Nestorian controversy and the unity of Christ's person
Ephesus
431 ADEphesus
Council of Ephesus
Ephesus defended the unity of Christ and confessed Mary as Theotokos because the one born of her is truly God the Son incarnate.
Emperor Theodosius II
About 200 bishops
Outcome
What the council decided
Rejected Nestorian division of Christ and affirmed Theotokos as a Christological confession.
Why it matters
The doctrine at stake
The title Theotokos is not mainly about Mary in isolation; it protects the truth that Jesus is one divine person, not two subjects loosely joined.
Council teaching
Theotokos and the one Christ
The council affirmed that Mary may rightly be called Theotokos because the child born of her is the eternal Word made flesh.
It rejected language that separated the man Jesus from the divine Son as though two subjects acted side by side.
Controversy explained
The Nestorian controversy
Nestorius feared that calling Mary Theotokos confused Christ's divinity with his humanity. Cyril of Alexandria argued that refusing the title divided the one Christ.
The issue was salvation: the one who is born, suffers, dies, and rises is the eternal Son acting in and through his assumed humanity.
Study path
How to understand it
Begin with Christ
The debate is about who Jesus is, not only about Marian language.
Understand Theotokos
The title guards the unity of the incarnate Son.
Trace later tensions
Ephesus is crucial background for Chalcedon and later Eastern divisions.
Reception
How the traditions receive it
Catholic
Received as ecumenical and central for Christology and Marian doctrine understood through Christ.
Orthodox
Received as a defining council for the unity of Christ and the liturgical confession of Theotokos.
Protestant
Many classical Protestant traditions accept the Christological point, even where later Marian devotion is treated differently.
Oriental Orthodox
Received as ecumenical and deeply important for the Cyrilline confession of the incarnate Word.
Key terms
Words to know
Theotokos
God-bearer; Mary is mother of the incarnate Son, who is truly God.
Nestorianism
A Christological error associated with dividing Christ's humanity and divinity too sharply.
Hypostatic unity
The unity of Christ's person: the eternal Son is the subject of both divine and human actions.
Scripture
Biblical connections
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