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'Monophysitism' (from the
Greek 'monos' meaning 'one, alone' and 'physis' meaning 'nature') is the
Christological position that Christ has only one nature, as opposed to the
Chalcedonian position which holds that Christ has two natures, one divine and one human. Monophysitism and its antithesis,
Nestorianism, were both hotly disputed and divisive competing tenets in the maturing Christian traditions during the first half of the fifth century; a tumultuous period being the last decades of the Western Empire, and marked by the political shift in all things to a center of gravity now located in the
Eastern Roman empire, and particularly in
Syria, the
Levant,
Egypt, and
Anatolia, where Monophysitism was popular among the people.
There are two major doctrines that can indisputably be called 'Monophysite' ():
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Eutychianism holds that the human nature of Christ was essentially obliterated by the Divine, "dissolved like a drop of honey in the sea", and therefore Christ only had the one (mono) nature, that of divinity.
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Apollinarianism holds that Christ had a human body and human "living principle" but that the
Divine Logos had taken the place of the ''
nous'', or "thinking principle", analogous but not identical to what might be called a
mind in the present day.
The Monophysitism of
Eutyches, a sometimes radical
presbyter and
archimandrite at
Constantinople, emerged in
431 AD as a response to
Nestorianism, espoused by the
Archbishop of Constantinople Nestorius at the
First Council of Ephesus. That council repudiated the Nestorians' interpretation, but did not accept the position of
Eutyches either, leading to a couple of acrimonious decades of infighting and alienation of large numbers of otherwise worshipful Christians.
Eutyches' energy and imprudence with which he asserted his opinions led to his being misunderstood, accused of
heresy in
448 AD, leading to a temporary excommunication. In
449 AD, however, at the
Second Council of Ephesus, not only was Eutyches reinstated to his office, but
Eusebius,
Domnus and
Flavian, his chief opponents, were deposed, and the Alexandrine doctrine of the "one nature" (monophysitism) received the sanction of the church. In the end, such infighting was settled at the cost of schism when Monophysitism was again rejected at the
Council of Chalcedon in
451 AD. Monophysitism is also rejected by the
Oriental Orthodox Churches, but was widely accepted in Syria, the Levant, and Egypt leading to many tensions in the early days of the
Byzantine empire.
Later,
Monothelitism was developed as an attempt to bridge the gap between the Monophysite and the Chalcedonian position, but it too was rejected by the members of the Chalcedonian synod, despite at times having the support of the
Byzantine emperors and one of the
Popes of Rome,
Honorius I. Some are of the opinion that
Monothelitism was at one time held by the
Maronites, but the Maronite community, for the most part, dispute this, stating that they have never been out of communion with the
Roman Catholic Church.
Miaphysitism, the
christology of the
Oriental Orthodox churches, is sometimes considered a variant of Monophysitism, but these churches view their theology as distinct from Monophysitism and
anathematize Eutyches.
See also
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Acephali
★ ''
Henotikon''
★ the
Three-Chapter Controversy
References
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Agreed Statements between representative of the Oriental and Eastern Orthodox Churches
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Joint Declaration by the Oriental and the Catholic Church
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Catholic Encyclopedia article