Constantinople I

381 AD

Constantinople

First Council of Constantinople

Constantinople reaffirmed Nicaea and clarified the Church's confession of the Holy Spirit as Lord and giver of life.

Issue

The Holy Spirit, Nicene faith, and lingering Arian controversy

Called by

Emperor Theodosius I

Attendance

About 150 bishops

Outcome

What the council decided

Expanded the creed's language about the Holy Spirit and strengthened Nicene Trinitarian doctrine.

Why it matters

The doctrine at stake

This council completes the classic Trinitarian confession used in worship: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are glorified together.

Council teaching

The Spirit confessed as Lord

The council confessed the Holy Spirit as the Lord and giver of life, who proceeds from the Father, and who with the Father and the Son is worshiped and glorified.

It also reaffirmed the Church's faith in one holy catholic and apostolic Church, one baptism for the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come.

Controversy explained

The Holy Spirit controversy

Some accepted strong language about the Son while resisting the full divinity of the Holy Spirit. The council answered that the Spirit is not a creature or servant power.

The Church's worship was central to the argument: the Spirit is glorified together with Father and Son, and Christian life depends on the Spirit's divine work.

Study path

How to understand it

1

Reaffirm Nicaea

The council guarded Nicaea against reinterpretations that weakened Christ's divinity.

2

Confess the Spirit

The Spirit is not an impersonal force but Lord, giver of life, and worthy of worship.

3

Read the Cappadocians

Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, and Gregory Nyssa provide the theological background.

Reception

How the traditions receive it

Catholic

Received as the completion of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed used in liturgy and catechesis.

Orthodox

Received as a central council for Trinitarian faith, especially the confession of the Spirit in worship.

Protestant

Received by classical Protestant confessions as a faithful expression of biblical Trinitarian doctrine.

Oriental Orthodox

Received as part of the shared ecumenical inheritance before the Chalcedonian division.

Key terms

Words to know

Pneumatomachians

Opponents of the divinity of the Holy Spirit.

Nicene faith

The confession that the Son is truly God, now clarified together with the divinity of the Spirit.

Doxology

A form of praise that reveals the Church's doctrine through worship.

Scripture

Biblical connections

Matthew 28:19John 14:16-17Acts 5:3-42 Corinthians 13:14

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