert his own ecclesiastical policy.” (Ayres, p. 127)

“In the summer of 345 Constantius permitted Athanasius back to Alexandria. … Athanasius made his way back cautiously, visiting Constantius, and did not arrive until 346.” (Ayres, p. 127)

“Meanwhile the opponents of Athanasius had gathered at Antioch and protested against his readmission to his see. … Constantius was pursuing a policy of reconciliation, when he had time to turn his attention to ecclesiastical affairs, and the enemies of Athanasius were powerless.” (Hanson, p. 312) “The watchword at this period was Reconciliation.” (Hanson, p. 313)

Eastern Attempt

“In other parts of the church, the prevailing temper was also one of reconciliation. The Council of Antioch … in 344 also produced a creed, which was conveyed [in 345] to the Western church by a delegation of Eastern bishops.” (Hanson, p. 308)3The Christian church originated in Jerusalem but, in the first century, Antioch soon became the leading gentile church.

This creed was “universally known as the Macrostich (‘Long-Liner’ Manifesto’). … The first part is much the same as, if not identical with, the IVth Antiochene Creed of 341,” (Hanson, p. 308) which leaves out, as far as possible, all contentious issues. It attempted to explain Christ simply from the Bible, without referring to the recent contentious views. However, the Macrostich added “a long explanation.” (Ayres, p. 127) “The conciliatory tone of this text is clear.” (Ayres, p. 129)

The closing section of the creed states the purpose as “to clear away all unjust suspicion concerning our opinions, … and that all in the West may know, … the audacity of the slanders.” The “slanders” refer, most probably, to the letter written by the bishop of Rome in 431 which, following Athanasius, accused the East of being followers of Arius. Through the creed, the bishops in Antioch attempted to clarify their position.

In 345, the Eastern delegation presented their manifesto to the Latin-speaking bishops in the western part of the empire. “The Council of Milan … gave audience to the Antiochenes with their creed. Before the Council would consider the Macrostich, however, they demanded that the Eastern bishops should condemn Arius. The Eastern delegation refused to do this, not assuredly because they were unwilling to condemn Arius, but because they thought it insulting to be suspected and arraigned in this way. They returned to Antioch, their purpose unaccomplished.” (Hanson, p. 312)

While Arius had some extreme views, he was, like the Eastern delegation, a ‘three hypostasis’ theologian. Therefore, his views were much closer to the Easterners’ than to the Western one-hypostasis theology.

The Controversy was deeply political.

“Political tensions between Constans and Constantius have shaped a controversy between a key group of eastern bishops and their … ‘western’ counterparts. That controversy is indeed partly theological … (but) also deeply political, both” politics inside and outside the church.” (Ayres, p. 129-130) 4“In ecclesial terms (what form of appeal is possible following conciliar condemnation? can eastern and western councils interfere in each other’s business? can one appeal to Rome?) and in extra-ecclesial terms.”

“But this period of rapprochement resolved nothing: the tensions remained.” (Ayres, p. 130)

THE MACROSTICH

The East answered the next year (344) with another creed, the Macrostich or Long-Lined Creed, confessing three hypostases. The term homoousios was only brought back into the Controversy in the 350s (see here). After that, the three-hypostases view subdivided into the Heterousian, Homoiousian, and Homoian views. The Macrostich explains the three-hypostases view before homoousios became an issue again. 

This section discusses this manifesto as an opportunity to understand the three-hypostases view in the middle of the fourth century. The term homoousios was only brought back into the Controversy in the 350s (see here) and, only after that, did the three-hypostases view subdivide into the heterousian, homoiousian, and Homoian views.

Hoping their creed would be acceptable to all, the Eastern bishops avoided controversial and non-biblical language as far as possible.

Believes in three hypostases.

The Macrostich describes the Father, Son, and Spirit as three distinct Persons. Attempting to avoid all the new terms borrowed from Greek philosophy, it does not mention “three hypostases” explicitly (Hanson, p. 311) but uses the terms ‘realities’ and ‘persons’:

      • “There are three realities (πράγματα) or persons (πρόσωπα),” (Ayres, p. 128)
      • It condemns “those who treat Father, Son, and Spirit as three names of one reality (πράγμα) or person (πρόσωπον),” (Ayres, p. 128) and

In one-hypostasis theology, the Son or Word does not have a true distinct existence. Therefore it “argues against Marcellan doctrines which … treat the Word as ‘mere word of God and unexisting, having his being in another’.” (Ayres, p. 127) “Against this theology the Macrostich confesses the Son as ‘living God and Word, existing in himself’.” (Ayres, p. 128)

These are aimed against one-hypostasis theology, specifically against Sabellianism, as the West held according to the manifesto of the Western delegates at Serdica in 343. The Macrostich says that, if the three were the same, then, when the Son became a man, the Unlimited has become limited, the Impassible5incapable of suffering or feeling pain had become passible and the Immutable6not subject to change had become mutable.

Only the Father exists without beginning.

The manifesto begins by saying:

“We believe in one God the Father Almighty,
the Creator and Maker of all things.”

This is the standard opening of all creeds, including the Nicene Creed, identifying the Father as the “one God.” The Macrostich adds: “We do assert ‘three Objects and three Persons’, but not three gods.” (Hanson, p. 310) It does not confess three Gods because the Father alone exists without cause or beginning, and has generated the Son. 7“This does not … mean three Gods because there is only one ingenerate, unbegun and because the Father ‘who alone has existence from himself, and alone gives this abundantly to all others’.” (Ayres, p. 128)8“Since we acknowledge the Self-complete and Ingenerate and Unbegun and Invisible God to be one only, the God and Father of the Only-begotten, who alone has being from Himself, and alone gives this to all others generously.”9“Only the Father of Christ is unbegotten and unbeginning.” (Hanson, p. 310) “We must not consider the Son to be co-unbegun.” “The Father is the Son’s origin.” (Hanson, p. 310) Only the Father is selfsufficient and invisible. (Hanson, p. 310)

Origin of the Son

The Son was begotten from the being of God.

The creed condemns “those who say, that the Son was from nothing, or from other subsistence and not from God.” Note that this sentence uses the word “from” three times, indicating three possible sources of the Son:

“It is not safe … to say that the Son is from non-existence,” as Arius said. Nor can we say that He is from some other “underlying hypostasis.” He is “genuinely begotten from God alone.” (Hanson, p. 310)

He exists by the Father’s will.

In the one-hypostasis view, since the Father and Son are one single ‘Person’, the Son has existed for as long as the Father has. Consequently, the Father had never decided to beget the Son; the Father ‘always’ was Father, and the Son ‘always’ was Son.

In contrast, the Macrostich anathematizes those who say that the Father had no choice but to beget the Son so that He begat the Son unwillingly. It says that the Father begat the Son by his counsel and his will. (Hanson, p. 309-10) 10“The Son is generated from the Father’s will as the only alternative to being generated by necessity.” (Ayres, p. 129)

In this way, the Macrostich avoids Origen’s doctrine of “eternal generation of the Son.” (Hanson, p. 311) Origen argued that God created all things through His Son, that God has always created, therefore the Son has always existed. Therefore, in Origen’s theory, the creation has also always existed.

There was no time before the Son.

Arius said, “there was when He (the Son) was not.” Although Arius explicitly taught that the Son was begotten “timelessly,” his enemies accused him of saying there was “time” when the Son was not. The Macrostich states:

It is dangerous to say that “there was a time when he did not exist.” We do not envisage “an interval of time preceding him.” Only God who begot him timelessly, preceded Him. (Hanson, p. 310) “The Son of God existed before the ages.” (Hanson, p. 309) He was begotten “before all ages.” There was no “time or age when He was not.”

In other words, the Son had a beginning, but that beginning was before time existed. Therefore, there never was “a time or age when He was not.”

He is not a Created Being.

Arius said that the Son is the only Being ever produced by the Father directly, that He is the only Being who can come directly into God’s presence, and that He is the Creator of all else. But Arius’ enemies accused him of saying that the Son is a mere created being. For a further discussion, see here.

The Macrostich similarly says that “the Son was not created as other creatures and products are produced; he cannot be compared with them.” He is the only being ever begotten by God. (Hanson, p. 310) All other creatures came into existence through the Son. “It is irreligious … to compare the Creator with handiworks created by Him.”

The opening phrase of the creed identifies the Father as “the Creator and Maker of all things.” The Bible says that God created all things through the Son (John 1:3; Heb 1:2-3; Col 1:15-16). The Father is the Force and Cause of creation. The Son is the Means or Hand through which God created.

The Son is both subordinate and God.

The Macrostich strongly affirms the subordination of the Son. (Hanson, p. 311)11The Son is “subordinate to his Father and God.” (Ayres, p. 127) It describes the Son as subordinate to the Father because the Father alone exists without cause.12“Three realities or persons … does not … mean three Gods because there is only one ingenerate, unbegun and because the Father … ‘alone has existence from himself’.” (Ayres, p. 128) It says that the Father alone is “Head over the whole universe wholly.” However:

“In saying that the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is one only God, the only Ingenerate, do we (not) therefore deny that Christ also is God before ages …”

“Though he be subordinate to his Father and God, yet, being before ages begotten of God, he is God according to his perfect and true nature.” (Ayres, p. 127)

While the Nicene Creed describes the Son as “true God (the Son) from true God (the Father),” the Macrostich omits the word “true” in both instances and refers to Jesus as “God from God.”

That the Macrostich also describes the Son as subordinate to the Father may sound confusing to the modern ear. However, that confusion is caused by the translations. Ancient Greek did not have a word exactly equivalent to the modern word ‘God’. It only had the word theos, which means ‘divine’ or ‘god’. Even an exalted person may be called theos. We must read the context to determine whether “God” or “god” or “divine” is intended. Translators tend to translate theos, when it refers to Jesus, as “God,” but that is an application of the Trinity doctrine, not proof thereof. For a further discussion, see – The Meanings of the Word theos.

The incarnated Son is the preexistent Son.

The Macrostich refers to “His Only-begotten Son our Lord Jesus Christ.” In other words, the pre-existent “Only-begotten Son” and the incarnated “Lord Jesus Christ” are one and the same.

In contrast, in one-hypostasis theology, the incarnated Son is a different person – often a mere human with a human soul or mind who is divinely inspired, because the Son cannot suffer or die because he is the same as or part of the Father.

The Trinity

He is One with the Father.

One-hypostasis theology has a strong unity of Father and Son because they are but one hypostasis (Person). In contrast, the Macrostich explains the unity of Father and Son as “’harmony’ and ‘conjunction’:” (Hanson, p. 311)

“Father and Son ‘are united with each other without mediation or distance’ and … they ‘exist inseparably’, all the Father embosoming the Son, and all the Son hanging and adhering to the Father.” (Ayres, p. 128-9)

These words are probably an interpretation of passages such as:

“I and the Father are one” (John 10:29), and
“No one has seen God at any time; the only begotten God who is in the bosom of the Father, He has explained Him” (John 1:18).

Confesses a Triad.

“Believing then in the All-perfect Triad, the Most Holy, that is, in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost.”

In this context, the translation “Triad” is better than “Trinity” because ‘Trinity’, with a capital T, implies the Trinity doctrine in which Father, Son, and Spirit are one Being, while the Macrostich presents them as three distinct Beings; a hierarchical group of “three realities and three Persons,” where the Father is the uncaused Cause of all else, and also generated the Son.

Says very little about the Holy Spirit.

The Macristich has a very scanty treatment of the Holy Spirit. It says:

“We believe in the Holy Ghost, that is, the Paraclete, which, having promised to the Apostles, He sent forth after the ascension into heaven, to teach them and to remind of all things.”

The Son is “granting the grace of the Holy Ghost unsparingly to the saints at the Father’s will.”

Similar to the Bible, it does not refer to the Holy Spirit as God, or as God from God. On the contrary, the phrase “two Gods” in the following implies that the Holy Spirit is not God:

“The Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and calling the Father God, and the Son God, yet we confess in them, not two Gods.”

We see Jesus in the Old Testament.

The LMM finds Jesus in the OT. It says:

“He it is, to whom the Father said, ‘Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness’ (Gen 1:26), who also was seen in His own Person by the patriarchs, gave the law, spoke by the prophets, and at last, became man …”

Some dispute that God was talking to His Son in Genesis 1:26, saying that God spoke to His angels, but man was not created in the image of angels, but in the image of God. Furthermore, the Son Himself “existed in the form of God.” (Phil. 2:6)

No ousia language

The Nicene Creed says that the Son was begotten from the ousios (substance or essence) of the Father and claims that the Son is homoousios (of the same substance as) the Father. It follows that the Son is equal to the Father.

The Dedication Creed of 431, which is, like the Macrostich, an Eastern creed, also uses the term ousia: “Exact image of the Godhead and the substance (ousia) and will and power and glory of the Father.”

In contrast, although the Macrostich says that He is “from God,” and “begotten,” it does not use the terms ousia (substance) and homoousios (same substance). It “appears to have been composed by theologians unhappy with the ousia language deployed in the Dedication creed.” (Ayres, p. 127) 13The Macrostich describes “the Father’s generation of the Son as a sharing of the divine existence, but … without materialist connotation. … The hierarchical scheme within which this occurs remains unaltered.” (Ayres, p. 129)


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FOOTNOTES

  • 1
    Hanson refer to “`the suspicion of Sabellianism which hung around the one Western theological statement which had appeared since the controversy began, the Formula accompanying the Encyclical of the Western bishops at Serdica.” (Hanson, p. 311)
  • 2
    “The remainder of the 340s requires much less discussion. Richard Hanson rightly characterizes this period as one in which the failure of Serdica eventually prompted attempts at rapprochement.” (Ayres, p. 126)
  • 3
    The Christian church originated in Jerusalem but, in the first century, Antioch soon became the leading gentile church.
  • 4
    “In ecclesial terms (what form of appeal is possible following conciliar condemnation? can eastern and western councils interfere in each other’s business? can one appeal to Rome?) and in extra-ecclesial terms.”
  • 5
    incapable of suffering or feeling pain
  • 6
    not subject to change
  • 7
    “This does not … mean three Gods because there is only one ingenerate, unbegun and because the Father ‘who alone has existence from himself, and alone gives this abundantly to all others’.” (Ayres, p. 128)
  • 8
    “Since we acknowledge the Self-complete and Ingenerate and Unbegun and Invisible God to be one only, the God and Father of the Only-begotten, who alone has being from Himself, and alone gives this to all others generously.”
  • 9
    “Only the Father of Christ is unbegotten and unbeginning.” (Hanson, p. 310) “We must not consider the Son to be co-unbegun.” “The Father is the Son’s origin.” (Hanson, p. 310) Only the Father is selfsufficient and invisible. (Hanson, p. 310)
  • 10
    “The Son is generated from the Father’s will as the only alternative to being generated by necessity.” (Ayres, p. 129)
  • 11
    The Son is “subordinate to his Father and God.” (Ayres, p. 127)
  • 12
    “Three realities or persons … does not … mean three Gods because there is only one ingenerate, unbegun and because the Father … ‘alone has existence from himself’.” (Ayres, p. 128)
  • 13
    The Macrostich describes “the Father’s generation of the Son as a sharing of the divine existence, but … without materialist connotation. … The hierarchical scheme within which this occurs remains unaltered.” (Ayres, p. 129)
  • 14
    Overview of the history, from the pre-Nicene Church Fathers, through the fourth-century Arian Controversy