- Home
- Books
- Various
- Creeds Of Christendom With A History And Critical Notes
- &Sect; 18. The Synods Of Constantinople, A.D. 1672 And 1691.
§ 18. The Synods of Constantinople, A.D. 1672 and 1691.
Three months previous to the Synod of Jerusalem a Synod was held at Constantinople (January, 1672), which adopted a doctrinal statement signed by Dionysius, Patriarch of Constantinople, and forty-three dignitaries belonging to his patriarchate. [142] It is less complete than the Confession of Dositheus, but agrees with it on all points, as the authority and infallibility of the Church, the extent of the canon, the seven mysteries (sacraments), the real sacrifice of the altar, and the miraculous transformation [143] of the elements.
Another Synod was held in Constantinople nineteen years afterwards, in 1691, under Patriarch Callinicus, for the purpose of giving renewed sanction to the orthodox doctrine of the Eucharist, in opposition to Logothet John Caryophylus, who had rejected the Romish theory of transubstantiation, and defended the Calvinistic view of Cyril Lucar. The Synod condemned him, and declared that the Eastern Church had always taught a change (metabole) of the elements in the sense of a transubstantiation (metousiosis), or an actual transformation of their essence into the body and blood of Christ. [144]