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'Nestorianism' is the
doctrine that
Jesus exists as two persons, the man Jesus and the divine Son of God, or
Logos, rather than as a unified person. This doctrine is identified with
Nestorius (c.
386–c.
451),
Patriarch of Constantinople. This view of Christ was condemned at the
Council of Ephesus in
431, and the conflict over this view led to the
Nestorian schism, separating the
Assyrian Church of the East from the
Byzantine Church.
The
Assyrian Church of the East refused to drop support for Nestorius and denounce him as a heretic, and it has continued to be called "Nestorian" in the West, to distinguish it from other ancient Eastern churches. However, the Church of the East does not regard its doctrine as truly Nestorian, but rather teaches the view of
Babai the Great, that Christ has two ''qnome'' (essences) which are unmingled and eternally united in one ''parsopa'' (personality). According to some interpretations, the origin of this belief is mostly historical and linguistic: for example, the
Greeks had two words for 'person', which translated poorly into
Syriac, and the meanings of these terms were not even quite settled during Nestorius's lifetime.
Nestorianism originated in the Church in the 5th century out of an attempt to rationally explain and understand the incarnation of the divine Logos, the Second Person of the
Holy Trinity as the man Jesus Christ. Nestorianism taught that the human and divine essences of Christ are separate and that there are two persons, the man Jesus Christ and the divine Logos, which dwelt in the man. In consequence, Nestorians rejected such terminology as "God suffered" or "God was crucified", because the humanity of Jesus Christ which suffered is separate from his divinity. Likewise, they rejected the term
Theotokos (Giver of birth to God/Mother of God) as a title of the
Virgin Mary, suggesting instead the title
Christotokos (Giver of birth to Christ/Mother of Christ), because in their view Mary gave birth to only the human person of Jesus and not the divine.
Nestorius
Nestorius (c.
386–c.
451) was a pupil of
Theodore of Mopsuestia in
Antioch in
Syria (modern Turkey) and later became
Patriarch of Constantinople. He taught that the human and divine aspects of Christ were distinct natures, not unified. He preached against the use of the title ''Mother of God'' (''
Theotokos'') for the
Virgin Mary and would only call her ''Mother of Christ'' (''Christotokos''). He also argued that God could not suffer on the cross, as he is omnipotent. Therefore, the human part of Christ died on the cross, but not the divine.
His opponents accused him of dividing Christ into two persons: they claimed that proposing that God the Word did not suffer and die on the cross, while Jesus the man did, or that God the Word was
omniscient, while Jesus the man had limited knowledge, implied two separate persons with separate experiences.
Nestorius responded that he believed that Christ was indeed one person (Greek: ''prosopon''). Opposed by
Cyril of Alexandria, Nestorius was condemned at the
Council of Ephesus in
431.
The Council held that Christ is one person, and that the Virgin Mary is the mother of God. The condemning pronouncement of the Council resulted in the
Nestorian schism and the separation of the
Assyrian Church of the East from the Byzantine Church.
[1] However, even Ephesus could not settle the issue, and the Byzantine Church was soon split again over the question of whether Christ had one or two natures, leading to the
Chalcedonian schism.
Christological implications
From the point of view of the Chalcedonian theology which is held by most Western and Orthodox churches, the teaching of Nestorius has important consequences relating to
soteriology and the
theology of the
Eucharist.
During the
Protestant Reformation, when some groups denied the
Real Presence and the communication of attributes between the two natures, they were accused of reviving the heresy of
Nestorius.
The involvement of the Assyrian Church
Cyril of Alexandria worked hard to remove Nestorius and his supporters and followers from power. However, in the
Syriac speaking world, Theodore of Mopsuestia was held in very high esteem, and the condemnation of his pupil Nestorius was not received well. His followers were given refuge. The
Sassanid Persian kings, who were at constant war with Byzantium, saw the opportunity to assure the loyalty of their Christian subjects and supported the Nestorian schism:
★ They granted protection to Nestorians (
462).

Painting of a Nestorian nun,
1779.
★ They executed the pro-Byzantine Catholicos Babowai who was then replaced by the Nestorian Bishop of Nisibis
Bar Sauma (
484).
★ They allowed the transfer of the
school of Edessa to the Persian city
Nisibis when the Byzantine emperor closed it for its Nestorian tendencies (
489).
At Nisibis the school became even more famous than at Edessa.
The main theological authorities of the school have always been Theodore and his teacher
Diodorus of Tarsus. Unfortunately, few of their writings have survived.
The writings of Nestorius himself were only added to the curriculum of the school of Edessa-Nisibis in
530, shortly before the
Fifth Ecumenical Council in
553 condemned
Theodore of Mopsuestia as Nestorius's predecessor.
At the end of the 6th century the school went through a theological crisis when its director
Henana of Adiabene tried to replace Theodore with his own doctrine, which followed
Origen.
Babai the Great (
551–
628), who was also the unofficial head of the Church at that time and revived the Assyrian monastic movement, refuted him and in the process wrote the normative Christology of the Assyrian Church, based on Theodore of Mopsuestia.
A small sampling of Babai's work is available in
English translation. The ''Book of Union'' is his principal surviving work on Christology. In it he explains that Christ has two ''qnome'' (essences), which are unmingled and eternally united in one ''parsopa'' (personality). This, and not strict Nestorianism, is the teaching of the Assyrian Church. However, the Assyrian Church has continued to be called "Nestorian" in the West to distinguish it from other ancient Eastern churches, despite the fact that Babai's Christology is basically the same as that of Catholicism and Orthodoxy; the
Baltimore Catechism teaches that Christ is one "person" (like Babai's ''parsopa'') but has two "natures" (Babai's ''qnome'').
The spread of Assyrian "Nestorianism"

Nestorian wedding

Nestorian Archbishop
The
Assyrian Church produced many zealous missionaries, who traveled and preached throughout
Persia and Central and East Asia in the seventh and eighth centuries. Also during this time many Nestorian scholars, having escaped the Byzantines, settled in
Gundishapur, Persia and
Muharraq in
Bahrain, bringing with them many ancient Greco-Roman philosophical, scientific, and literary texts. “Nestorian” Christianity reached
China by
635, and its relics can still be seen in Chinese cities such as
Xi'an. The
Nestorian Stele, set up on
7 January 781 at the then-capital of
Chang'an (modern
Xi'an), describes the introduction of Christianity into China from Persia in the reign of
Tang Taizong, and documents found at the
Mogao Caves near
Dunhuang further elucidate the religion. About the same time Nestorian Christianity penetrated into
Mongolia, eventually reaching as far as
Korea. Some historians even suggest that they made it to the shores of Japan. In 797 AD, a Japanese history,
Shoku Nihongi was published. It states that in 736 AD an envoy returned to Japan from China. He brought with him a Persian physician by the name of Limitsi (or Rimitsui, 李密医), and Kohfu (皇甫), a “dignitary of the church of the Luminous Religion”. The “Luminous religion” is (Nestorian) Christianity - because Christ is “the Light of the World”.
The Christian community later faced persecution from
Emperor Wuzong of Tang (reigned
840–
846). He suppressed all foreign religions, including
Buddhism and Christianity, which then declined sharply in China. A Syrian monk visiting China a few decades later described many churches in ruin.
Nestorianism was particularly active in the 12th century, being a state religion of Khitans in the times of
Yelü Dashi. It was also one of the widespread religions in the empire of
Genghis Khan, and several Nestorian gravestones written in
Syriac survive in what is today
Kyrgyzstan.
The Church experienced a significant revival during the
Yuan dynasty.
Marco Polo in the 1200s and other medieval Western writers indicate many Nestorian communities remaining in China and Mongolia.
Rabban Bar Sauma a Nestorian traveler from Shang-Du (ie: present day Beijing) became a diplomat for the Il-Khanate of Persia to the courts of Constantinople and Rome for talks of alliance against the Muslims at this time. However, the Nestorians clearly were not as vibrant as they had been during Tang times. The communities seem to have petered out during the
Ming dynasty from lack of popular support. The legacy of the missionaries remains in the Assyrian churches still to be found in
Iraq,
Iran, and
India.
There is evidence from within the
hadith that
Muhammad had contact with
Nestorian Assyrians, most notably,
Bahira. Particularly of interest are the similarities between
Muslim raka'ah, or ritual prayer, and the
genuflections performed by Nestorians during
Lent.
Modern Nestorianism
As outlined above, the
Assyrian Church of the East and the "Nestorian"
Church of the East & Abroad represent a historical continuity with the Nestorian Christianity, though it is debated whether their doctrine is actually Nestorian.
The
New Age metaphysical system of
Theosophy teaches a Nestorian doctrine regarding
Jesus Christ (see
Benjamin Creme).
References
★ BAUM, Wilhelm and WINKLER, Dietmar W (
1 January 2003).
''The Church of the East: A Concise History'', London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-29770-2. Google Print, retrieved
16 July 2005.
★
Nestorius and Nestorianism at the Catholic Encyclopedia
★ Lev N. Gumilev. Poiski vymyshlennogo tsarstva (in Russian, "Looking for the mythical kingdom"). Moscow, Onyx Publishers, 2003. ISBN 5-9503-0041-6.
See also
★
Nestorius
★
Nestorian Assyrians
★
Christology
★
Assyrian Church of the East
★
Church of the East & Abroad
★
Babai the Great
★
Nestorianism in China
★
Alopen
★
Johannite
★
Prester John
External links
★
“Church of the East” unofficial website