The Meletian Schism – Athanasius vs. Basil of Caesarea

This article quotes mainly from world-class scholars of the last 50 years specializing in the fourth-century Arian Controversy:

Hanson Lecture – An informative 1981 lecture by R.P.C. Hanson on the Arian Controversy.

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

The Arian Controversy 318-381, 1988

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

Anatolios, Khaled,
Retrieving Nicaea, 2011

The Meletian Schism was a dispute in the 360s and 370s between two Pro-Nicene factions. John Mason Neale described them as the “old Catholic party … and the new Catholic party.” [Show More]

The Meletian Schism must not be confused with the Melitian Schism several decades earlier in Egypt.

The Eustathians

The “old Catholic party” or ‘Eustathians’ are named after Eustathius, bishop of Antioch 40 years earlier, who attended the Nicene Council in 325 and significantly influenced the wording of the Nicene Creed. [Show More]

Similar to the Sabellians, Eustathius taught that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are a single hypostasis (one Person). In his view, the Son or Logos is merely an aspect or part of the Father and does not have a distinct existence. Consequently, soon after Nicaea, he was exiled for Sabellianism. [Show More]

After he was exiled, his followers remained a significant minority group at Antioch. They continued his teachings and elected rival bishops:

“’One hypostasis’ of the Godhead was to become the slogan and rallying-cry of the continuing Eustathians.” (Hanson, p. 213)

After Eustathius was deposed, the Eusebians (traditionally but misleadingly called ‘Arians’), teaching three hypostases, dominated the church in Antioch. [Show More]

The Meletians

In opposition to the Eustathians, the other pro-Nicene faction – “the new Catholic party” – also called the Meletians after bishop Meletius of Antioch, following the teachings of Basil of Caesarea in the 360s, believed that the Father, Son, and Spirit are three hypostases (three distinct Persons).

The Eusebians (Arians) also believed in three hypostases. However, while the Eusebians regarded the Son as subordinate to the Father, this ‘new Catholic party’ regarded the three hypostases as ontologically equal.

While the Eustathians understood ‘homoousios’ (same substance) as meaning ‘one substance’, this ‘new Catholic party’ understood it as meaning two substances that are alike in all respects.

In 361, the Eusebian majority elected Meletius as bishop of Antioch. However, Meletius later accepted Basil’s ‘three hypostases’ version of Nicene theology. The Meletian Schism is named after him because the dispute manifested particularly in the battle for the election of the bishop of Antioch. For the pro-Nicenes, the choice was between Meletius, who followed Basil, and Paulinus, the rival Eustathian bishop.

Show quotes

A clash between Athanasius and Basil

In the 360s and 370s, the two most important pro-Nicenes of the fourth century, Athanasius and Basil of Caesarea, found themselves on opposing sides in this dispute. Athanasius, similar to the Sabellians, proclaimed one hypostasis (Read Article). He taught that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are a single hypostasis (Person). Consequently, while Athanasius and friends supported Paulinus, Basil supported Meletius.

Show quotes

A Clash about the Number of Hypostases

The main point of this dispute was the number of hypostases (Persons) in God. While Athanasius and the Eustathians said one, Basil and the Meletians maintained three. For example:

“A council headed by Athanasius at Alexandria in 362 … met to address a schism between followers of two pro-Nicene bishops at Antioch: Paulinus, who confessed the one hypostasis, and Melitius, who confessed three hypostaseis.” (Anatolios, p. 26-27)

In a letter to Basil, “Damasus sent a very cool reply … deliberately avoided making any statement about the three hypostases. It was the adhesion of Basil, Meletius and their followers to this doctrine of the hypostases which caused Damasus … to suspect them of heresy.” (Hanson, p. 798)

Basil was concerned that homoousios could be understood in a Modalistic or Sabellian manner in which Father, Son, and Spirit are a single Person. Therefore, when he agreed to the term, it was with the understanding that the Father, Son, and Spirit are acknowledged as distinct hypostases, each subsisting uniquely. He encouraged the Eustathians to embrace the terminology of three hypostases.

Show quotes

Prosopon does not make a real distinction.

The Eustathians refused to say that the Father, Son, and Spirit are three hypostases. Instead, they said each is a distinct prosopon (pl. prosōpa). While prosopon can mean hypostasis, in Ancient Greek, prosopon originally designated one’s “face” or “mask”. In that sense, it was used in Greek theatre, since actors wore masks on stage to reveal their character and emotions to the audience. Applied to the Trinity, it can indicate different roles played by a single Person. For that reason, the Sabellians accepted the term but Basil rejected it.

Show quotes

As another example of the distinction between hypostasis and prosopon, Jerome disapproved of the phrase ‘three hypostaseis.’ (Anatolios, p 27) The Latin equivalent of prosopon is persona. Writing in Latin, Jerome described the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as “una substantia, tres personae” (one substance, three prosopa). [Jerome, Epistle 15.4.] In other words, for Jerome, there was an important distinction between hypostasis and prosopon/persona.

This was the Core of the Arian Controversy.

The core of the Controversy always was about the number of hypostases in God. For example:

In the second century, while the Logos-theologians identified the Logos as “the nous or Second Hypostasis of contemporary Middle Platonist philosophy” (see – Apologists), the Monarchians proclaimed one hypostasis.

In the third century, the Sabellians taught one hypostasis and the followers of Origen taught three.

In the dispute between Alexander and Arius, culminating in the Nicene Council, Alexander taught one and Arius three. At Nicaea, Constantine took Alexander’s side, resulting in a Creed that was open to a one-hypostasis reading. See – The Meaning of Homoousios.

After Constantine died in 337, the empire was divided into East and West. In the 340s, while the empire remained divided, the Western Church taught one hypostasis and the East three.

When the empire was united again under Constantius in the 350s, Constantius forced the West to accept the Eastern ‘three hypostases’ theology.

In the 360s-370s, Constantius’ successors mostly continued his ‘three hypostases’ policy but the pro-Nicene divided into one- and three-hypostases camps, as discussed above.

In 380, emperor Theodosius made Athanasius’ one-hypostasis theology the state religion of the Roman Empire:

“Theodosius made known by law his intention of leading all his subjects to the reception of that faith which was professed by Damasus, bishop of Rome, and by Peter, bishop of Alexandria.” (Sozomen’s Church History VII.4)

For a detailed discussion, see – The Real Issue.

The Eustathians were Sabellians.

If we define Sabellianism as the teaching that the Father, Son, and Spirit are a single Person (hypostasis), then the Eustathians were Sabellians. For example:

Hanson describes Paulinus as “a Sabellian heretic.” (Hanson’s Lecture) He was “Marcellan/Sabellian.” (Hanson, p. 799)

Paulinus derived “his tradition in continuity from Eustathius who had been bishop about forty years before” (Hanson, p. 800-1). As stated above, Eustathius was deposed for Sabellianism.

Basil of Caesarea regarded Athanasius and the Western support of ‘one hypostasis’ theology as Sabellianism, of which Marcellus was the primary representative:

Show quotes

More descriptions of the Meletian Schism

“The opening of the year 375 saw the ironical situation in which the Pope, Damasus, and the archbishop of Alexandria, Peter, were supporting Paulinus of Antioch, a Sabellian heretic, and Vitalis, an Apollinarian heretic, against Basil of Caesarea, the champion of Nicene orthodoxy in the East, later to be acknowledged universally as a great Doctor of the Church.” (Hanson’s Lecture)


Other Articles