Nicaea I

325 AD

Nicaea

First Council of Nicaea

The first ecumenical council answered the claim that the Son was a creature and confessed that the Son is truly God from God.

Issue

Arianism and the full divinity of the Son

Called by

Emperor Constantine

Attendance

Traditionally remembered as 318 bishops

Outcome

What the council decided

Produced the Nicene Creed's confession of the Son as begotten, not made, and of one essence with the Father.

Why it matters

The doctrine at stake

Nicaea protects the gospel itself: if Christ is not truly God, then worship, salvation, baptism, and prayer lose their Christian center.

Council teaching

Core Nicene confession

The council confessed Jesus Christ as the Son of God, begotten from the Father, true God from true God, begotten not made, and of one essence with the Father.

It rejected the claim that there was a time when the Son was not, or that the Son belongs to the order of created things.

Controversy explained

The Arian controversy

Arius wanted to preserve the uniqueness of the Father by saying the Son was exalted above creation but still made. The council judged that this destroyed Christian worship and salvation.

The central question was not abstract philosophy. Christians prayed to Christ, were baptized into his name, and trusted him for salvation. Nicaea insisted that this only makes sense if the Son is truly God.

Study path

How to understand it

1

The crisis

The Church had to answer whether Jesus Christ is truly divine or the greatest of created beings.

2

The confession

The council used precise language to guard biblical worship of the Son.

3

The reception

The council did not end the controversy instantly; Athanasius and later fathers defended its meaning.

Reception

How the traditions receive it

Catholic

Received as the first ecumenical council and a foundation for Trinitarian doctrine, creed, worship, and later catechesis.

Orthodox

Received as the decisive conciliar confession of the Son's full divinity, defended especially through Athanasius and the Cappadocians.

Protestant

Classical Protestant traditions generally receive Nicaea as a faithful summary of biblical Trinitarian doctrine.

Oriental Orthodox

Received as fully ecumenical and foundational for the shared pre-Chalcedonian faith.

Key terms

Words to know

Arianism

The teaching associated with Arius that the Son was made and therefore not eternal God in the same sense as the Father.

Homoousios

Of one essence; the word used to confess that the Son shares the same divine being as the Father.

Begotten, not made

The Son is eternally from the Father, not a creature brought into existence.

Scripture

Biblical connections

John 1:1-18John 20:28Colossians 1:15-20Hebrews 1:1-4

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