Ecumenical Council
The Sixth Ecumenical Council — condemned Monothelitism and defined that Christ has two wills, divine and human, in perfect harmony.
The Third Council of Constantinople was convened by Emperor Constantine IV in AD 680–681 to resolve the Monothelite controversy — the question of whether Christ has one will or two. The Council defined that, since Christ has two complete natures (as Chalcedon had defined), he must also have two wills — divine and human — which operate in perfect harmony.
The Council is also notable for condemning Pope Honorius I posthumously for his failure to condemn Monothelitism during his pontificate. This case is frequently cited as a disproof of papal infallibility. The Catholic response is that Honorius’s letter was a private pastoral response, not an ex cathedra definition — precisely the kind of document that the Vatican I definition of infallibility explicitly excludes from the scope of the charism.
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We define that there are two natural wills and two natural operations in Christ, indivisibly, inconvertibly, inseparably, inconfusedly; his human will following and not resisting his divine will, but rather subject to it.
We decide that Honorius also, who was pope of elder Rome, be with them cast out of the holy Church of God, and be anathematized with them, because we have found by his letter to Sergius that he followed his opinion in all things.
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