Featured Content Page about: nestorius

Content Sections:     General Information | Questions & Answers | Internet Sites | Articles | 
Questions and Topics related to   nestorius
What is the difference between the Greek Orthodox Church and?
The Assyrian Church of the East? Does anyone know what the differences are?
I am opening a garden center. Where can I buy plants at wholesale?
I am a florist and I own two flower shops. We are expanding our business to include a garden center and greenhouse. I am searching for a plant farm to buy bulk plants from.
What is the trace of the development of the unfolding of Christianity from its beginn...
i need significant people and the major turns in the development.
Why did the early Chruch refer to Mary as Theotokos or Mother of God?
Were the early Christians wrong in giving this title to Mary?
What are the basic tenets/beliefs of Nestorian Christians?
And can you provide some links?btw, I'm researching too, I just want extra info.Thanks you.
About   nestorius
Nestorius (in Greek: ''Νεστόριος''; ''c.'' 386-''c.'' 451) was Archbishop of Constantinople from 10 April 428 to 22 June 431. He was accused by his political enemy Cyril of Alexandria of a heresy that later bore his name, Nestorianism, because he objected to the popular practice of calling the Virgin Mary the ''Mother of God'' theotokos; he instead preached that ''Mother of Christ'' would be more fitting. He was condemned at the First Council of Ephesus before his supporters could arrive and he was then dethroned. His views were widely held in the East, and the consequence was the separation of the Assyrian Church of the East from the Byzantine Churchdate=March 2009.
Early life
Nestorius was born in 386 in Germanicia in the Roman province of Syria (now Kahramanmaraş in Turkey). He received his clerical training as a pupil of Theodore of Mopsuestia in Antioch and gained a reputation for his sermons that led to his enthronement by Theodosius II as Archbishop following the death of Sisinnius I in 428.
Controversy with Cyril
Nestorius is considered the originator of the Christological position known as Nestorianism, which was eventually declared heretical by the Council of Ephesus; it emerged when he began preaching against the title Theotokos (in Greek, Θεοτόκος) or ''Birth-giver to God'', ''God-Bearer'', ''Mother of God'', an appellation for Mary, the mother of Jesus. From the standpoint of Nestorius, God had no beginning and thus could not have a literal ''mother.'' Nestorius assert that what Mary gave birth to was the man of Jesus, but not the preexisting Word from the Trinity. Instead, Nestorius preferred the term ''Mother of Christ'' (''Christotokos/Χριστοτόκος''/)
He quickly met with antagonism from the bishop, Saint Cyril of Alexandria. Alongside the Christological debate, other factors were to come into play in the controversy that would ensue, including a political struggle between the supporters of the See of Alexandria and the See of Antioch, the influence of the Emperor over the See of Constantinople, and the patriarchal primacy of the Pope.
Supporters of the title ''Theotokos,'' including the Alexandrian bishop Cyril, countered that it was Nestorius who was actually denying the reality of the Incarnation, by making Jesus Christ into two different persons, one human and one divine, in one body. ''See Nestorianism.'' Such objection to the ideas of Nestorius stemmed from his viewpoint that there is a divine essence and a human essence and that they are mutually exclusive--no union between the human and divine is possible. If such a union of human and divine occurred, Nestorius believed that Christ could not truly be con-substantial with God and con-substantial with us because he would grow, mature, suffer and die (which he said God cannot do) and also would possess the power of God that would separate him from being equal to humans.
The Emperor Theodosius II (401-450) was eventually induced to convoke a general church council, sited at Ephesus, itself a special seat for the veneration of Mary, where the ''theotokos'' formula was popular. The Emperor gave his support to the Archbishop of Constantinople, while Pope Celestine I was in agreement with Cyril.
Cyril took charge of the First Council of Ephesus in 431, opening debate before the long-overdue contingent of Eastern bishops from Antioch could arrive.
The council deposed Nestorius and declared him a heretic. In Nestorius' own words,
But while the council was in progress, John I of Antioch and the eastern bishops arrived, and were furious to hear that Nestorius had already been condemned. They convened their own synod, at which Cyril was deposed.
Both sides then appealed to the emperor, or rather to the imperial eunuchs who controlled him. Initially the imperial government ordered both Nestorius and Cyril deposed and exiled. Letter 96 of Cyril's ''Letters'' contains a list of the bribes that he offered to various courtiers; and Cyril was allowed to return. -date=November 2008
In the following months, 17 bishops who supported Nestorius' doctrine were removed from their sees. Eventually the political position became so bad that John I of Antioch was obliged to abandon Nestorius in March 433. On August 3, 435, Theodosius II, who had supported Nestorius' appointment, bowed to the influence of his sister Pulcheria in issuing an imperial edict that exiled Nestorius to a monastery in the Great Oasis of Hibis (al-Khargah), in Egypt, securely within the diocese of Cyril. There he was at risk of attack by desert bandits, and was injured in one such raid.
In East and West, Nestorius' writings were burnt wherever they could be found. They survive mainly in Syriac.
The incident caused a split within the church, and led to the creation of separate Nestorian churches that would flourish throughout the Middle East and central Asia.
A recovered text, the ''Bazaar of Heracleides''
After 1,500 years of Nestorius' stigmatization as a heretic, a handwritten 16th century book containing a copy of a text written by Nestorius was discovered by American missionaries in 1895, in the library of the Nestorian patriarch in the mountains at Konak, Hakkari, southeastern Turkey. This book had suffered damage during Muslim raids, but was substantially intact, and copies were taken secretly. The Syriac translation had the title of the . The original 16th century manuscript was destroyed in 1915 during the Turkish massacres of Assyrian Christians.
The ''Bazaar'' was written towards the end of Nestorius' life, and in it he explicitly denies the heresy for which he was condemned. Instead he affirms of Christ ''the same one is twofold'' — an expression that some consider similar to the formulation of the Council of Chalcedon. Nestorius's earlier surviving writings, however, including his letter written in response to Cyril's charges against him, contain material that seems to support charges that he held that Christ had two persons. Thus, whether Nestorius was actually a Nestorian is still a matter of debate.
''Mar Nestorios''
Nestorius is deeply venerated in the Assyrian Church of the East as a saint, the Syriac for 'Saint Nestorius' being ''Mar Nestorios''.
Web Sites about   nestorius
Nestorius - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nestorius sought to defend himself at the First Council of Ephesus in 431, but instead he found himself formally condemned for heresy and removed from his see. Thereafter he retired to a monastery, where he asserted his orthodoxy for the rest of his life. ...
en.wikipedia.org
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Nestorius and Nestorianism
Nestorius, who gave his name to the Nestorian heresy, was born at Germanicia, in Syria Euphoratensis (date ... Within a few days of his consecration Nestorius had an Arian chapel destroyed, and he persuaded Theodosius to issue a severe edict against heresy in the following month. ...
www.newadvent.org
Nestorius
Together, Theodore and Nestorius served as the wellsprings of the two Mesopotamian schools that carried the banner of Nestorianism. ... Although much of Nestorius's sermons and teachings were ordered to be burned, the doctrine of Nestorianism survived and served as the basis for Dyophysite teachings
www.nestorian.org
Nestorius - LookLex Encyclopaedia
There is a discrepancy between what Nestorius was accused of having said and what he himself declared to be his opinions, as this is indicated in the sole surviving scripture from his hand. ... The official version is that, as archbishop, Nestorius chose to not refer to Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus,
i-cias.com
Nestorius - LoveToKnow 1911
The consecration took place on the 10th of April 428, and then, almost immediately afterwards, in what is said to have been his first patriarchal sermon, Nestorius exhorted the emperor in the famous words - "Purge me, 0 Caesar, the earth of heretics, and I in return will give thee heaven. ...
www.1911encyclopedia.org
Nestorius: Biography from Answers.com
Nestorius (born 4th century, Germanicia, Syria Euphratensis, Asia Minor — died c. 451, Panopolis, Egypt) Founder of Nestorian Christianity
www.answers.com
Nestorius (bishop of Constantinople) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on Nestorius (bishop of Constantinople), 4th century adGermanicia, Syria Euphratensis, Asia Minor [now Maras,
britannica.com
Nestorius - New World Encyclopedia
Nestorius, in Greek, Νεστόριος (c. 386 – c. 451 C.E.) was archbishop of Constantinople from April 10, 428 to June 22, 431. He is considered the originator of the Christological heresy known as Nestorianism, which emerged when he began preaching ...
www.newworldencyclopedia.org
The Lynching of Nestorius
NESTORIUS. Many people, in western civilization, do not know this man. If they do know the name, they only have a vague understanding of this man and the
metamind.net
Nestorius - OrthodoxWiki
Nestorius was a bishop who lived during the first half of the fifth century. ... Nestorius is believed to have been born in 386 Germanicia in Syria Euphoratenis. ...
orthodoxwiki.org
More internet sites about nestorius
Articles about   nestorius
Is the Virgin Mary Truly Mother of God?
Nestorius claimed that the Virgin Mary was merely the mother of the human ... that Jesus is not two persons, one human and one divine, as Nestorius claimed. ...
Turning Points in Church History - Council of Jerusalem to Edinburgh
Sep 25, 2008 ... Cyril of Antioch condemned the extreme Antiochene Christology taught by Nestorius viewing the man Jesus an independent person beside the ...
Comments: Is the Virgin Mary Truly Mother of God?
Many non-Catholics question the Catholic teaching on Mary as Mother of God by citing the old argument of Nestorius, the heretic condemned by the Council of ...
Note: Some content may be licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License