Ecumenical Council
The Second Ecumenical Council — convened in AD 381 to complete the work of Nicaea, definitively condemning Arianism and defining the full divinity of the Holy Spirit. Produced the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed still recited at every Sunday Mass.
The First Council of Constantinople was convened by Emperor Theodosius I in AD 381. Its immediate purpose was to end the Arian crisis that had continued to convulse the Eastern Church despite the definitions of Nicaea. The Council reaffirmed Nicaea, condemned Arianism and all its variants, and — crucially — extended the Nicene definition to include the full divinity of the Holy Spirit.
The Macedonians (also called Pneumatomachi — “fighters against the Spirit”) had accepted the Son’s full divinity but denied it to the Spirit, describing the Holy Spirit as a creature or a divine energy rather than a divine person. The Council condemned this and implicitly defined the Spirit as homoousios with the Father and Son — though it used the phrase who proceeds from the Father rather than the full homoousios formula.
The Council also produced what we now call the Nicene Creed — strictly the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed — which expanded the original Nicene text to include the fuller pneumatology. This is the creed recited at Sunday Mass in the Catholic Church to this day.
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The faith of the 318 Fathers assembled at Nicaea in Bithynia shall not be set aside, but shall remain dominant. And every heresy shall be anathematized.
The Bishop of Constantinople, however, shall have the prerogative of honour after the Bishop of Rome, because Constantinople is new Rome.
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