The Theology of The Council of Nicaea
The Theology of The Council of Nicaea
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Lyman, Rebecca. 2024. 'The Theology of the Council of Nicaea', St Andrews
Encyclopaedia of Theology. Edited by Brendan N. Wolfe et al. https://www.saet.ac.uk/
Christianity/TheTheologyoftheCouncilofNicaea Accessed: 5 August 2025
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Copyright © Rebecca Lyman CC BY-NC
ISSN 2753-3492
The Theology of the Council of Nicaea
Rebecca Lyman
The Council of Nicaea in 325 was a critical theological and institutional watershed between
the local and often diverse theologies of one God as Trinity in the second- and third-
century Christian communities and the universal or catholic credal statements of the
ancient imperial church that developed over the course of the fourth century. For the first
time bishops from throughout the Roman Empire gathered, at the request and expense
of the Emperor Constantine, to debate and declare their beliefs with an expectation of
enforcement and unity – i.e. a council of broader representation and authority with a
synodal creed. While the origins of the theological conflict in Alexandria that prompted the
gathering at Nicaea remain unclear, the decisions at the council and the extensive debates
in the decades afterwards on the nature of God created the theological and exegetical
foundations of Nicene trinitarian doctrine. No longer imagined through a hierarchical
divinity based on causality or separate spheres of activity, the one divine nature and
operation of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit was the eventual result of the extensive
theological and exegetical work of the pro-Nicene theologians. Recent studies have been
especially attentive to the development of the theological methodology which underlay the
defence and exposition of these foundational doctrines. The declaration and enforcement
of Nicene orthodoxy by Emperor Theodosius in 381 marked the end of the formal debate,
though dissent and persuasion continued. The history of Nicene theology is therefore
institutionally complex as well as theologically foundational.
1
Table of contents
1 Theologies and communities in ancient Christianity
2.2.1 Canons
2
1 Theologies and communities in ancient
Christianity
1.1 Diversity, theology, and the rule of faith before Nicaea
Traditional church histories often contrasted ‘orthodoxy’ with ‘heresy’ to map the vigorous
theological conflicts of the first three centuries. However, current studies underline the
variety and vitality of early urban Christian communities throughout the Mediterranean that
resulted in a spectrum of interpretations and teachings, including the creation of orthodoxy
itself (King 2008: 66–84). Christianity was unusual as an ancient religion because it was
not necessarily linked to a sacred place or ethnicity, so the first communities flourished
as voluntary associations or schools, often in continuity with Judaism, which had an
intense focus on texts, interpretation, worship, and practice of life (Vinzent 2016: 103–
118). The Greek translation of Hebrew scripture, the Septuagint, was the primary source
and authority for early Christian life and reflection, together with the emerging religious
literature of the first and second centuries which would form the New Testament. Not
surprisingly, debates on the definitions of a scriptural canon, hermeneutics, and apostolic
authenticity were widespread as the early communities explored and articulated their
beliefs and practices within the traditional polytheistic culture of late antiquity (Young
2008: 849–851). These dispersed communities exchanged letters and treatises, and
cautioned each other against writings and teachers thought to be harmful; but only by the
third century did bishops begin to gather regularly in synods to censure and discipline
opponents (Williams 1989: 11–18). Theological reflection on scripture and practice was
therefore an integral part of the life of Christian communities in relation to Judaism, other
Christians, and surrounding ancient religions and philosophies.
One of the major theological conflicts among the early communities was defining Christian
divinity and life as revealed and practised through the central saving work and teaching
of Jesus in the light of the Jewish inheritance of monotheism. In antiquity, the concept
of monotheism included a range of concepts, from a single being to a single power
with mediating agents, or the first of a hierarchy of gods with lesser degrees of divinity
increasingly diminished by being in closer relation to the material world (Novenson 2020:
1–8; DeConick 2020: 263–292). Drawing on Hebrew scriptures, Jews and Christians
both confessed the absolute singularity and power of one God as creator (Deut 6:4; 1
Cor 8:6). However, other passages in scripture described mediating aspects of divinity
as active agents, such as Wisdom (Sophia) as found in the books of Proverbs (8:22–
30) and Wisdom (7:26–27). Christian writers identified Jesus with these aspects as the
divine mediator and saviour (John 1:1–5; Col 1:15–20), as well as using a variety of unique
titles such as ‘Lord/Anointed’ (Acts 2:36) and ‘Son’, which could indicate both divinity
(John 20:31) and secondary status to the Father (John 17:3; Fredriksen 2020: 316–319).
Reflecting the diversity both of scripture and of local practices of prayer and liturgy, the
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New Testament had binitarian formulas (Rom 8:11; 2 Cor 4:14; Eph 1:20; 2 John 1:13)
as well as triadic formulas (Matt 28:19, 1 Cor 6:11; Heb 10:29) to describe the persons of
Christian divinity as the Father, Son, and Spirit. The early Christian debates concerning the
nature and actions of God then contrasted scriptural texts of divine equality between the
Father and Son (John 1:1; Matt 11:27; Luke 22:70; John 10:30; John 12:45; Col 2:9: Heb
1:3) with those which seemed to subordinate the Son to the power or being of the Father
(Matt 10:18; John 14:28; 17:3).
Several dualistic models of God and salvation within the growing Christian communities
sharpened the defence of one good God as omnipotent Father and Creator, over and
against conceptions of an alien creator responsible for the limits and errors of the material
world, as in Marcion, or a lower evil creator (demiurge) in ‘Gnostic’ authors. Following
Philo, a Jewish philosophical author and exegete, some Christian intellectuals drew on
Hebrew scripture and contemporary philosophy to describe God the Father as the only
and eternal source of existence. Within later Platonic cosmology, philosophers increasingly
contrasted the absolute goodness and utter transcendence of God to the lower multiplicity
and mutability of the physical world (Ip 2022: 15–47). Divine mediators were therefore
necessary as lower and active agents to accomplish the divine purpose in creation and
history. As a philosophical Christian teacher in Rome, Justin Martyr outlined an apologetic
theology in which the Son was the active Word of the transcendent Father, being the
mediating lower god in creation and also revealing the eternal and invisible God through
the incarnation:
You must not imagine that the unbegotten God himself came down or went up from any
place. For the ineffable Father and Lord of all has no place […] for he existed before the
world was made. (Dialogue with Trypho 27.1–2, trans. Behr 2001: 103)
There is, therefore, as I have pointed out, one God the Father and one Christ Jesus,
who is coming throughout the whole economy […] the invisible becoming visible, the
incomprehensible becoming comprehensible, the impassible becoming passible […]
(Against Heresies 3.16.6, trans. Behr 2001: 127)
The entire sweep of saving action by God the Father through the Son as Word in creation
and incarnation – i.e. the economy of salvation – rested on the primacy and power of the
4
transcendent and eternal Father, the revealing and transformative divine presence of the
Son, and the continuing active power of the Holy Spirit.
In the early third century, Origen of Alexandria noted these differing opinions of Christians
and set out to explicate one body of apostolic doctrine based on scripture, the rule of
faith, and theological deduction, in his highly influential and controversial work, On First
Principles. This attempt at a more systematic exploration of scripture and theology set
the parameters of much of the later trinitarian debates in the fourth century. Origen
placed his theological moves and exegetical choices in the explicit context of other
Christian opponents: those (Monarchians) who wished to make little distinction between
Father and Son in spite of biblical evidence, and those who had obscured the proper
transcendence and simplicity of the Godhead by using materialist images of generation
such as emanation (probole) (Ip 2022: 84). Like Irenaeus before him, Origen defined the
nature and action of one God through both contemporary philosophical assumptions and
the soteriological purposes of creation. Thus, the simplicity and goodness of divine nature
is manifest in the primacy of the unbegotten Father, and also in the gracious multiplicity
5
of the titles of the only begotten Son which indicate his salvific mediation to retrieve the
fallen creation into unity with God (Ip 2022: 119–153). Origen delineated both unity and
distinction through his scriptural metaphors of light, eternal generation, and the Son
as the image of the Father in act and will (Ip 2022: 155–187). Whether or not Origen
used the term homoousios remains disputed (Edwards 1998: 658–670). For Origen, the
scriptural titles and descriptions of the Son as Wisdom, Word, and Image of God proved
both a distinct divine identity (hypostasis) as well as his soteriological accommodations
and mediation to the fallen creation to reveal the transcendent Father. The Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit shared divine nature but were distinguished by causality, and at times
through participation, to ensure both shared nature and individuality (Edwards 2002: 47–
86; Hengstermann 2022: 348–351). Origen’s theology of image was especially rich in
describing the relation of the Father and Son as well as the incarnation: the two natures of
Christ exhibited the image of God as Word and also perfected humanity as unchanging in
goodness and faithful in virtue.
Several decades later, the bishops of Rome and Alexandria exchanged testy letters on
negotiating the proper language of divine nature and activity. The bishop of Alexandria
strongly opposed local ‘Sabellians’, who in turn appealed to the Roman bishop for
support. Their literary exchange would be used by both sides in the later fourth century
debates, as Dionysius of Alexandria described the Son as ‘creature’ to distinguish him
from the uncaused Father, affirmed three separate persons (hypostases), and initially
rejected homoousios (same nature) in order to avoid a muddled divine unity (Hanson
1988: 72–76; Beatrice 2002: 243–250). As seen in the fragments of a third century
Alexandrian writer, Theognostus, the scriptural metaphors of light or image continued to
be theologically central to describing the unique generation and identity of the Son in ways
which distinguished, but did not diminish or divide, the divine nature (Hanson 1988: 77–
78). These early debates on the Christian nature of God provided the conceptual outlines
and scriptural texts that shaped the later theological arguments and practices during the
controversies concerning Trinity and Christology in the fourth century (Ip 2022: 189–199).
6
emperors, even as he enforced their decisions he ultimately failed to hold the bishops
together if they were divided on what they considered to be fundamentals of theology and
salvation. In recent accounts of the fourth-century Nicene controversies, historians have
traced through the shifting opinions, diversity of opponents, and bewildering succession
of ecclesiastical councils the gradual emergence of a theological ‘culture’ or ‘grammar’
that provided rules of discourse to ensure divine simplicity, the primacy of Christ, and
a clarification of theological epistemology in exegesis and reflection (Anatolios 2011:
8–9; Ayres 2004a: 4–5). The debates of the councils forced a conversation among
geographically diverse Christian bishops and theologians which gradually produced a
more consistent vocabulary to describe and defend the mystery of the doctrine of God.
Ironically, ‘Arianism’, as the shadow side of the Nicene orthodoxy, has often been
portrayed as an archetypical heresy, yet the actual doctrinal origins of the original conflict
in Alexandria have never been fully settled among historians (Wiles 1996: 1–26; Lyman
2021: 47–52). Not only is the literary evidence of the debate – especially the writings of
Arius and his colleagues – very limited, these fragments have been largely preserved,
and often distorted, in polemical sources (Gwynn 2007: 169–202). Attempts to link Arius’
teaching on the transcendence of the Father to contemporary philosophy (by Rowan
Williams), or a populist exemplarism through a created Son (by Robert Gregg and Dennis
Groh), or legacies of problems within Origen’s theology have never fully explained the
intensity and bitterness of the early debate which first split the Alexandrian church and
then attracted powerful outside episcopal allies on both sides (Löhr 2006a: 524–560).
This local debate on the proper nature, origin, and worship of the Son hit a vital nerve as
it spread among the Eastern churches, still recovering a decade after the end of the Great
Persecution under Diocletian and his successors. Since most of his original teachings
were abandoned by his allies after Nicaea, Arius has had less importance in the recent
histories of fourth-century Nicene theology. He is seen as a catalyst for a larger debate
among Christians on the nature of God, rather than the founder of a coherent movement
(Ayres 2004a: 12, note 3). Most recently, Arius and his allies have been interpreted as
concerned with defending traditional monotheism as a determinative principle, which may
reflect current philosophical or social issues, but equally reflects inherited liturgical and
devotional themes (Löhr 2006b: 156–157; Anatolios 2011: 42–52).
From the extant documents concerning the controversy, historians have ordered the
sequence and dating of events in Alexandria, and recently proposed the events began
around 321/322 (Parvis 2006: 78, 100–101). According to Constantine (one of the nearest
contemporary sources), Alexander the bishop of Alexandria initiated the conflict by
discussing holy mysteries in public, but all clergy were to blame in allowing this arcane
discussion to roil the larger community (Urk 17; Opitz 1935: 32–35; Drake 2021: 118–
119). The theological conflict was thus not a literary exchange among ecclesiastical elites
but a public urban debate about the origin and nature of the Son, taking place between
7
Alexander and a group of his clergy – including, most notably, Arius, a presbyter. This
argument spread among the laity of Alexandria, and eventually separated the diocese into
separate communities. According to his critics, Alexander compromised traditional and
biblical monotheism by his mischaracterization of the eternal relation and shared nature
of the Father and the Son. In response, Alexander portrayed his opponents as little better
than adoptionists who denied the divinity of the Son, since they insisted on the Son’s
separate and lower nature which had come about through the will of the Father.
After a synod of Egyptian and Libyan bishops condemned Arius and his allies, Arius wrote
to Eusebius, the powerful bishop of Nicomedia, invoking a shared connection through
the martyred bishop, Lucian of Antioch, and suggesting Alexander’s theology – which he
portrayed as a muddled Monarchianism – was not shared by many Eastern bishops (Urk
1; Opitz 1935: 1–3). Several bishops then wrote to Alexander to correct him about the
traditional and necessary primacy of the Father, including Eusebius of Caesarea (Urk 7;
Opitz 1935: 14–15). Alexander issued two encyclical letters describing the theological and
biblical errors and arrogance of his opponents, including separate assemblies, lawsuits,
and unruly women (Urk 4, 14; Opitz 1935: 6–11, 19–20). Arius composed an apologetic
theological piece, the Thalia, perhaps to clarify his controversial positions for other allies
(DelCogliano 2018: 477–492). This continuing public disorder in Alexandria may have led
to the edict of Licinius in the Eastern portion of the empire against the meetings of bishops
and the instruction of women by men (Barnes 2014: 105).
He who has begotten the only begotten Son before aeonian times […] giving him existence
by his own will, unchangeable and unalterable, a perfect creature (ktisma) of God, but not
like one of the creatures, a product (gennema), but not like one the things produced […] not
as Valentinus laid down an issue (probole) nor as Mani taught a consubstantial part (meros
homoousios) of the Father, nor as Sabellius said, dividing the Monad, a ‘Sonfather’ nor as
Hieracas, a light lit from a lamp or a lamp spread in two. (Urk 6.2–5; Opitz 1935: 12–13,
translation in Hanson 1988: 7)
The Father did not deprive himself of that which he possesses as unoriginated
(agennetos). The Father is defined as ‘supremely sole (monotatos), without beginning,
8
monad, and origin of everything’ (Urk 6.8; Opitz 1935, translation in Hanson 1988: 8).
Arius later wrote to Eusebius of Nicomedia,
[t]hat the Son is not unbegotten (agennetos) nor in any way a part (meros_) of the
unbegotten nor derived from some substratum, but he exists by will and counsel before
time and before ages, full of truth, and grace, God, only begotten […] And before he was
begotten or created […] he did not exist. For he is not unbegotten. (Urk 1.2–3; Opitz 1935,
translation in Hanson 1988: 6)
In this letter, Arius also stated that the Son derived from non-existence. While Arius and
his allies would insist that the Son was ‘begotten’ in a unique relation to the Father, he was
necessarily separate in nature as having a beginning, and therefore a different existence
or nature (hypostasis) from the uncreated Father. This unique process however also
distinguished him from the rest of creation. Only the omnipotent will of the transcendent
Father ensured the status of the Son as ‘god’ rather than sharing a common or derivative
nature. In comparison to the eternal and uncreated Father, the Son had by definition come
into being and so subsisted by the will of the Father. He was unchangeable as a perfect
creature and Son by divine will, so he was not equivalent to those created later by divine
will through the Son.
In his later work the Thalia, Arius outlined an apophatic theology and spirituality that
denied the knowledge or vision of the one transcendent Father to the Son, except as
granted to him by divine will:
God himself, in himself, remains mysterious (arretos). He alone has no equal, none like
him, none of equal glory. We call him unoriginated in contrast to him who is originated by
nature […] we praise him as without beginning in contrast to him who has a beginning,
we worship him as eternal in contrast to him who came into existence in times. He who
was without beginning made the Son a beginning of all things which are produced, and he
made him into a Son for himself, begetting him […] So the Son having not existed attained
existence by the Father’s will. He is the only begotten God and he is different from any
others. Wisdom became Wisdom by the will of the wise God and so he is apprehended in
an uncountable number of aspects (epinoia). He is God’s glory and truth and image and
Word […] He is the mighty god (Isaiah 9:15) and in some degree worships the creator.
God is mysterious to the Son, for he is to him that which he is, ineffable. (De Synodis 15,
translation in Hanson 1988: 14–15)
The biblical designations of the Son (Wisdom, Word) therefore remained proper to
the Father as his eternal attributes, so that all the Son had, including these traditional
9
descriptions, was solely given by the Father (Gwynn 2007: 189–220). This apophatic
theology defended Christian monotheism, but radically altered the traditional being of the
Son as the incarnate revelation of the transcendent Father. The Son’s knowledge of the
Father was only by the gift of the Father (Matt 11:27). According to Winrich Löhr, Arius’
apophatic theology ‘[…] implies the abrogation of the intellectualist agenda of much of
late antique philosophy – both pagan and Christian […]. The emphasis is on praising and
glorifying […] divine transcendence is democratized’ (Löhr 2006b: 149). The revelation of
God appears to be only through relation and action modelled by the Son (Heb 2:8–18).
Both sides in Alexandria were on new theological ground in their passionate defences
of monotheism in Christian divinity. For the dissenting clergy, Alexander had ignored
the traditional and biblical definitions of the Father as the sole and eternal cause of all.
For Alexander, his opponents’ insistence on the origin of the Son by will, in spite of their
explication of ‘only begotten’ as unique, made the Son only a creature. For the first time,
both sides consistently distinguished divinity and created being through the doctrine of
‘creation from nothing’ (creatio ex nihilo). In past theological debates, scriptural references
10
to begetting (Ps 2:7) or creating (Prov 8:22) had been used interchangeably to describe
the Son’s derivative and divine nature. This new sharp cosmological divide between the
unchanging and eternal creator and the contingent and mutable creation left the former
mediating and hierarchical scriptural definitions of the Son as Word or Logos or Image
ontologically ambiguous: how can eternal divine nature by definition be compound or
shared? Does a language of begetting mean both share unbegotten nature?
The sharp emphasis in Alexandria on the problem of two co-eternals and the singular
power of divine will may be due to the presence of Manichees in Egypt, who taught two
divine co-existent principles (as noted by the dissenting clergy in their letter to Alexander),
or the criticism of Origen’s doctrine of eternal creation by Methodius which emphasized
the omnipotent will of God (Edwards 2015: 137–142; Lyman 2021: 50–51). The earlier
and intense persecution by Diocletian had also included a propaganda war by polytheists
against Christian theology. Christians, it was claimed, were not monotheists because they
worshipped a man (Shin 2018: 18–25). For Alexander, the scriptural references of Wisdom
or Image proved the Son’s eternal and divine nature in that he was proper to the Father,
which in turn guaranteed the authority of his revelation and confirmed the practice of
worship of the Son. For his opponents, these scriptural references are only titles given to
the Son by the undivided Father, who still possessed Wisdom or Word as proper to himself
in the radical simplicity of divine nature. For Alexander’s opponents, the Son remained as
the unique revelator of the Father, but solely by the Father’s gift, unchanging by the will of
the Father yet also linked to humans as the first born of every creature, and perhaps an
exemplar of faithful virtue (Col 1:15–18; Rom 8:29).
11
young boys: are there two co-existent principles? Is he made of wood or stone, or can he
change? Did you have a son before you had a son? (Lyman 2021: 59 note 83). These
varied opinions among bishops and on the streets give insight into the intensity of the
Christian defence of one transcendent being and the complexity of scriptural language
to be reconciled concerning divine and human natures. Athanasius would later apply a
‘double account’ of exegesis to distinguish which texts were applied to Christ’s divinity or to
his humanity: Christ is unchangeable as divine and changeable as human (Gwynn 2012:
76).
Like many aspects of the council, the number of the attending bishops is a combination
of legend and scriptural numerology; the traditional number was 318, modelled after the
servants of Abraham (Gen 14:14). The more likely estimate was around 200–250 bishops
12
plus their retinues, predominately from the East. The total number could have been 2,000,
including attendees such as Athanasius as a deacon (who attended with Alexander, his
bishop, but did not sign the creed and probably did not speak at the proceedings) and the
imperial officials, such as Philumenus, who supervised the signing of the creed (Gwynn
2021: 92–95). Ossius of Cordova, who was the first signer of the creed, was probably
the presider; he was followed by the two presbyters who signed on behalf of the Roman
bishop.
As Everett Ferguson observed, councils were not yet institutions but events: participants
came to gather, discuss, clarify, and (for some) to win (Ferguson 2008: 438). The volatility
of participants in ancient church councils reflected the usual process of decision in
Roman culture. Even with the absolute power of the emperor or colonial administration,
participants at events could influence policy through acclamation or argument, though
the decision ultimately had to be endorsed (or coerced) as a majority and final decision
(MacMullen 2006: 20–21). Later councils involved a variety of theological advisors, lay and
ordained, as well as clerical assistants around the voting bishops, but little contemporary
evidence exists for this at Nicaea. Constantine joined the bishops for the opening of
the council in late May or early June and, according to Eusebius, graciously sat on the
same level with them, and urged harmony; a later legend portrayed him as burning
the diverse theological petitions given to him to illustrate the point of necessary unity
(Gwynn 2021: 99). The heavy-hitting urban episcopal protagonists of the earlier conflict
had arrived at Nicaea interested in the vindication of their own theologies, as well as
sorting out structures of authority whose vagueness had limited their jurisdiction and
invited unwelcome external theological intervention. Eusebius of Caesarea in particular
was interested in rehabilitation after his condemnation at the recent Council of Antioch.
Scholars now believe Eusebius of Nicomedia gave the opening speech of welcome as the
local metropolitan (Gwynn 2021: 97).
13
In Egypt, another division had roiled the Christian community, over the legitimacy
of leaders who had absented themselves from their communities during the earlier
persecution. This ‘Melitian’ schism had resulted in parallel ecclesiastical structures in
Egypt, but the council affirmed that their clergy could remain in place, if secondary to
the clergy of Alexander. Later, church historians added dramatic confrontations at the
council by scarred confessors and uneducated ascetics defeating learned philosophers
in order to demonstrate the Christian power of simplicity and the imperial desire for peace
and unity (Lim 1995: 182–216; Gwynn 2021: 106–107). According to Eusebius, the
bishops concluded the event by joining the emperor at a feast on 25 July to celebrate his
Vicennalia (twenty years of rule) at his palace in Nicomedia (Gwynn 2021: 108).
We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things both visible and invisible;
and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten from the Father, only begotten,
that Is from the substance of the Father; God from God, Light from Light, true God from
true God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father; ‘through whom all things
came into being’ (John 1.3; 1 Cor 8:6), both things in heaven and things on earth; who
for us humans and for our salvation descended, became incarnate, was made human,
suffered, on the third day rose again, ascended into the heavens, will come ‘to judge the
living and the dead’ (2 Tim 4.1; 1 Pet 4:5); and in the Holy Spirit. The catholic and apostolic
Church anathematizes those who say, ‘There was when he was not’, and, ‘He was not
before he was begotten’, and that he came to be from nothing, or those who claim that the
Son of God is from another hypostasis or substance (or created) or alterable, or mutable.
(Edwards 2021: 156)
As a product of an imperial and ecumenical council, this ‘synodal creed’ was a new type
of statement of faith which had a broad geographical application and also ecclesiastical
power (Ferguson 2008: 428–429). Declaratory creeds as forms of pledges to a specific
set of doctrinal statements only began to appear in the fourth century amid the broadening
theological crisis between Alexander and his opponents (Kinzig and Vinzent 1999: 552).
These statements included building blocks of ‘anti-logic’ (statements to correct and
exclude opponents) and ‘tradition’, i.e. language of scripture and inherited theology (Kinzig
and Vinzent 1999: 555). The synodal creed was a document created and shared only by
bishops, who could then be expected to enforce its contents at home. The exact origins
of the Nicene Creed remain part of the historical puzzle of the largely undocumented
events of the council, but the resulting patchwork of traditional and scriptural language can
suggest the significant issues of concern and the necessary compromises.
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The crucial theological debate lasted over several weeks, but the actual events remain
difficult to reconstruct or synthesize (Gwynn 2021: 97–102; Parvis 2006: 85–91). A
key piece of evidence is an explanatory letter by Eusebius of Caesarea written to his
own diocese immediately after the council. His presentation of his local creed to the
council may have happened early in the proceedings in order to seat him as an orthodox
participant (Gwynn 2021: 99; Johnson 2021: 208–222). As Aaron Johnson noted,
Eusebius’ sense of hope in an imperially unified church pervades his description of all
participants actively debating theological language, even as he himself ‘resisted even
to the last minute’ certain statements to demonstrate the serious intellectual acumen
and care for tradition at the council (Johnson 2021: 211, 221). By contrast, Eustathius
of Antioch asserted that a document which revealed the blasphemy of Eusebius was
torn up, and silence was imposed for the sake of order; this could be a document by
Eusebius of Nicomedia opposing any use of homoousios (Gwynn 2021: 99). In sharing a
common name with the bishop of Nicomedia, Eusebius of Caesarea might have wished
to communicate immediately after the council about the favourable reception of his own
document.
The final extant account was written much later by Athanasius in the midst of a defence of
the term homoousios. He dramatically contrasted two sides of orthodox participants and
‘Eusebians’ struggling, and failing, to define a common theology in purely scriptural terms,
that is, in terms of ‘power’ or ‘image’; the heretical participants accepted the biblical terms
with duplicitous winks and whispers in the hopes that these could be parsed to their own
erroneous ends (Gwynn 2012: 87–89). However, as revealed in the complex debates after
the council, the geographically diverse bishops in attendance could hardly be reduced to
simply two sides. The theological compromises of the final language of the creed in fact
reveal a careful construction of phrases to preserve traditional and scriptural language as
well as exclude the defenders of Arius and his colleagues.
In the letter to his diocese, Eusebius of Caesarea claimed that he presented their local
baptismal creed to the council. This creed affirmed the ‘Word’ as God from God, Light from
Light, only begotten Son, first born of creation, begotten from the Father before all ages.
He asserted that Constantine approved this statement, and would have simply added
‘homoousios’ to it, but another statement was drawn up. As noted by Mark Edwards, this
creed from Caesarea indicates two fourth century additions to other extant statements of
faith by including ‘Word/Logos’ as the title of the Son as well as ‘only-begotten’ (Edwards
2021: 143–144). These were biblical terms under intense discussion in the original
controversy in Alexandria. The final creed of Nicaea highlighted ‘Son’ rather than ‘Word’
and used ‘only begotten’ to highlight the meaning of the singularity of divine begetting. This
was instead of ‘first born’, which had connotations of order (Col 1:15) with other creatures,
including humans (Rom 8:29; Col 1:18; Rev 1:5), and was omitted from the final creed.
15
In the Nicene Creed, sonship and the understanding of ‘begotten’ in contrast to ‘created’
was carefully outlined to signal and ensure the divinity of the Son. The Son was thus
begotten ‘from the substance of the Father’, which assured divinity not explicitly found in
the common proof text ‘today I have begotten you’ (Ps 2:7). Another innovation was to
include ‘true God from true God’ together with ‘Light from Light’ to show no diminishment
of divine nature (1 John 5:20; Edwards 2021: 145). Notably, there is no reference to time
or eternity in the creed, which had roiled the original controversy over monotheism in
Alexandria, though it is addressed in the anathemas; ‘before all worlds’ would appear in
the later version of Constantinople (see God and Philosophy of Time; Kelly 1972: 303;
Radde-Gallwitz 2023: 228–231).
A controversial part of the creed was the use of substance language in relation to the
divine nature of the Father and the Son (Edwards 2021: 145–149; Hanson 1988: 181–
202). In addition to the affirmation that the only begotten Son was from the ousia of the
Father, the term homoousios (same substance) was the concluding term which underlined
the council’s understanding of ‘begotten, not made’. For many, this word had negative
heretical and material associations, including the shared spiritual nature in ‘gnosticism’
and Manicheanism. Dionysius of Alexandria had rejected it as ‘Sabellian’ and, as would
be later discussed by Athanasius, it had been denounced at the Council of Antioch in 268
against Paul of Samasota (Hanson 1988: 192–194; Beatrice 2002: 243–272). In the creed,
the non-scriptural word concluded and summarized the definitions of divine begetting
before the narration turned to the creation and incarnation. Though controversial, the
term by design short-circuited any interpretation of the Son as a creature, since it had
been explicitly rejected by opponents of Alexander (Hanson 1988: 197; Ayres 2004a:
90). Eusebius claimed that Constantine suggested the term, though other sources credit
Alexander, who introduced it precisely to exclude Eusebius of Nicomedia and his other
opponents (Edwards 2021: 148–149). Whatever the origin, the term decisively shifted
divine causality away from categories of will or time towards divine nature which the
begotten Son received from the Father. Later confusion, however, would result from the
anathema against those who say ‘the Son of God is of another hypostasis or ousia’;
although these terms were seen as synonymous by some, others could read this as a
careless or even ‘Sabellian’ lack of distinction as persons between the Father and the Son
(Hanson 1988: 167–168). The other phrases condemned were ‘there was a time when
he was not’; ‘[h]e was not before he was begotten’; and ‘that he came to be from nothing’
or ‘alterable’ or ‘changeable’ which would define him as a creature (Edwards 2021: 145).
Edwards also accepts that a final anathema condemned the use of ‘made’ of the Son,
which appears in an account by Philostorgius, a non-Nicene historian (Edwards 2021:
151).
16
Eusebius’ discussion of the Nicene Creed in his letter also offered a glimpse of the
continuing reservations around these key phrases which would persist in the debates
in the following decades. His objections to the phrases ‘from the substance of the
Father’ or homoousios have to do with the traditional fear of materiality or division in
divine transcendent nature, so he claimed that the Son was indeed from the Father,
but not a part. ‘Begotten’ with regard to divine nature could only mean that the Son
was of a nature too high for creation and ineffable; no division or change occurred in
the Father’s unbegotten nature, and the Son is not another hypostasis or ousia, but
from the Father (Hanson 1988: 165–166). Defending the primacy of the Father as well
as ensuring the divinity of the Son remained essential for him. He also supported the
imperial authority of the creed in his portrayal of Constantine as the theological expert who
provided reconciling readings of the controversial phrases. Athanasius would later draw
on Eusebius’ explanation, which perhaps reflected an imperial interpretation, in order to
persuade reluctant churchman of a limited sense of homoousios (Ayres 2004b: 358–340).
2.2.1 Canons
The work of the council also addressed a range of disciplinary problems with regard to
clergy, as well as lingering problems from the recent persecution against Christians by
Licinius. Critical issues of jurisdiction and mobility underlay the theological conflict which
spread so rapidly from Alexandria into the larger Eastern church. Resembling in form
imperial citations and Roman law, there are few extant canon collections from this period
and area of Christianity: Ancyra 314; Neocaesarea 315; and Antioch 330 (Weckwerth
2021: 158–160). The majority of the twenty canons addressed clergy behaviour. The first
three limit radical charismatic practices: self-castration was prohibited, and clergy were not
permitted to live with ascetic women who were not members of their family. The second
was to prohibit immediate ordination to priesthood or episcopacy of recent converts (1
Tim 3:6–7). The next cluster clarified episcopal succession and power: bishops could
only be appointed with the consent of three bishops and the metropolitan. If a bishop
excommunicated a priest, it was not permitted for him to be received by another bishop;
however, twice a year the bishops would meet to review these disciplinary actions. In the
next canons, the ecclesiastical jurisdiction was aligned with the provinces established
by Diocletian and Constantine (Weckwerth 2021: 164). The jurisdiction of metropolitans
over other local bishops was then defined: the Bishop of Alexandria was defined as
including Egypt, Libya, and Pentapolis. The jurisdictions of Antioch and Jerusalem were
also clarified.
The next sequence of canons (8–14) addressed the continuing chaos in Christian
communities in the face of political and religious attack. They established consistency
in the requirements of ordination and also in the penance and restoration of those who
had lapsed (sacrificed) under recent religious restrictions by Licinius (Barnes 2014: 105–
17
106). The clerical orders of anyone who had been ordained quickly with no proper vetting
were now null and void. If one was ordained and lapsed he was deposed. Those who had
lapsed during the rule of the Roman Emperor Licinius could be admitted after twelve years
of penance.
The final section strengthened episcopal power and orthodoxy by regulating the behaviour
of clergy: specifically, forbidding clergy to move from city to city and bishops from receiving
wandering clergy (canons 15–16). Clergy were not to practise usury. Deacons were to
receive communion after presbyters and did not sit with them. The followers of Paul of
Samasota were deemed heretics, who needed to be rebaptized and re-ordained in order
to be received in the church. Deaconesses, however, were not clergy, since no hands had
been laid upon them; this might imply a plurality of practice with regard to the status of
deaconesses. Finally, this section instructed that Christians should not kneel for prayer on
Easter or Pentecost.
While traditional histories traced the dualling theologies of ‘Arians’ or ‘Eusebians’ against
the defenders of Nicaea over the next five decades of the fourth century, these binary
and polemical categories were largely created by Athanasius during his exile in Rome
with Marcellus in 340 (Parvis 2006: 180–192). In fact, beneath this ecclesiastical and
political search for a unifying statement over the next decades, there was intensely
creative theological work. The struggles of the theologians and bishops revealed the
continuing geographical and theological diversity of Christian communities and the breadth
of interpretation within the inherited apostolic tradition. Defenders, opponents, and those
simply uneasy with the language of Nicaea held much in common, including a preference
18
for scriptural language, yet exegesis by itself increasingly convinced no one (Vaggione
2000: 85–86). Until 350, the controversial term homoousios would rarely appear. The
famous semantic confusions concerning ousia and hypostasis or distinguishing ‘begetting’
and ‘creating’ by one letter in Greek simply illustrate the problems of the diverse scriptural
and theological inheritances of the local Christian communities (Hanson 1988: 181–207).
Over two generations a shift gradually emerged in the Christian imagination toward a
trinitarian doctrine of one God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit that embodied not only both
words but also the soteriological scope of scripture, the practices of tradition including
prayer, and the larger and ordinary experience of the communities (Vaggione 2000:
103–105). These shifts rested on the creation of consistent and shared exegetical and
theological practices, a ‘grammar of theology’ that in affirming divine simplicity regulated
the problematic and conflicting inheritances concerning singularity, hierarchy, and causality
within the Godhead (Ayres 2004a: 14, 273–301; Anatolios 2011: 1–11).
In the immediate aftermath of Nicaea, certain theologians defined Christian divinity through
one eternal and shared nature (one hypostasis or ousia) of the Father and the Son which
ensured authentic revelation and divinization in the incarnation, while others felt equally
strongly that traditional monotheism must maintain distinctions (three hypostases), so
that the unbegotten Father remained the transcendent source of all and the Son was
the agent and visible subject of all earthly experiences (Lienhard 1987: 415–437). The
first alliance included Athanasius, Marcellus, and Eustathius who, although diverse in
their own theologies, saw their opponents as essentially polytheistic in their defence
of three hypostases, and probably adoptionist, since the Son did not share the divine
nature with the Father. The second alliance of Eusebius of Caesarea and Eusebius of
Nicomedia saw the first as bordering on ‘Sabellianism’ and ignoring the clear biblical
hierarchy and divisions of the divine activity of the Father and Son. This unity would result
in patripassianism, if not doceticism, as the Father ‘suffered’ or the suffering of the divine
Son was denied (Parvis 2006: 39–68).
These oppositions surfaced in the ecclesiastical conflicts among these bishops well as
in literary theological battles. Creating a new version of non-Nicene theology, Asterius
the Sophist defended Eusebius of Nicomedia by describing the Son as the image of
the Father’s ousia and will, hoping to delineate distinction in unity (DelCogliano 2006:
458–460; Parvis 2021: 234–235). By contrast, Marcellus of Ancyra had a dynamic
understanding of the one Godhead (one hypostasis) from which the Logos became ‘Son’
and ‘Image’ only at the incarnation. God as monad became triad, but this was restored
again to unity at the final judgment when God became all in all (1 Cor 15:24–8). He
attacked Asterius’ definition precisely because the language of ‘image’ by definition implies
a separation of being and identity; Col 1:15 (‘image of the invisible God’) must refer to the
incarnation (Parvis 2021: 235–237). Eusebius of Caesarea wrote against Marcellus, who
19
was eventually excommunicated in the East but was received as orthodox in the West
based on his confession of faith (Parvis 2006: 129–132).
Over the next twenty years, a series of councils would reveal the variety of theologies
which sought to avoid or replace the allegedly materialist implications of homoousios. In
341, the Council of Antioch under Eusebius of Caesarea’s episcopal successor Acacius
was hosted by the new emperor Constantius to dedicate a church which had been
founded by his father ten years earlier. Like his father, Constantius pushed his bishops in
the East to find a theological compromise that would settle their disputes and provide a
unified piety for a peaceful empire. Earlier in 341, Pope Julius had re-admitted Athanasius
and Marcellus to communion, as well as defended Nicaea, so the Eastern bishops wished
to justify their earlier decisions in response to the Western statements. Protesting that they
were not ‘Arian’, they composed the ‘Second Creed of Antioch’ or ‘Dedication Creed’ (Kelly
1972: 264–274). This statement affirmed the many scriptural names of the Son (Light,
Way, Truth) and his eternity, refuting ‘Arian’ formulas, but also defending the divine nature
as ‘three in subsistence’ (hypostasis).
In the East, Acacius and Basil of Ancyra represented the new theological consensus in
contrast to the West (Parvis 2021: 241–242). In 358, Basil of Ancyra at Sirmium proposed
a formula of ‘like in substance’ to describe the relation of the Father and the Son, partly
to oppose more radical thinkers like Aetius. However, in 359, another council in Sirmium
produced the ‘Dated Creed’ which removed any reference to ousia: ‘Since the term […]
was adopted by the fathers rather naively, and not being known by the people causes
scandal because the Scriptures do not contain it […]’ (Parvis 2021: 250). A majority of
bishops at the Council of Ariminum in the West apparently initially rejected this creed in
favour of Nicaea. Later compromises in a search for unity resulted in a rejection of the
controversial ousia categories and an affirmation of the dissimilarity of the Father and the
Son, which prompted increasing controversy in the West at this theological distance from
Nicaea (Williams 2021: 310–323). The Council of Seleucia preferred the Dedication Creed,
but in 360 Constantius – through the Council of Constantinople – banned Nicaea and the
Dedication Creed by rejecting all ousia language (Parvis 2021: 251). Having managed to
offend all sides of the dispute, and especially many bishops in the traditionalist middle,
Constantius died the following year. In 361, Julian, a former Christian who intended to
revive traditional polytheism, refused to support any side in the conflict and, after he
became emperor, Julian recalled all ecclesiastical exiles.
20
the singularity of the Father and the separate reality and agency of the Son. Contrary
to Arius’ earlier apophatic theology, this essential definition of divine nature made God
comprehensible; knowing the name of God was essential to Christian hope, and Eunomius
criticized his opponents for perverting or obscuring what was clear in divine revelation by
using appeals to divine mystery (Vaggione 2000: 254–265). Eunomius defined the Father
alone as unbegotten, and the Son and Word therefore as begotten as divine, but also the
mediator who could change and thus be incarnate to reveal and accomplish salvation. If
the Nicenes condemned their opponents for the humiliation of the divine Word with their
emphasis on his obedience and suffering to prove his distinct nature, the non-Nicenes
retorted that a theology of incarnation of divine nature seemed to erase the biblical reality
of the experiences of the suffering Son (Vaggione 2000: 113; Gavrilyuk 2006: 101–134).
As in the earlier debate in Alexandria, problems of incarnation were inevitably woven into
defining the distinctions and saving actions of the Christian Godhead.
Beyond these imperial councils and duelling theological treatises, Eastern and Western
cities contained diverse communities of Christians of opposing theologies which would
persist into the next century (Williams 2021: 318–323). Some bishops mumbled at critical
moments in the liturgy in order to remain unaligned, barbers offered opinions on the
origins of the Son, and some such as Athanasius were valorised for their heroic and
lifelong theological commitments. In the newly expanding ascetic movement, some monks
avoided controversy while others like Anthony supported Nicaea; the virgins of Alexandria
were divided by doctrine (Brakke 1995: 57–79). Intellectuals such as Origen had always
grumbled about the varied levels of comprehension in the congregations, but the problem
of a newly-legitimate and heavily financially-endowed church embroiled in endless public
discussions led others to argue that theology should now be reserved to experts in order
to safeguard popular belief (Vaggione 2000: 100–102; Lim 1995: 109–148). As seen in the
mid-century urban turmoil surrounding Athanasius and non-Nicene bishops in Alexandria,
public civic order and religious life were increasingly intertwined (Haas 1997: 273–277).
The Apostolic Constitution provide evidence of a liturgy perhaps used by followers of
Eunomius, but this appears simply to attach instruction and devotional admonishment
about the ‘only unbegotten God’ to traditional rituals (Vaggione 2000: 258–261). However,
in this age of establishment and division, private worship became more suspect and
prohibited for fear of error (Bowes 2008: 191–202). Gradually, at the end of the fourth
century, in public liturgy and in private amulets trinitarian formulas with both coordinate (to
the Father, Son and Holy Spirit) and hybrid formulas (to God through the Son and with the
Holy Spirit) became standard doxological expressions (de Bruyn 2017: 221–225).
The success of Constantius in eliminating ousia from the creed, and Julian’s efforts to
restore traditional polytheism, caused a new alliance of alarmed bishops to seek common
ground to defend the divinity of the Son. While Athanasius had composed an earlier
response to the ascendency of the ‘Eusebians’ in his Against the Arians, he only began
21
to defend the language of Nicaea in the 350s in On the Decrees of the Council. Here
he presented the Nicene Creed in accord with earlier tradition that excluded the radical
teachings of the ‘Eusebians’, and shaped the reception of the creed through his own
theological vision of deification and eternal generation (Gwynn 2012: 80–89). In On the
Synods, Athanasius continued to cultivate a broader consensus with all those who were
not ‘Arians’; and in the Letter to the Antiochenes, he admitted that the confusion about
ousia and hypostasis had caused unfortunate division among those who were actually
thinking along similar lines of one common nature in the Godhead (Gwynn 2012: 95–98).
At this point Nicaea finally became a way to build consensus among the Eastern bishops
in defending the divinity of the Son, rather than a dividing line (DelCogliano 2021: 264–
267). Athanasius may well have drawn on Eusebius of Caesarea’s explanation of the
creed in order to reassure those hesitating that homoousios meant the same as ‘from the
nature of the Father’, and did not in fact erase the distinction of the Father and Son as
separate hypostases (Ayres 2004b: 350–358).
A new generation of exchanges by Basil of Caesarea, his brother Gregory of Nyssa, and
their friend Gregory of Nazianzus concerning divine nature, epistemology, and divine
action laid the methodological groundwork for the pro-Nicene doctrine of the Trinity.
This reimagining of the radical simplicity of the divine nature in opposition to Aetius and
Eunomius, with the aid of Aristotelian and Neoplatonic thought, shifted the earlier and
tenacious hierarchical definitions of the Father as first cause to imagine the entire triune
Godhead as separate from creation, unified in action, and defined through relation rather
than causality. If divine nature was simple by definition, God was incapable of division or
degrees of divine existence; generation must happen within this divine simplicity (Ayres
2004a: 279–280). In response to Aetius and Eunomius in particular, the nature of such
transcendent divinity must (again by definition) be incomprehensible to created beings, so
there can be no final or human comprehension of God. What therefore was revealed in
scripture – i.e. the names of God as Father, Son, and Spirit – must be both trustworthy and
foundational, and therefore the only foundation for any theological reflection (Ayres 2004a:
282–285). Revelation alone revealed the Godhead as Trinity, and human knowledge must
be acknowledged as limited concerning the details of God’s inner life.
Since the names of Father and Son were revealed as constitutive of the simple divine
nature, causality was an inadequate key to the Christian doctrine of God. Within its
essential simplicity, the names reveal an eternal relation to one another. As Gregory of
Nazianzus argued in his Third Theological Oration:
[…] the Father is not a name either of an essence or of an action, most clever sirs. But it is
the name of the relation in which the Father stands to the Son and the Son to the Father.
[…] But let us concede to you that Father is a name of essence: it will still bring in the idea
22
of the Son […]. (Gregory of Nazianzus, Third Theological Oration 16, translated by Browne
and Swallow in Hardy and Richardson 1964: 171)
Equally important, the simplicity of divine nature as Father, Son, and Spirit must mean
that all persons share in the actions of each, so there is no longer hierarchy or division in
the creating, saving, or sanctification of the creation as all these actions reveal the one
mystery of the Godhead. Gregory of Nyssa explained, in An Answer to Ablabius:
Rather does every operation which extends from God to creation and is designated
according to our differing conceptions of it have its origin in the Father, proceed through the
Son, and reach its completion by the Holy Spirit. It is for this reason that the word for the
operation is not divided among the persons involved. For the action of each in any matter is
not separate and individualized. But whatever occurs […] occurs through the three persons
and is not three separate things. (translated by Richardson in Hardy and Richardson 1964:
262)
The result of the necessary epistemological and ontological distinction between creator
and creation with regard to language, number, and nature led to the rejection of causality
and hierarchy within divinity, which had often been a traditional and cultural assumption
within previous Christian theology. In relation to this theology of the unknowable and
incomprehensible God, the Cappadocians also developed a spirituality based on the
inexhaustible journey of the growth of the soul through love into the boundless intimacy
and depths of the divine (Louth 1981: 80–97). The pro-Nicenes thus generated what
Lewis Ayres called ‘the grammar of divinity’, i.e. not only creating the theological rules
for speaking about God as Trinity but demonstrating how these rules gradually take on a
density of theological meaning (Ayres 2004a: 14).
The result of these six decades of close debate and theological reimagining was
eventually seen in the theology of the Council of Constantinople in 381, called by
Theodosius, which reaffirmed Nicaea. The creed which now is referred to as ‘The Nicene
Creed’ is in fact this later synodal statement. During this period, the status and origin of
the Holy Spirit had also come into deeper discussion (Hanson 1988: 738–772). Previous
scholars had suggested that the definitions of the Spirit had simply been added to the
original credal text while eliminating the anathemas against Arius and his supporters,
but present opinion supports that certain revisions and enhancements were made
(Kelly 1972: 296–305; Ayres 2004b: 253–260). This text, now referred to as the Nicene-
Constantinopolitan Creed, was preserved at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 (Hanson
1988: 812–820).
23
Legislation also followed which outlawed those who taught or met in opposition to this
understanding, though non-Nicenes would linger for several centuries in imperial life
and empire among the Goths, Burgundians, Suebi, and Vandals (Heil 2014: 85–86).
In the next century, the continuing debates over exegesis and the one or two natures
of the incarnate Christ, which inflamed ecclesiastical rivalries between Alexandria and
Antioch/Constantinople, would eventually split not only the church but also the Byzantine
Empire. In the midst of this debate, the Nicene Creed would be introduced into the
liturgy as a symbol of orthodoxy. In the seventh century, as an anti-Arian statement, the
Western Church added the controversial phrase filioque (and from the Son) describing the
procession of the Holy Spirit from the Son and Father rather than from the Father alone;
this was and is received as an illegitimate addition to the text by the Eastern Church (Dunn
2021: 350–351).
The lasting legacy of Nicaea was thus not only the first synodal creed, but the intense
theological creativity which arose afterward to explicate and defend it. This resulted in the
foundational debates to create a methodology for a ‘coherent construction of the entirety of
the Christian experience’ (Anatolios 2011: 1, 281–292).
Brennecke, Hanns Christof, Uta Heil, Annette von Stockhausen, and Angelika Wintjes
(eds). 2007. Athanasius Werke: Dokumente zur Geschichte des arianischen Streites.
Volume 3, part I. Lieferung 3: Bis zur Ekthesis Makrostichos (Athanasius’ Works:
Documents on the History of the Arian Controversy.Volume 3, part I. Delivery 3: Up to the
Ekthesis Makrostichos). Berlin: De Gruyter.
Brennecke, Hanns Christof, Annette von Stockhausen, Christian Muller, Uta Heil, and
Angelika Wintjes (eds). 2014. Athanasius Werke: Dokumente zur Geschichte des
arianischen Streites. Volume 3, part I. Lieferung 4: Bis zur Synode von Alexandrien 362
(Athanasius' works: Documents on the history of the Desarian dispute. Volume 3, part I.
Delivery 4: Up to the Synod of Alexandria 362). Berlin: De Gruyter.
24
Hardy, Edward R. and Cyril Richardson (eds). 1964. Christology of the Later Fathers. The
Library of Christian Classics. Ichthus Edition. Philadelphia: The Westminster Press.
Kinzig, Wolfram, ed. 2017. Faith in Formulae: A Collection of Early Christian Creeds and
Creed-Related Texts, 4 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Radde-Gallwitz, Andrew (ed). 2017. The Cambridge Edition of Early Christian Writings.
Volume 1: God. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Löhr, Winrich. 2006a. ‘Arius Reconsidered (Part 1)’. Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum 9,
no. 3: 524–560.
Löhr, Winrich 2006b. ‘Arius Reconsidered (Part 2)’. Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum 10,
no. 1: 121–157.
Parvis, Sara. 2006. Marcellus of Ancyra and the Lost Years of the Arian Controversy 325–
345. Oxford Early Christian Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Attributions
Copyright Rebecca Lyman (CC BY-NC)
25
Bibliography
• Further reading
◦ Anatolios, Khaled. 2011. Retrieving Nicaea: The Development and Meaning of
Trinitarian Doctrine. New York: Routledge.
◦ Ayres, Lewis. 2004a. Nicaea and Its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century
Trinitarian Theology. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
◦ Ayres, Lewis, and Andrew Radde-Gallwitz. 2009. ‘Doctrine of God’, in The
Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Studies. Edited by Susan Ashbrook
Harvey and David G. Hunter. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 864–885. https://
doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199271566.003.0043
◦ Barnes, Timothy D. 2014. Constantine: Dynasty, Religion and Power in the Later
Roman Empire. Blackwell Ancient Lives. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. http://
doi.org/10.1002/9781444396263 Reprint. First published 2011.
◦ Behr, John. 2004. The Nicene Faith: Formation of Christian Theology. Crestwood,
NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press.
◦ Ip, Pui Him. 2022. Origen and the Emergence of Divine Simplicity Before Nicaea.
Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press.
◦ Kim, Young Richard (ed.). 2021. The Cambridge Companion to the Council of
Nicaea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
◦ Radde-Gallwitz, Andrew. 2009. Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and the
Transformation of Divine Simplicity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
◦ Vaggione, Richard. 2000. Eunomius of Cyzicus and the Nicene Revolution.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
◦ Young, Frances M., and Andrew Teal. 2010. From Nicaea to Chalcedon. A Guide
to the Literature and Its Background. Grand Rapids: Baker Academic. Second
Edition.
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Trinitarian Doctrine. New York: Routledge.
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◦ Ayres, Lewis. 2004a. Nicaea and Its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century
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◦ Edwards, Mark. 1998. ‘Did Origen Apply the Word “Homoousios” to the Son?’,
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◦ Edwards, Mark. 2015. Religions of the Constantinian Empire. Oxford: Oxford
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◦ Edwards, Mark. 2021. ‘The Creed’, in The Cambridge Companion to the Council
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◦ Ferguson, Everett. 2008. ‘Creeds, Councils and Canons’, in The Oxford
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