Page 27 - God's Church through the Ages - Student Textbook
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created being—the first thing created—not the eternal Son of God; Jesus was god-like, but He was not God.

             As Arius began promulgating his heresy, Athanasius was a newly ordained deacon and secretary to Bishop
             Alexander of Alexandria. Athanasius had already written two apologetical works, Against the Gentiles and On the
             Incarnation of the Word. Upon hearing Arius’s false teaching, Athanasius immediately refuted the idea that the
             Son is not eternal: the “begetting” of the Son, or the “uttering” of the Word, by the Father, said Athanasius,
             denotes an eternal relationship between the Father and Son, not a temporal event.

             Arianism was condemned by most of the bishops of Egypt, the country where Arius lived, and he moved to
             Nicomedia in Asia Minor. From there Arius promoted his position by writing letters to church bishops
             throughout the world. Arius seems to have been a likable person with a gift for persuasion, for he attracted
             many bishops to share his viewpoint. The church was becoming divided on the issue of Christ’s divinity. Emperor
             Constantine sought to resolve the dispute over Arianism by calling a council of bishops, which met in Nicaea in
             Bithynia in Asia Minor, in the year 325. Athanasius attended the council with his bishop, and there Athanasius
             was recognized as a lead spokesman for the view that the Son is fully God and is co-equal and co-eternal with
             the Father.

             At the Council of Nicaea, Athanasius’ view was in the majority. All that was needed was to formulate a creedal
             statement to express the consensus. Initially, the council sought to formulate from Scripture a statement that
             would express the full deity and eternal nature of the Son. However, the Arians agreed to all such drafts,
             interpreting them to fit their own views.

             Finally, the Greek word homoousious (meaning “of the same substance, nature, or essence”) was introduced,
             since that was one word that could not be twisted to fit Arianism. Some of the bishops balked at using a term
             not found in Scripture; however, they eventually saw that the alternative was a statement that both sides might
             agree to, even though one side’s understanding was completely different from the other’s. The church could ill
             afford to be unclear on the question of whether the Son is truly God (or, as the Arians said, “a god”). The result
             was that the council adopted what we now call the Nicene Creed, declaring the Son to be “begotten, not made,
             being of one substance with the Father.”

             Of course, the Arians refused to accept the council’s decision; also, many orthodox bishops had wanted wording
             less divisive than that of the Nicene Creed—something that the Arians would accept but still sounded doctrinally
             firm to orthodox ears. All sorts of compromises to and variations of Nicaea were put forward.

             In 328 Athanasius succeeded Alexander as bishop of Alexandria. Athanasius refused to participate in
             negotiations with the Arians, wary of compromise on such an important issue. Once the search for common
             ground took priority over sound doctrine, Athanasius feared, the truth would be lost. More and more of the
             other bishops accepted Arianism. Emperor Constantine himself sided with the Arians. But Athanasius continued
             to vigorously defend the full deity of Christ against the leaders and theologians of his day, refusing to allow
             Arians into his church. For this, he was regarded as a troublemaker by various emperors, and he was banished
             several times from his city and his church. At times, it seemed Athanasius was the sole proponent of Christ’s
             deity, a doctrine that he vehemently defended. Athanasius’ unmoving dedication to biblical truth in the face of
             severe opposition led to the expression Athanasius contra mundum, or “Athanasius against the world.”

             Eventually, Christians who believed in the deity of Christ came to see that the Nicene Creed could not be
             abandoned without consigning the Logos to the role of high-ranking angel. The careful wording of the Nicene
             Creed was a proper expression of biblical truth. The Nicene Creed was later confirmed at the Council of
             Constantinople in 381, a final triumph that Athanasius did not live to see (he died in 373).

             Beyond defending the faith, Athanasius also helped identify the canon of Scripture. It was the duty of the bishop
             of Alexandria to write to the other bishops every year and tell them the correct date for Easter (Alexandria had
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