logo
Council of Nicaea anniversary is call to Christian unity: Experts

Council of Nicaea anniversary is call to Christian unity: Experts

Herald Malaysia15 hours ago

The Council of Nicaea 1,700 years ago recognized that Christian unity had to be based on a common faith and should be demonstrated by a common celebration of Easter, the most sacred feast of the Christian year, said speakers at a Rome conference. Jun 06, 2025
Pope Leo XIV waves to the crowd as he arrives in the popemobile for the weekly general audience at St Peter's Square at the Vatican, on June 4. (Photo: AFP)
By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service
The Council of Nicaea 1,700 years ago recognized that Christian unity had to be based on a common faith and should be demonstrated by a common celebration of Easter, the most sacred feast of the Christian year, said speakers at a Rome conference.
Yet as Christians mark the anniversary of the council, held in 325, they celebrate their common profession of the basics of faith in the Creed adopted at Nicaea while also continuing to experience division, said Paul L. Gavrilyuk, president of the International Orthodox Theological Association.
The association and the Institute for Ecumenical Studies of Rome's Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas organized the June 4-7 conference with the support of the Vatican Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity.
Gavrilyuk, who holds the Aquinas Chair in Theology and Philosophy at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, and the other speakers noted the coincidence of the anniversary year and the election of Pope Leo XIV whose episcopal motto is "In Illo uno unum," an expression of St. Augustine meaning "In the One (Christ), we are one."
"Nicaea was a landmark exercise in collective truth seeking and discernment with an enduring and universally significant dogmatic outcome enshrined in its famous creed," Gavrilyuk said.
The fact that Christians today continue to use the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, not just liturgically but as a statement of orthodox Christian belief, means it is a continuing source of Christian unity, speakers said.
"The restoration of the unity of the church requires agreement on the essential content of the Christian faith, not only among the churches and ecclesial communities of today, but also in continuity with the church of tradition, and above all, with its apostolic origins," said Cardinal Kurt Koch, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity.
The Creed is "the strongest ecumenical bond of the Christian faith," the cardinal said. "The Council of Nicaea took place at a time when Christianity had not yet been divided by so many subsequent schisms; its creed is therefore shared by all Christian churches and ecclesial communities, uniting them in a common confession to this day. Its ecumenical importance cannot be underestimated."
Orthodox Metropolitan Job of Pisidia, a theologian and Orthodox co-chair of the Catholic-Orthodox theological dialogue, said the Council of Nicaea could serve as a model of Christian unity today because it determined the essential points of Christian faith while allowing differences on other matters.
"The Nicene Creed does not represent a confession of faith at a particular moment in the history of the church but rather manifests the confession of faith that transcends the limits of time and space," he said. It was introduced into the liturgy at the turn of the sixth century, "which shows how much this text became a universal confession of the faith confessed by the one church, received from Christ through the apostles and handed down by the holy fathers."
Cardinal Koch said the celebration of the Nicaea anniversary also is an occasion to make a renewed commitment to synodality -- shared listening, reflection and discernment -- and for members of different churches to learn from the synodal structures of each other's churches.
"The creed of the Council of Nicaea is not merely the result of theological reflection, but the expression of a joint, more precisely, synodal struggle of bishops for an orthodox and doxologically appropriate formulation of the Christian faith," Cardinal Koch said. At the time of Nicaea, there were about 1,800 Christian bishops, and most experts believe about 318 of them participated in the council.
The Council of Nicaea also is known for setting the formula for determining the date of Easter at a time when Christian communities were celebrating Jesus' resurrection on different dates. A common celebration of Easter held until Pope Gregory XIII reformed the calendar in 1582.
Cardinal Koch reminded his audience that since the 1960s, the Catholic Church has repeatedly said it would accept an ecumenical proposal for returning to a common date for Easter "on the condition that all Christian churches reach an agreement."
"The endeavor to find a common date for Easter is an important pastoral concern, particularly for families of different denominations, and in light of the increasing mobility of people today," the cardinal said. "Above all, a shared celebration of Easter would bear more credible witness to the profound conviction of the Christian faith that Easter is not only the oldest but also the central and most important feast of Christianity."
At Nicaea, Metropolitan Job said, the bishops determined that the church would celebrate Easter on the first Sunday after the full moon after the spring equinox -- a formula based on "observable astronomical phenomena" and not on any specific calendar.
"All Christians today, without exception, determine the date of Easter according to the Nicene rule," he said, but with Western Christians using the more accurate Gregorian calendar and Eastern Christians using the Julian calendar, the celebrations only occasionally coincide.A decision on a proposal for the Orthodox churches "to use the most accurate scientific data to determine the date of Easter, using as a reference the meridian of Jerusalem, place of death and resurrection of Christ," has been postponed multiple times, he said.Anglican Archbishop Rowan Williams, the former archbishop of Canterbury, looked specifically at how celebrating the Nicaean anniversary is a call to deeper faith and to greater unity.To profess the Creed is to profess belief in the Trinity, a community of life that gives life to the church, the body of Christ, the archbishop said."The unity of the church is neither a goal toward which human negotiators struggle, nor a timelessly given identity untouched by history," he said. Rather, "it is a constantly realized and constantly frustrated or denied movement between subjects, bringing one another alive in the one life of the eternal Son."
"The faith articulated at Nicaea and later in Constantinople cannot, I would say, be understood just as a set of claims about the life of God in abstraction from the call of God into the life of the new creation," he said.--ucanews.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel warns of more Lebanon strikes if Hezbollah not disarmed
Israel warns of more Lebanon strikes if Hezbollah not disarmed

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Israel warns of more Lebanon strikes if Hezbollah not disarmed

BEIRUT, LEBANON: Israel warned Friday that it would keep striking Lebanon until militant group Hezbollah has been disarmed, after hitting south Beirut in what Lebanese leaders called a major violation of a November ceasefire. Thursday's attacks on what the Israeli military said were underground Hezbollah drone factories came after an Israeli evacuation call on the eve of Eid al-Adha, a key Muslim religious festival, and sent huge numbers of residents of Beirut's southern suburbs fleeing. It was the fourth and heaviest Israeli bombardment of the heavily populated area, known as a bastion of support for Hezbollah, in the six months since a ceasefire deal aimed at ending hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel. The last attack was in late April. 'There will be no calm in Beirut, and no order or stability in Lebanon, without security for the State of Israel,' Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a statement. 'Agreements must be honoured and if you do not do what is required, we will continue to act, and with great force.' The state-run National News Agency reported around a dozen strikes, while Health Minister Rakan Nassereldine said several people were wounded by flying glass. AFP photographers on Friday saw huge destruction as residents, some wearing masks, inspected the debris and damage to their homes. - 'Blatant act' - A Hezbollah statement said a preliminary assessment showed nine buildings were completely destroyed and dozens of others damaged. A woman in her 40s who lives near one of the strike sites said she fled on foot with her young children including a three-month-old baby. 'Thank God' the building was not destroyed, she told AFP after returning Friday morning to find the windows of her flat shattered. South Beirut resident Fatima, 40, said 'life goes on', adding that she and her two children were following the usual Eid traditions after fleeing the previous night. Hezbollah sparked months of deadly hostilities by launching cross-border attacks on northern Israel in stated solidarity with Palestinian ally Hamas following its October 7, 2023 attack. France, part of a committee overseeing the ceasefire, condemned the strikes and urged all parties to respect the truce, noting that the monitoring mechanism 'is there to help the parties deal with threats and prevent any escalation'. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun late on Thursday voiced 'firm condemnation of the Israeli aggression' and 'flagrant violation of an international accord... on the eve of a sacred religious festival'. Prime Minister Nawaf Salam condemned the strikes as a violation of Lebanese sovereignty. Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Ammar on Friday urged 'all Lebanese political forces... to translate their statements of condemnation into concrete action', including diplomatic pressure. Hezbollah backer Iran called the strikes 'a blatant act of aggression against Lebanon's territorial integrity and sovereignty', foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said. The war left Hezbollah massively weakened, with top commanders including longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah killed and weapons caches incinerated. - 'Refusal to cooperate' - Under the ceasefire, Lebanon should disarm Hezbollah, once reputed to be more heavily armed than the state. A Lebanese military official told AFP the committee received no warning before the Israeli evacuation order. The Lebanese army 'attempted to go to one of the sites... but Israeli warning shots prevented it from carrying out its mission', the official said, requesting anonymity. Lebanon's army, which has been dismantling Hezbollah infrastructure under the truce, said the Israeli military's ongoing violations and 'refusal to cooperate' with the ceasefire monitoring mechanism 'could prompt the (Lebanese) military to freeze cooperation' on site inspections. The French foreign ministry statement noted that 'dismantling unauthorised military sites... falls as a priority to the Lebanese' army with the support of United Nations peacekeepers. The Israeli military had said Hezbollah was 'operating to increase production of UAVs (drones) for the next war' in 'blatant violation' of the truce understandings. Under the ceasefire, Hezbollah fighters were to withdraw north of the Litani river, about 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the Israeli border. Israel was to withdraw troops from Lebanon but has kept them in five areas it deems 'strategic' and still launches regular strikes on south Lebanon. Israel's military also issued an evacuation warning for the southern village of Ain Qana. It then struck a building there that it alleged was a Hezbollah base, according to the NNA.

Bitter return for deported Iraqis
Bitter return for deported Iraqis

The Star

time3 hours ago

  • The Star

Bitter return for deported Iraqis

IRAQI Mohammed Jalal lost 10 years of his life seeking asylum in Germany, without success. Instead of being granted refuge, he was sent back to the land he had fled. He now faces the same challenges that drove him to leave the northern Kurdistan region of Iraq. More than a year has passed, and he is still without a job. Jalal is just one of thousands of Iraqis and migrants from many other countries who have been forced out of Europe as it tightens its migration policies, driven by the rise of the extreme right. European states are now working closely with Iraq to support returnees by funding programmes primarily aimed at tackling unemployment. In the town of Ranya in autonomous Kurdistan, Jalal moved back in with his elderly father to a cramped two-room apartment where they sleep on mattresses on a cold concrete floor. 'If I could return to Europe I would,' 39-year-old Jalal said. He still dreams of a day when German authorities grant him asylum. Mohamed Jalal posing for a picture in his apartment in Ranya. — AFP 'I could become legal and work in a Kurdish restaurant,' he said. 'Here I don't have a job.' In 2015, Jalal undertook the perilous journey across the Mediterranean from the Turkish city of Izmir to Greece. He went to North Macedonia, Serbia and Croatia before finally reaching Germany. There, he settled in a centre for asylum seekers and received €300 a month. Despite restrictions on asylum seekers getting jobs, Jalal travelled to cities including Nuremberg and Munich where he worked illegally and had to be careful not to be caught. Jalal's asylum requests were denied twice and Germany expelled him in January last year. Back home, following a failed attempt to open a bakery, he worked for two months at a falafel kiosk earning US$7 a day. Unemployed again, he now receives US$150 from his family abroad. 'I live on this meagre amount,' he said. In the last quarter of 2024, around 125,000 non-Europeans were ordered to leave a country in the European Union, 16% more than during the same period in 2023. 'As a matter of principle, Germany repatriates people who are required to leave the country,' the German embassy said. Mohamed Ismail working in his repair shop in Arbil. — AFP It said Germany 'has given protection and shelter to millions of people who have fled war and violence in their home countries', including many Iraqis, mostly from the north. But the embassy warned that 'there are no prospects of residence for people who enter Germany irregularly in the hope of a better life and who have no need for protection'. Despite presenting itself as an oasis of stability in turbulent Iraq, Kurdistan is grappling with economic challenges that push its young people to seek opportunities elsewhere. Many have lost their lives while trying to reach Europe. Hardi Ahmed left Ranya, east of the Kurdistan capital Arbil, in 2021. He called his journey to the United Kingdom the 'path of death' after losing three friends to drowning, one in the channel between France and Britain. Upon arrival, Ahmed quickly realised he was not welcome. He was turned back to France, where the Iraqi embassy helped him return home. Back in Kurdistan, the 39-year-old is now unemployed, and believes the authorities should provide jobs. 'If not, youth will be forced... to go to Europe,' he said. After decades marred by conflict, including a US-led invasion followed by insurgencies and the rise of the Islamic State group, Iraq has now regained some stability. The German government-linked development agency GIZ supports centres in Arbil and Baghdad that provide returnees with counselling and help in job searches, training and providing financial aid for small businesses. Funded by Germany, Switzerland and the EU, the centres assisted 350 people between June 2023 and August 2024. The EU ambassador to Iraq, Thomas Seiler, said that 'some member states have agreed on bilateral return and readmission agreements with Iraq', and the EU is finalising a similar deal. The capacity of many European cities and villages 'to receive and integrate' migrants 'has long been reached', Seiler warned. 'Irregular migration should now clearly be prevented.' Seiler said the EU funds programmes to assist Iraq in welcoming back returnees. It also provides tens of millions of euros to support initiatives aimed at helping 'Iraqis stay in Iraq'. With funding from Denmark and Finland, the Kurdish Rwanga Foundation launched a programme to reintegrate returnees. It has so far trained 120 people on starting small businesses and provided grants of up to US$5,600 to 15 of them. Kamiran Shivan, head of the foundation's programmes, said beneficiaries' sectors include construction, carpentry, mobile and electronics repair, restaurants and beauty salons. Many Iraqis return home burdened with debt from the cost of their journey to Europe. 'They come back without having a source of income or assets that would allow them to repay their debts,' Shivan said. Mohammed Ismail, 29, left for Germany in 2016, hoping for a better life and a European passport. But more than five years later, nothing has changed for him. Germany rejected his asylum requests three times on the basis that Arbil is considered safe. Back home in Kurdistan, he received a grant from Rwanga to become a partner in a mechanic's workshop, which provides him with US$550 a month – enough to support his wife and three-year-old child. 'I no longer consider emigrating,' Ismail said. 'If I return to Europe, it will be as a tourist.' — AFP

Trump scuppers idea of calling Musk after row, may ditch Tesla
Trump scuppers idea of calling Musk after row, may ditch Tesla

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Trump scuppers idea of calling Musk after row, may ditch Tesla

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has no plans to speak to billionaire Elon Musk and may even ditch his red Tesla car, the White House said Friday after a stunning public divorce fraught with risk for both men. Trump's camp insisted that he wanted to move on from the row with the South African-born Musk, with officials telling AFP that the tech tycoon had requested a call but that the president was not interested. The Republican instead intended to focus on getting the US Congress to pass his 'big, beautiful' spending bill -- Musk's harsh criticisms of which had triggered the astonishing meltdown on Thursday. Fallout from the blow up between the world's richest person and its most powerful could be significant, as Trump risks political damage and Musk faces the loss of huge US government contracts. Trump phoned reporters at several US broadcast networks to insist that he was looking past the row. He called Musk 'the man who has lost his mind' in a call to ABC and told CBS he was 'totally' focused on the presidency. The White House meanwhile squashed earlier reports that they would talk. 'The president does not intend to speak to Musk today,' a senior White House official told AFP on condition of anonymity. A second official said it was 'true' that Musk had requested a call. - Tesla giveaway? - Tesla stocks tanked more than 14 percent on Thursday amid the row, losing some $100 billion of the company's market value, but recovering partly Friday. Trump was considering either selling or giving away the cherry red Tesla S that he announced he had bought from Musk's firm at the height of their relationship. The electric vehicle was still parked on the White House grounds on Friday. 'He's thinking about it, yes,' a senior White House official told AFP when asked if Trump would sell or give away the Tesla. Trump and Musk had posed inside the car at a bizarre event in March, when the president turned the White House into a pop-up Tesla showroom after viral protests against Musk's role as head of the cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). - 'Expiration date' - The move came despite apparent efforts by Musk to de-escalate. On Thursday, the SpaceX boss briefly threatened to scrap his company's Dragon spacecraft -- vital for ferrying NASA astronauts to and from the International Space Station -- after Trump suggested he could end Musk's giant government contracts. But later in the day, Musk sought to deescalate, writing on his X social media platform: 'OK, we won't decommission Dragon.' The tech magnate also kept a low profile early Friday. But there is no clarity on how the two big egos will repair the relationship, which had already been fraying badly, causing tensions in the White House. Trade Advisor Peter Navarro, whom Musk once called 'dumber than a sack of bricks' in an argument over Trump's tariffs, refused to gloat but said the tycoon had an 'expiration date.' 'No, I'm not glad or whatever,' he told reporters. 'People come and go from the White House.' Vice President JD Vance also stuck by Trump amid the blazing row -- blasting what he called 'lies' that his boss was 'impulsive or short-tempered' -- but notably avoided criticizing Musk. The tensions burst into the open this week when Musk called Trump's flagship spending bill an 'abomination' because it raises the US deficit. Then in a televised Oval Office diatribe on Thursday, Trump said he was 'very disappointed' with Musk. The pair traded insults for hours on social media, with Musk at one point suggesting impeachment of Trump and signalling interest in forming a new political party.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store