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Schism · Today in 553

Three Chapters controversy

Mosaic of Justinian I in San Vitale, Ravenna.
Justinian's imperial theology project drove the Three Chapters controversy. Jose Luiz, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0

The Three Chapters controversy showed how hard it was to repair the damage after Chalcedon. Justinian condemned writings linked to Theodore of Mopsuestia, Theodoret, and Ibas, hoping anti-Chalcedonian Christians would see that the empire rejected Nestorian tendencies. Many Western bishops saw the move as imperial pressure and a betrayal of Chalcedon. The result was not reconciliation, but new fractures in North Africa, Italy, and Aquileia.

Trying to heal Chalcedon created another wound.

Highlights

  • Justinian targeted Antiochene writings.
  • Western bishops resisted.
  • Pope Vigilius was pressured.
  • Aquileia broke communion.

How it happened

What happened

Justinian pushed for the condemnation of three bodies of Antiochene writings.

The argument

Was condemning long-dead Antiochene theologians a faithful defense of Cyril or an attack on Chalcedon?

What changed

Constantinople II condemned the Three Chapters, but Western resistance hardened.

Why it matters

The controversy shows that posthumous condemnations could destabilize communion as much as clarify doctrine.

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Cover of Sermons by Leo the Great
Daily reading

Book of the day

Tome (Letter to Flavian)

Pope Leo I

A reading pick tied to today's figure, quote, era, or event. Leo's letter becomes a central text for Chalcedon and the two-natures formula.

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Today: Three Chapters controversy (553) — Patristic Lineage