Nestorius and the Nestorian Church

by Crossings
Colleagues,
Last week’s ThTh #111–Luther and the Jews, historic episcopate–generated considerable response. It’s still coming in. So I’ll wait a week or two before sorting it out and passing it on to you. Another reason for such a delay is that we’re doing a bit of vacation from now to mid-August–and NOT taking along the laptop!
So for ThTh 112 something guaranteed(?) to be non-controversial: Nestorian and the “Nestorian” Church of the East. 
Richard Leigh, dear friend here in town and omnivorous theologian, found this on the Internet and sent it on to me. I think it came from a pastor of a “Nestorian” congregation in California. The piece takes us back over 1500 years, a long long time ago. Nestorius, one time patriarch of Constantinople, died in exile in 451 under a heresy label he’d gotten during the church-political wars of his day. 
The closest I’ve ever come to Nestorians was–of all places–in Xian, China in 1992. Modern tourists flock to Xian primarily to see the mammoth excavations of the terra cotta warriors. Our Crossings group did too. But another Xian attraction is the “Stele Museum,” a vast collection of standing granite monuments, one of which is the “Nestorian Stone.” I think it dates from the 8th century. It verifies the presence of Nestorian Christians in China, the fruit of missionaries who’d brought the gospel from Persia into the Chinese empire.
“Nestorius was no heretic.” I remember Prof. Werner Elert saying that during the summer semester 1953 when I was an exchange student at the Univ. of Erlangen in Germany. If you’ve never had an opinion on that issue, you may use what follows to see for yourself.
Peace & Joy!
Ed

Is the Church of the East “Nestorian?”

Why is the Church of the East regularly called the “Nestorian” Church? A dispute among western Bishops in the fifth century ultimately came to affect the relationship between the Church of the East and the Greek and Latin Churches. This was over the definition of the Union in the Messiah of God the Word and the man, Jesus of Nazareth. One party, championed by Nestorius, the Patriarch of Constantinople, charged the other with confusing the natures of Godhead and manhood in the Messiah and of suggesting impossible and unthinkable things, such as that God died, suffered, thirsted, tired, slept, etc. In other words, those characteristics and properties of manhood in the Messiah were being thoughtlessly ascribed to his Godhead, confusing the two natures. The other side charged Nestorius with so distinguishing the natures as to effectively deny the Union of God the Word with the manhood in the Messiah. He was also thought to teach the Union (such as he understood it) so loosely as to turn the Messiah into two persons.

Popular terms such as “Mother of God” for the Blessed Virgin were denied by Nestorius, thus making him seem insensitive to traditional sensibilities and usages in Constantinople, and further suggesting that the Incarnation was a loose association of manhood and Godhead rather than a substantial Union. Nestorius was concerned with preserving the theological insistence upon two natures in the Messiah, Godhead and manhood, without confusing them or suggesting a change in their properties. This view was that of the Antiochene School of Theology.

The opponents of Nestorius were more concerned with preserving the theological insistence upon “one subject” in the Messiah. This view represented the Alexandrian School of Theology. It took many generations of councils and commentaries in order to sort out this problem in the West, which was ultimately decided in favor of Nestorius’ opponents, but only partially. In the end, much of Nestorius’ view prevailed. Today the Christological expressions used by most Christian denominations reflect that of Nestorius; The Messiah was perfect God and perfect man, without confusion or change, division or separation.

In the East (beyond Byzantine borders), the same issue was debated and, after generations of similar councils of Bishops and discussions, the outcome was favorable to Nestorius rather than his opponents. This was due, perhaps, to political and cultural considerations (at least to some degree), but also to the fact that the theology of the Church of the East, as formulated among the theologians of the Antiochene school (where Nestorius had received his training) had always exerted the greater influence in the East. The formulas and arguments of the Nestorians had already become standard for Christians in the Persian Empire, and this fact greatly affected the course of the debate. Subsequently, because the Church of the East had the same doctrinal outlook which Nestorius himself held, the Church came to be called “Nestorian” by those in the West, the Byzantine Empire.

In the present state of ecumenical feeling in the Church at large, the Church of the East has sought as much as possible to reach out to the western Churches and to try to comprehend the theological differences on this issue which create suspicion and distrust on either side. Both the Church of the East and its detractors believe firmly in the two natures and one person (“parsopa” in Syriac and “prosopon” in Greek) of our Lord and Savior, Jesus the Messiah, and both call their position the orthodox position. The sticking points between the two parties are two:

  1. The meaning of the word “nature” (“qa’numa” in Syriac or “hypostasis” in Greek), and
  2. The “communicatio idiomatum” (a phrase which describes the exchange of predicates in reference to the Messiah, as in phrases like “God suffered” or, in reference to the Blessed Virgin, “Mother of God.”)

Qa’numa is regularly viewed in the Church of the East as “the essence of a nature which differentiates it from other natures” (a nature being an abstraction unless individuated and its properties defined which characterize it against other natures, whether like or unlike itself). Thus God the Word is a qa’numa of the nature of Godhead, and Jesus of Mary is a qa’numa of the nature of manhood. Two individuated and substantial natures underlie the one “person” of Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God. Qa’numa and nature are viewed, then, as synonymous in the Church of the East. This was the use of the Greek word “hypostasis” prior to the fifth century.

In the West (within Byzantine borders), on the other hand, hypostasis came to be a synonym for “person.” In such a case, “two hypostases” would equate with “two persons.” Therein lay an impasse for the Christology of the Church of the East, only recently overcome in the Latin Church and yet to be resolved in the other Churches.

The West further insisted upon the “communicatio idiomatum,” that is, the verbal attribution of the Messiah’s human properties to his Godhead (and vice versa). The Church of the East has always strongly resisted the popular tendency to ascribe suffering, death, or any passability, mutability, etc., to the Godhead, and out of an intense desire to protect its theological definition of Godhead (which it shares with the West), it has reacted against the “communicatio idiomatum.” It chooses, rather, to utilize terms in a more cautious way — “Mother of the Messiah,” for instance, rather than “Mother of God,” or “the sufferings of the Son of God, which he voluntarily underwent in his manhood for our salvation,” rather than, “the sufferings of God.” These two sticking-points — an agreement over the use of the term hypostasis and its application and implications, and the propriety of the communicatio idiomatum — stood as barriers between the Church of the East and the Greek and Latin Churches.

Both sides would wish to remove the barrier without vitiating their traditional theology. Recently, such has been the case. On the 11th of November, 1994, the Catholicos-Patriarch of the East and the Pope of Rome signed a “Declaration of Christological Unity.” In it, both Churches recognized that the Christology of the other was not only orthodox, but actually the same Christology, expressed in different terms. Both Churches upheld the validity of the others terms for Mary, stating, “We both recognize the legitimacy and rightness of these expressions of the same faith and we both respect the preference of each Church in her liturgical life and piety.” A renewed interest in the West towards the thought and writing of Theodore of Mopsuestia, Nestorius and Bawai the Great, as well as other theologians of the Antiochene School of Theology, may continue to help improve understanding and enhance dialogue. We pray God’s blessings on these developments.

Next week, d.v., we’ll post the text of this “Declaration of Christological Unity” as ThTh #113.

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