The East deposed Athanasius but the West vindicated him.

A previous article discusses the conflict between Athanasius and the Melitians in the first seven years after he was elected bishop of Alexandria and concludes that Athanasius was justly deposed for violence against the Melitians (see here). The current article discusses the period from the Council of Tyre in 335, where Athanasius was condemned by the Eastern Church, to the Council of Rome in 340, where he was vindicated by the Western Church under Julius, bishop of Rome.

Athanasius was condemned at Tyre. – AD 335

It was beyond doubt that Athanasius had behaved violently against the Melitians. He behaved in an authoritarian manner, exploiting his position as bishop of Alexandria. The Council of Tyre condemned him on a number of charges, deposed him from being archbishop of Alexandria, excommunicated him, and forbade him to return to his former see. This was a crushing blow for Athanasius. It took him a long time to recover. But Athanasius was an extremely talented and powerful individual. As this article will show, he was able to recover. Show More

Arius’ Death – AD 335-6

Emperor Constantine informed the bishops that Arius and his friends had made a profession of faith to him, which he accepted as orthodox, and commanded the bishops to admit Arius and his friends formally into the Church. The Eusebian bishops complied. Note the authority that the emperor had over the church. Separation of Church and State was unknown. The emperor was effectively the head of the church.

However, Arius suddenly died in 335 or 336. Athanasius wrote that Arius died as an answer to prayers, but Athanasius’ account of Arius’ death cannot be regarded as historically trustworthy. Show More

Athanasius returns from Exile. – AD 337

Everything changed when Constantine died in 337. All pro-Nicene bishops who had been exiled after Nicaea, including Athanasius, were permitted to return to their sees.

Athanasius took 6 months to reach Alexandria. He first visited and garnered the support of the other bishops who had returned from exile. Show More

Athanasius’ Polemical Strategy

The first time that Athanasius referred in his writings to ‘Arians’ was in 338. This is very important and discussed in much more detail by Lewis Ayres (see here). Athanasius coined the term ‘Arian’ to tar the bishops who exiled him as followers of Arius’ already rejected theology, claiming that he himself (Athanasius) was innocent of violence but was deposed by an Arian conspiracy for his opposition to Arianism. By using this strategy, Athanasius appealed successfully to bishop Julius of Rome in 339–40. Up to this time, the Western Church was on the periphery of the Controversy, but Julius’ acceptance of Athanasius’ polemics made it a main player. Show More

Renewed action against Athanasius – AD 338

In 338, the Eusebians, with Eusebius of Nicomedia at the lead, brought new charges against Athanasius. They believed that Athanasius had been formally deposed by a properly constituted synod on charges which could hardly be refuted. It was against all church order that he should be readmitted to his see on the bare word of an Emperor.

In the winter of 337-338, the leaders of the church of Antioch (the headquarters of the Eastern Church) met and sent a letter to the three emperors. They accused Athanasius of violence, challenged the regularity of his election, and recalled the verdict of the Council of Tyre. Show More

Athanasius sought support from the West.

In response to these accusations, Athanasius held a grand council of bishops in Alexandria in 338. That council sent a circular to all bishops, suggesting that his enemies were preparing to overturn the decisions of the Council of Nicaea. That was Athanasius’ polemical strategy: Whenever he was accused of violence, he claimed that he was being persecuted for his support for the Nicene Creed and his opposition to Arianism.

Athanasius also sent a deputation with this circular to Rome. In response, Julius, bishop of Rome, wrote to both parties (the Eastern Church with headquarters in Antioch and the bishops of Alexandria), summoning them to a synod in Rome. Show More

Athanasius became famous.

This was the beginning of a new era for the church. It was the beginning of the later fanatical attachment to the person of Athanasius. It was also the beginning of the association of a Sabellian interpretation of the Nicene Creed with the true faith. Show More

As discussed in other articles:

What we today call ‘Arianism’, namely, that the Son is a distinct divine Person, subordinate to the Father, was the traditional teaching of the church during the first three centuries and into the fourth and fifth centuries. Show More

Homoousios was a Sabellian term. Before Nicaea, it was preferred only by Sabellians. Show More

Like the Sabellians, Athanasius believed that the Son is in the Father and that the Father and Son are a single Person (hypostasis). Therefore, at Nicaea, Alexander allied with the Sabellians. Show More

The vast majority of the delegates to Nicaea were Eusebians (Arians). However, Emperor Constantine took Alexander’s part in his quarrel with Arius. This allowed the Sabellians to dominate. Constantine forced the council to accept a creed with which they were uncomfortable. Show More

The emperor also insisted that the controversial phrases (from the substance of the Father, same substance as the Father) must not be understood as if God has a body and that the Son was begotten bodily. He explained the terms as merely meaning that the Son is from the Father and not from anywhere else. The Eusebian (Arian) majority at Nicaea accepted the Creed with this explanation. Show More

However, Athanasius and the Sabellians had reason to accept that homoousios means ‘one substance.’ The Nicene Creed was a Sabellian victory. After all, the Creed explicitly states that the Father and Son are a single Person (hypostasis). Show More

Athanasius was driven out of Alexandria. – AD 338/9

During the winter of 338/339, the Eusebian party again declared Athanasius deposed from the see of Alexandria and chose Gregory as bishop of Alexandria. The Eastern Emperor Constantius issued an edict that he approved of Gregory. Roman soldiers then drove Athanasius out of his episcopal residence. This caused riots in which two large churches went up in flames and several people were killed. Show More

Athanasius appeals again to Rome.

After Gregory’s arrival, Athanasius wrote to Julius of Rome and went to Rome later that year. As a result of pressure put on him by Athanasius, Marcellus, and other pro-Nicene exiles in Rome, Julius now wrote to the Eusebian party, inviting them to a council in Rome in 340, to investigate the cases of Athanasius and Marcellus.

The Eusebians responded only a year later. They defended the validity of the Council of Tyre, stated that the Eastern Church respected the see of Rome, but did not feel inferior to it, repeated the charges against Athanasius and Marcellus, and threatened schism if Rome continued to communicate with these two. Show More

Rome vindicates Athanasius. – AD 341

Julius held his Council of Rome early in 341. The council pronounced Athanasius blameless and Marcellus orthodox. Show More

The West attacks the East. – AD 341

After the council, Julius wrote a letter to the Eusebian bishops whose centre was at Antioch. He called them ‘the party of Eusebius’ and claimed jurisdiction over them. He accused them of receiving Arians and of challenging the validity of the Nicene Creed. He claimed that Athanasius and Marcellus had been unjustly treated, and that Marcellus is perfectly orthodox and indeed a zealous opponent of Arianism.

Julius also accused the Eusebians of being ‘Arians’. This shows the acceptance of Athanasius’ polemical strategy.

The bishop of Rome had no secure precedent in seeking to oversee the Council of Tyre or hear appeals from it. He must have appeared to the Eastern bishops to be meddling. Show More

The West was Sabellian.

Initially, the West was not part of the Arian Controversy. For example, at Nicaea, the delegates were “drawn almost entirely from the eastern half of the empire” (Ayres, p. 19).

The West was traditionally ‘Monarchian’. This refers to the second-century form of Sabellianism in which ‘Father’ and ‘Son’ are two names for the same being, also called Modalism. In the West’s traditional Monarchianism, Marcellus was orthodox. Two years later, at the Council of Serdica of 343 (see here), the Westerners formulated a manifesto that explicitly teaches that the Father and Son are one single hypostasis (Person). Show More

Division between East and West

These events caused a divide between the Eastern and Western Churches that would result in a series of heated interactions and creeds in the 340s. The East had condemned both Athanasius and Marcellus, but for different reasons. The West, which previously was on the fringes of the Controversy, had now not only vindicated both but also attacked the East through Julius’ letter. Later that same year (431), the East held a Council to discuss Julius’ letter and issued the Dedication Creed. Two years later, in 343, the emperors called the Council at Serdica to seek reconciliation, but that council never met as one. Show More


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