The Seven Ecumenical Councils are the seven universal gatherings of bishops between 325 and 787 AD whose decisions the Orthodox Church receives as the authoritative voice of the Holy Spirit defining our faith. These aren’t suggestions or interesting historical discussions. They’re how the Church under the Spirit’s guidance answered the question: Who is Jesus Christ?
Most folks coming from Protestant backgrounds in Southeast Texas haven’t heard much about these councils. Maybe you learned the Nicene Creed at some point, but nobody mentioned it came from an actual council of bishops in 325. The councils feel distant, academic, maybe irrelevant to daily faith. But here’s the thing: without them, we wouldn’t know how to talk about the Trinity or the Incarnation without falling into heresy. They gave us the vocabulary of orthodoxy.
Why Seven Councils Matter
The Church faced crisis after crisis in those early centuries. Teachers kept getting things wrong about Christ, saying He wasn’t really God, or wasn’t really human, or had only one nature instead of two. Each time a heresy spread and threatened to tear the Church apart, the bishops gathered to settle the matter. Not by voting on opinions, but by discerning together what the Church had always believed and received from the Apostles.
We don’t believe in sola scriptura. Scripture is the inspired Word of God, but it’s received and interpreted within Holy Tradition. The councils are part of that Tradition. They didn’t invent new doctrines. They clarified and defended what had been handed down.
The Seven Councils
First Council of Nicaea (325) met because a priest named Arius was teaching that the Son was a created being, not truly God. Emperor Constantine called 318 bishops to Nicaea. They condemned Arianism and gave us the original Nicene Creed, declaring the Son is “of one essence” (homoousios) with the Father. That single word, homoousios, saved Christianity from becoming just another monotheism where Jesus is a really important prophet.
First Council of Constantinople (381) expanded the Creed to affirm the Holy Spirit’s divinity. Some were still denying the Spirit was God. The council settled it: the Spirit is “the Lord, the Giver of Life, who proceeds from the Father, who together with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified.” This is the Creed we say every Sunday.
Council of Ephesus (431) defended Mary’s title Theotokos, “God-bearer” or “Mother of God.” Nestorius, the Patriarch of Constantinople, objected to calling Mary the Mother of God. He wanted to separate Christ’s divine and human natures so sharply that you’d have two persons, not one. The council said no. Christ is one Person, the eternal Word made flesh. And if Mary didn’t give birth to God incarnate, then God didn’t really become human. Theotokos isn’t Marian sentimentality. It’s Christology.
Council of Chalcedon (451) gave us the definition we still confess: Christ is one Person in two natures, fully God and fully man, “without confusion, without change, without division, without separation.” Eutyches had taught that Christ’s human nature was absorbed into His divinity, leaving only one nature. Chalcedon rejected that. Christ is completely divine and completely human. Both natures remain distinct yet united in His one Person.
Second Council of Constantinople (553) reaffirmed Chalcedon and condemned writings that seemed to lean back toward Nestorianism. It’s often overlooked, but it mattered. The Church had to keep defending Chalcedon against people who wanted to water it down or reinterpret it.
Third Council of Constantinople (680-681) faced Monothelitism, the idea that Christ had only one will. It sounds obscure until you realize what’s at stake: if Christ doesn’t have a human will, He’s not fully human. And if He’s not fully human, He didn’t save human nature. The council affirmed Christ has two wills, divine and human, in perfect harmony. His human will was always in agreement with His divine will, but it was real.
Second Council of Nicaea (787) ended the iconoclasm controversy. For decades, emperors and bishops had been destroying icons and persecuting those who venerated them. This council restored the veneration of icons, distinguishing it clearly from worship. We venerate icons because the Incarnation makes Christ depictable. God took flesh. He became visible. Icons are windows into that reality, not idols.
What This Means for Us
When you’re standing in the nave at St. Michael on Sunday morning and the priest says, “Let us love one another, that with one mind we may confess Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the Trinity one in essence and undivided,” you’re confessing what these councils defined. When you venerate an icon, you’re living out the Seventh Council’s teaching. When you call Mary Theotokos, you’re echoing Ephesus.
The councils aren’t ancient history. They’re the Church’s immune system, protecting the faith from distortions that would’ve destroyed it. We receive them not because we’re blindly following tradition, but because we recognize in them the voice of the Spirit guiding the Church into all truth.
If you want to go deeper, Fr. John Meyendorff’s writings on the councils are excellent. But honestly, the best way to understand them is to keep showing up for Liturgy. The councils are baked into our prayers, our hymns, our Creed. You’ll absorb their teaching by living the faith they defended.
