Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Of the General Council, at which Bishops from all Nations were Present. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VII.—Of the
General Council, at which Bishops from all Nations were Present.3238
3238 The standard work on councils is Hefele,
Conciliengeschichte, available to the English reader in the
translation of Clark, Oxenham, &c. (Edinb. 1872 sq.), a work so
thoroughly fundamental that a general reference to it will serve as one
continuous note to matters relating to the councils held under
Constantine. |
In effect, the most distinguished of God’s ministers from all
the churches which abounded in Europe, Lybia,3239 and Asia were here assembled. And a
single house of prayer, as though divinely enlarged, sufficed to
contain at once Syrians and Cilicians, Phœnicians and Arabians,
delegates from Palestine, and others from Egypt; Thebans and Libyans,
with those who came from the region of Mesopotamia. A Persian bishop
too was present at this conference, nor was even a Scythian found
wanting to the number.3240
3240 It
is noted that this evidence of the presence of foreign
bishops—“missionary bishops,” so to speak—is
confirmed by Gelasius and also by the roll of the members. | Pontus, Galatia,
and Pamphylia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Phrygia, furnished their most
distinguished prelates; while those who dwelt in the remotest districts
of Thrace and Macedonia, of Achaia and Epirus, were notwithstanding in
attendance. Even from Spain itself, one whose fame was widely spread
took his seat as an individual in the great assembly.3241
3241 [Hosius of Cordova.—Bag.] | The prelate of the imperial city3242
3242 [It has been doubted whether Rome or Constantinople is here
intended. The authority of Sozomen and others is in favor of the
former. See English translation, published as one volume of this
series.—Bag.] Also in this series. | was prevented from attending by extreme
old age; but his presbyters were present, and supplied his place.
Constantine is the first prince of any age who bound together such a
garland as this with the bond of peace, and presented it to his Saviour
as a thank-offering for the victories he had obtained over every foe,
thus exhibiting in our own times a similitude of the apostolic
company.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|