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

(Elle) #1

  1. The council of Chalcedon was inaugurated on the
    eighth of October 451 A.D. No two historians are agreed
    on the number of bishops who attended it, but hey all
    agree that both Pulcheria and Marcianus attended the
    opening sessions, and that they had appointed to it
    nineteen civil judges as court commissioners. These civil
    judges were charged with directing the sessions and
    establishing order, thus forming a cabinet for the council,
    which occupied the centre of the church of St. Euphemia,
    the meeting place of the council.
    To the right of the Emperor and Empress sat Abba
    Dioscorus, Juvenal of Jerusalem, and Heraclas of Corinth,
    the Bishops of Egypt, Illyria and Palestine. To the left sat
    the Bishop of Constantinople, the delegates of the Roman
    Bishop, and the bishops of Antioch, Caesarea, Ephesus,
    Pontus, Achaia and Thracia.
    Togther with the civil authorities, the Bishops
    (who, since then, were given the title of Patriach)^39
    presided over the council, consecutively – all except Abba
    Dioscorus, against whom ill-will was manifested,
    according to a previously laid plan, from the very outset.
    For no sooner did the council assemble than Paschasinus –
    one of the Roman delegates – rose and requested the
    imperial officers to evict Abba Dioscorus, otherwise he
    and his colleagues would have to withdraw from the
    assembly. Being asked why, his associate – Lucentius –
    answered that “this man came not to sit among the saints,
    but to give an account of what he had committed at
    Ephesus”. Here one of the bishops asked: “But what has
    he committed?” To which Lucentius answered that he
    had dared convoke a council without the authorisation of
    the bishop of Rome. It is amazing that in the face of this
    flagrant pretentiousness, none produced the letter of

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