The Orthodox Schism
The Orthodox Schism
The Orthodox Schism
The Orthodox church is the Body of Eastern Schismatics that separated them selves from
the Catholic Church in the year 1054, which was brought about by what is today known as
the Eastern Schism.
The schism itself however was due to a number of contributing factors such as
Iconoclasts who sought the destruction of Catholic images and other issues such as that of the
"Photian Schism" of Patriarch of Constantinople, in the ninth Century, but was finally
consummated in the eleventh Century, by the ambition of Michael Cerularius, one of his
successors, in 1054.
Leading up to 1054 there were various events which took place only to eventualise in
schism by the East. Yet, it is undeniably true that the West (and especially the Roman See)
had a much more solid and consistent record of orthodoxy. For example, the Eastern Church
split off from Rome and the Catholic Church on at least six occasions before 1054:
However to understand the events that lead up to the Schism of the East it must be
understood that before Constantine had chosen Byzantium as his new capital, the Episcopal
see of that city depended upon the Metropolitan of Heraclea. But no sooner had that city
received from the great emperor the title of "The second Rome, eldest and beloved daughter
of the old Rome," (Constantine was referring to the Old Pagan Rome, which was the centre
of the Roman Empire) than ambition arose in the hearts of its Bishops, proud of the favour
which they enjoyed at Court and twisting to their advantage the third Canon of the first
Council of Constantinople (381), which conferred upon the Bishop of Byzantium "the
primacy of honour second to that of the Bishop of Rome," they did not wait long until they
claimed to possess over the Eastern Church also the primacy of jurisdiction which had always
belonged to the Roman Pontiffs. Claiming that Constantinople should b as exalted in
ecclesiastical as it was in political matters.
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Already in the fifth century, the Pope, St. Leo, who had occasion to protest against the
usurpation of the rights of the Church of Rome, had said with much truth: "the presence of
the Emperor may make a royal residence, but he cannot create an Apostolic See, divine things
not being patterned after human concerns.
This final schism was the result of the clash of two powerful personalities, of Pope Leo
IX and Michael Cerularius. In 1024 the Emperor had asked Pope John XIX for the
recognition of the independence of the Church of Constantinople in her own sphere. This was
refused since the Church of Christ is universal and the Popes being the Supreme Shepard has
influence over the whole and not simply part of the Church (Matt 16:18, John 21:15-17). In
1053 Cerularius, fearing an alliance between the Emperor and Pope, which might result in the
transfer of the Greek province in S. Italy from his jurisdiction, and perhaps in other
infringements of his authority, decided upon schism. He ordered the closing of all churches of
the Latin rite in Constantinople. In 1054, in spite of the Emperor’s efforts at mediation, the
Roman legates at Constantinople excommunicated the patriarch. Cerularius anathematized
them in reply and Schism was complete. However previous to this Pope Leo had already
written to Michael Cerularius stating as follows:
“ . . . . You are said to have publicly condemned the Apostolic and Latin Church, without
either a hearing or a conviction. And the Chief reason for this condemnation, which displays
and unexampled presumption and an unbelievable effrontery, is that the Latin Church dares to
celebrate the commemoration of the Lord’s passion with unleavened bread. What an
unguarded accusation is this of yours, what an evil piece of arrogance! You place your mouth
in heaven, while your tongue, going the world, strives with human arguments and conjectures
to undermine and subvert the ancient faith . . .
….. In prejudging the case of the highest See, the see on which no judgment may be
passed by any man, you have received the anathema from all the Fathers of all the venerable
Councils.
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….. As a hinge, remaining unmoved, opens and shuts a door, so Peter and his successors
have an unfettered jurisdiction over the whole Church, since no one ought to interfere with
their position, because the highest See is judged by none” – In Terra Pax hominibus,
September 1053. Manzi, xix. 638 B sqq.
It has often been said that no great dogmatic differences separate the Orthodox people
from the Church of Rome. We would like to believe this were true, however the reality
reveals only the contrary. Unfortunately, heresy, modern unbelief, and irreligion has found its
way among the Orthodox Eastern churches. The people themselves scarcely realize this. They
do not understand the difference between schism and heresy. The great majority do not even
realize that they should be united to the Holy Father, the Vicar of Christ on earth. The
teaching of the Orthodox Church denies the supremacy and infallibility of the Pope thus
rejecting the monarchical structure of the Church (founded on Peter - Matt 16:18; Luke
22:31; John 21; 15-17), while claiming that their Patriarch is infallible also and that there is
no single visible head of the Christian Church since they affirm the Church to be aristocratic
(a body without a head is termed a monster!).
It is clear from the Eastern Schism that these Churches (now called Orthodox) have
placed themselves outside the Church instituted by Christ and have become little different to
any other protestant sect, for today they deny a number of Catholic doctrines (i.e. Purgatory,
the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son) which were affirmed by their
own Church fathers!
In fact this is one of the most evident signs of the Orthodox being in heresy, in that they
deny the very truths as found in the works of the Fathers and saints they claim to venerate and
honour. What is more is that they often forget that the Roman See, with its bishop, the pope,
was the supreme arbiter of orthodoxy in the early centuries of the Church. There is abundant
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historical evidence for this, but suffice it to say that even many of the East's most revered
Church Fathers and Patriarchs sought refuge in Rome (theologically and/or geographically),
for example: St. Athanasius (339 to 342), St. Basil the Great (371), St. John Chrysostom
(404), St. Cyril of Jerusalem (430), and St. Flavian of Constantinople (449). The East all too
frequently treated its greatest figures much like the ancient Jews did their prophets, often
expelling and exiling them, while Rome welcomed them unambiguously, and restored them
to office by the authority of papal or conciliar decree.
Many of these venerable saints (particularly St. John Chysostom), and other Eastern
saints such as (most notably) St. Ephraim, St. Maximus the Confessor, and St. Theodore of
Studios, also explicitly affirmed papal supremacy. The popes functioned as the "supreme
court" of the Church, and they presided over (personally or through papal legates) and ratified
the Ecumenical Councils of the Church.
The Schism of the East should not be so surprising if we considering the great number of
Bishops and Priests of the Eastern Church which had fallen away from the faith by heresy
prior to 1054. Let us just take a look at some of them:
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Constantinople Euphemius 490-96 Monophysite
Alexandria Athanasius II 490-96 Monophysite
Alexandria John II 496-505 Monophysite
Alexandria John III 505-518 Monophysite
Constantinople Timothy I 511-17 Monophysite
Antioch Severus 512-18 Monophysite
Alexandria Timothy III 518-35 Monophysite
Constantinople Anthimus 535-36 Monophysite
Alexandria Theodosius 535-38 Monophysite
Antioch Sergius c.542-c.557 Monophysite
Antioch Paul "the Black" c.557-578 Monophysite
Alexandria Damianus 570-c.605 Monophysite
Antioch Peter Callinicum 578-91 Monophysite
Constantinople Sergius 610-38 Monothelite
Antioch Anthanasius c.621-629 Monothelite
Alexandria Cyrus c.630-642 Monothelite
Constantinople Pyrrhus 638-41 Monothelite
Antioch Macedonius 640-c.655 Monothelite
Constantinople Paul II 641-52 Monothelite
Constantinople Peter 652-64 Monothelite
Antioch Macarius c.655-681 Monothelite
Constantinople John VI 711-15 Monothelite
Brief Summary:
These historical facts may be briefly summarized as follows: All three of the great
Eastern sees were under the jurisdiction of heretical patriarchs simultaneously during five
different periods: 357-60 (Arian), 475-77, 482-96, and 512-17 (all Monophysite), and 640-42
(Monothelite): a total of 26 years, or 9% of the time from 357 to 642. At least two out of three
of the sees suffered under the yoke of a heterodox "shepherd" simultaneously for 112 years,
or 33% of the period from 341 to 681 (or, two-thirds heretical for one-third of the time), and
at least 248 of these same years saw one or more of the sees burdened with sub-orthodox
ecclesiastical leaders: an astonishing 73% rate (277 years, or 53% from 190 to 715). Thus the
East, as represented by its three greatest bishops, was at least one-third heretical for nearly
three-quarters of the time over a 340-year span. If we examine each city separately, we find,
for example, that between 475 and 675, the patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, and
Antioch were outside the Catholic orthodox faith for 41%, 55%, and 58% of the time
respectively. Furthermore, these deplorable conditions often manifested themselves for long,
unbroken terms: Antioch and Alexandria were Monophysite for 49 and 63 straight years
(542-91 and 475-538 respectively), while Constantinople, the seat of the Byzantine Empire
and the "New Rome," was embroiled in the Monothelite heresy for 54 consecutive years
(610-64). There were at least 42 heretical Patriarchs of these sees between 190 and 711.
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Steadfastness of Rome
No such scandal occurred in Rome, where, as we have seen, heresy was vigilantly
attacked by the popes and local Synods, and never took hold of the papacy (not even in the
ubiquitous "hard cases" of Honorius, Vigilius, and Liberius - none having defined heretical
doctrines infallibly for the entire Church to believe). Rome never succumbed to heresy. It
experienced barbarian invasions, periodic moral decadence, a few weak or decadent popes,
the Protestant Revolt, the "Enlightenment," Modernism, etc., but always survived and
rejuvenated itself. Thus, Rome has far and away the most plausible claim for apostolic
faithfulness, and its history is a striking confirmation of the Catholic claims.
Furthermore, essentially the entire Eastern Church seriously missed the mark doctrinally
on at least two occasions: the "Robber Synod" at Ephesus in 449, and in the signing of the
Monophysite Henoticon of Emperor Zeno in 482. The record of heresy in the East, then,
could scarcely be more sobering for those Orthodox polemicists who are deliberately and
proudly anti-Catholic.
John Henry Cardinal Newman commented on these two (thankfully temporary) massive
Eastern apostasies, in a striking and eloquent passage from his famous Essay on the
Development of Christian Doctrine (1878 ed., Part II, chap. 6, sec. 3;):
"Eutyches [a Monophysite] was supported by the Imperial Court, and by Dioscorus the
Patriarch of Alexandria . . . A general Council was summoned for the ensuing summer at
Ephesus [in 449] . . . It was attended by sixty metropolitans, ten from each of the great
divisions of the East; the whole number of bishops assembled amounted to one hundred and
thirty-five . . . St. Leo [the Great, Pope], dissatisfied with the measure altogether, nevertheless
sent his legates, but with the object .. . . of "condemning the heresy, and reinstating Eutyches
if he retracted" . . .
The proceedings which followed were of so violent a character, that the Council has
gone down to posterity under the name of the Latrocinium or "Gang of Robbers." Eutyches
was honourably acquitted, and his doctrine received . . . which seems to have been the
spontaneous act of the assembled Fathers. The proceedings ended by Dioscorus
excommunicating the Pope, and the Emperor issuing an edict in approval of the decision of
the Council . . .
The Council seems to have been unanimous, with the exception of the Pope's legates, in
the restoration of Eutyches; a more complete decision can hardly be imagined. It is true the
whole number of signatures now extant, one hundred and eight, may seem small out of a
thousand, the number of Sees in the East; but the attendance of Councils always bore a
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representative character. The whole number of East and West was about eighteen hundred,
yet the second Ecumenical Council was attended by only one hundred and fifty, which is but
a twelfth part of the whole number; the Third Council by about two hundred, or a ninth; the
Council of Nicaea itself numbered only three hundred and eighteen Bishops.
Moreover, when we look through the names subscribed to the Synodal decision, we find
that the misbelief, or misapprehension, or weakness, to which this great offence must be
attributed, was no local phenomenon, but the unanimous sin of Bishops in every patriarchate
and of every school of the East. Three out of the four patriarchs were in favour of the
heresiarch, the fourth being on his trial. Of these Domnus of Antioch and Juvenal of
Jerusalem acquitted him, on the ground of his confessing the faith of Nicaea and Ephesus . . .
Dioscorus . . . was on this occasion supported by those Churches which had so nobly stood by
their patriarch Athanasius in the great Arian conflict. These three Patriarchs were supported
by the Exarchs of Ephesus and Caesarea in Cappadocia; and both of these as well as Domnus
and Juvenal, were supported in turn by their subordinate Metropolitans. Even the Sees under
the influence of Constantinople, which was the remaining sixth division of the East, took part
with Eutyches . . .
Such was the state of Eastern Christendom in the year 449; a heresy, appealing to the
Fathers, to the Creed, and, above all, to Scripture, was by a general Council, professing to be
Ecumenical, received as true in the person of its promulgator. If the East could determine a
matter of faith independently of the West, certainly the Monophysite heresy was established
as Apostolic truth in all its provinces from Macedonia to Egypt . . .
At length the Imperial Government, . . . came to the conclusion that the only way of
restoring peace to the Church was to abandon the Council of Chalcedon. In the year 482 was
published the famous Henoticon or Pacification of Zeno, in which the Emperor took upon
himself to determine a matter of faith. The Henoticon declared that no symbol of faith but
that of the Nicene Creed, commonly so called, should be received in the Churches; it
anathematized the opposite heresies of Nestorius and Eutyches, and it was silent on the
question of the "One" or "Two Natures" after the Incarnation . . . All the Eastern Bishops
signed this Imperial formulary. But this unanimity of the East was purchased by a breach with
the West; for the Popes cut off the communication between Greeks and Latins for thirty-five
years . . .
Dreary and waste was the condition of the Church, and forlorn her prospects, at the
period which we have been reviewing . . . There was but one spot in the whole of
Christendom, one voice in the whole Episcopate, to which the faithful turned in hope in that
miserable day. In the year 493, in the Pontificate of Gelasius, the whole of the East was in the
hands of traitors to Chalcedon, and the whole of the West under the tyranny of the open
enemies of Nicaea . . .
A formula which the Creed did not contain [Leo's Tome at the Council of Chalcedon in
451], which the Fathers did not unanimously witness, and which some eminent Saints had
almost in set terms opposed, which the whole East refused as a symbol, not once, but twice,
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patriarch by patriarch, metropolitan by metropolitan, first by the mouth of above a hundred,
then by the mouth of above six hundred of its Bishops, and refused upon the grounds of its
being an addition to the Creed, was forced upon the Council . . . by the resolution of the Pope
of the day, acting through his Legates and supported by the civil power. "
Conclusion:
The return of the Schismatics to the faith is indeed something that Catholics have always
worked toward. In fact some years after the Schism of 1054 a reconciliation was brought
about and solemnly proclaimed at the Council of Florence, held in 1438 under the Pontificate
of Eugenius IV; but the ill will of the clergy of Constantinople almost completely annulled
the effect of this reunion. This Council shows us the clear dishonesty of the Eastern
Schismatic clergy who freely signed the document of reconciliation only to later repudiate it.
Yet despite this let us observe that the duty of a reunion of the Orthodox with the Catholic
Church (as decreed and proclaimed by Ecumenical Council and recognized by the Orthodox
as legitimate), still remains today.
No later Council having abrogated or modified this solemn act, spontaneously signed by
all, it still preserves its legal canonical force; consequently, in the eyes of every enlightened
and sincere Greek, the Sovereign Pontiff, successor of Peter, ought to be acknowledged as the
lawful and Supreme Head of the Eastern as well as the Western Church.