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Council of Nicea: Prepared by Group 1: Salalac, Ariana N. Bengco, Arcel

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The key takeaways are that the Council of Nicea was the first ecumenical council that established the doctrine of the Nicene Creed which affirmed that Jesus Christ is of the same substance as God the Father and rejected the teachings of Arius that Jesus was a created being.

The main disagreement between Arius and Athanasius concerned salvation - Arius believed that Jesus was a created being while Athanasius believed that for humans to be saved, God himself had to become human in Jesus Christ.

The purpose of the Council of Nicea was to address the divisions in the church caused by the debate between Arius and Athanasius over the nature of Christ. Emperor Constantine summoned the council to establish unity and doctrine.

Council of

Nicea
Prepared by Group 1:
Salalac, Ariana N.
Bengco, Arcel

Council of Nicea

What is a council?
a

group of people who are chosen to


make rules, laws, or decisions about
something
a group of people who provide advice or
guidance on something

Arianism
is

the idea that Jesus Christ is not equal


to the Father by nature but He is the first
creation of God
founder of Arianism was Arius
Arianism is false Biblically, its doctrines
force the Church throughout all
generations to define what he/she
believes regarding the person and
nature of Christ

ARIUS
studied

under Lucian of Antioch who saw


Jesus as a semidivine intermediate being
He believed that Jesus is supernatural, but
He is not equal to the Father. Arianism
developed the idea that the Son is a
semidivine being created, not begotten, by
the Father and having an origin in time, or
at least a definite beginning before the
creation of the material world.

ATHANASIUS
was

Arius arch-enemy and a deacon in the


same church
His main disagreement with Arius
concerned salvation: we are saved because
in Christ God himself became a human
being and died a human death. God became
a human to make humans divine; the
immortal became mortal to raise mortals to
immortality. No mere creature could achieve
this but only the very Word of God

The Division of the Church


The

argument sparked by Arius divided


the church.
The Arians said that the Son was not as
eternal as the Father. Athanasius and
friends insisted that the Son was as truly
God as the Father.

There

were also many in the middle who


were uncomfortable with both extremes:
they wanted to hold on to the difference
between the Father and Son, without
making the Son a mere creature.

The Beginning of the Council


Emperor

Constantine was deeply upset


by this division, not least because it
threatened the stability of the Empire.
And so he summoned a conference of all
the bishops of the church the first
ecumenical (worldwide) council

This

is the agreement of faith

We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things


visible and invisible; And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of
God, the only-begotten of the Father, of the substance of the
Father; God of God and Light of Light; true God of true God;
begotten, not made, of the same substance as the Father, by
whom all things were made, in heaven and on earth: who for the
sake of us men and our salvation, descended, became incarnate,
and was made man, suffered, arose again on the third day, and
ascended into the heavens, from where he will come again to
judge the living and the dead; And in the Holy Spirit.
But

the Holy Catholic and Apostolic church anathematizes


those [i.e. the Arians] who say There was a time when he was
not, and Before he was begotten, he did not exist and He
was made from that which did not exist.The same goes for
those who assert that he is of a different substance or essence
from the Father, or that he was created, or can be changed.

On substance
This

creed was recognized and agreed


to by 318 members of council, who
being, as Eusebius says, unanimously
signed up to it. There only five who
refused to sign, objecting to the term
homoousios, of the same substance.

Of the same substance, they insisted,


means coming from something in one of
three way: by germination, as a shoot
comes from the roots; by derivation as
children come from their parents; or by
division, as two bowls come from one lump
of gold. But the Son does not come from
the Father in any of these ways. For this
reason, we cannot agree to this creed.

Eusebius Pamphilus
bishop

of Caesarea in Palestine
He sent a copy of the creed back to his
church, with a letter to explain the term
of the same substance so that no one
would misinterpret his motives in
agreeing to it after his previous
hesitation

The Nicene Creed

We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker


of all things visible and invisible; And in one Lord,
Jesus Christ. the Word of God, God of God, Light of
light, Life of life, the only-begotten Son, born
before all creation, begotten by God the Father
before all ages, by whom all things were made;
who for our salvation became incarnate, and lived
among us; and who suffered and rose again on
the third day, and ascended to the Father, and
shall come again in glory to judge the living and
the dead. We believe also in one Holy Spirit.

The bishops, drew up this formula of faith,


to include the term of the same
substance: [The Nicene Creed, see above]
When they put this definition forward, we
discussed at length what the expression of
the same substance as the Father meant,
and came to a clear agreement. We agreed
thatousias(of the substance) simply
means that the Son is truly of the Father,
but does not exist as a part of the Father.

Of the same substance as the Father, we


agreed, is not meant in a physical sense, or in any
way like mortal creatures. It does not suggest that
the Fathers substance is divided, nor that it is
subtracted from, nor in any changed, because the
nature of the Father is not derived from anything.
That the Son is of the same substance as the
Father, then, simply implies that the Son of God
has no resemblance to created things, but is in
every respect like nothing but the Father who
begot him, and that he is of no other substance
but the Fathers. Explained in this way, it seemed
right for me to assent to the doctrine, especially
since some great theologians in the past used the
term of the same substance in their writings.

Review and Discussion


How

important do you think it is that all churches


should share the same doctrine and the same
date for Christian festivals?
What do you think it must have been like to be
present at this first meeting of all the church
leaders? Some bishops there still bore injuries
that they suffered from imperial persecution.
How do you think they felt at this statesponsored council?
What role did Constantine play at the council?
Was his presence there a good influence?

How would you summarize the doctrine enshrined


in the creed they produced? How does it rebut the
teaching of Arius? Why is so much more space
given to Christ than to God the Father or the Holy
Spirit?
Why could some of those present not accept the
creed? Does their argument hold water? Was the
council right to condemn them as heretics?
Why was the creed proposed by Eusebius not
adopted by the council? What were his
reservations about accepting the official creed?
Why did he assent in the end?
Does the Nicene Creed simply spell out the
teaching of the Bible, or does it go further? Do you
think it successfully draws the line between true
and false Christianity?

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