THE STORY OF THE COPTS - THE TRUE STORY OF CHRISTIANITY IN EGYPT

(Elle) #1

God; we do not believe that He is simply united under the
semblance of dignity and power; these are new words
alien tot he Faith... If we, too, say, as did St. Paul (in
Col. 2:9) that in Christ dwells al the fullness of the
Godhead bodily, we apperceive that God dwells not in
Him as He dwells in His saints, but that the divine and the
human are united in Christ in the fashion that the soul is
united to the body in a human being. There is, therefore,
One Christ, One Son, One Lord”.^10 If he were really
‘Orthodox’ as he had claimed, Nestorius was asked to
prove it by signing both the letter and the anathemas.
Thus he would vindicate himself and clarify his attitude
before all believers.
The messengers who bore this letter bore
simultaneously two other Kyrillian letters; one to the
priests, the deacons and the people of Constantinople, and
the other to the monks of that same city.^11



  1. Nestorius not only refused his signature, but also
    exerted every effort to antagonise the Emperor against
    Kyrillos. His efforts succeeded, at leat temporarily, so
    that Theodosius wrote to the Alexandrian Prelate asking
    him to relent in his attitude to Nestorius so as to avoid the
    consequences of his wrath.
    The Emperor’s letter widely missed the mark, for
    if Kyrillos had been relentless in his attitude, it was not
    against a person but against “a whole system of principles
    whose perspective threatened to subvert the very core of
    the Christian Faith”.^12 And Kyrillos was determined to
    defend his Faith with every fibre of his being regardless of
    what this might bring upon him. Already Nestorius and
    some of his staunch and influential supporters had
    slandered and maligned him – which was inconsequential
    to him. What was of the greatest import to him, however,

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