On Feb. 18, the Roman Catholic Church remembers Patriarch Saint
Flavian of Constantinople, who is honored on the same date by Eastern
Catholics of the Byzantine tradition and by Eastern Orthodox Christians.
Known to Eastern Christians as “St. Flavian the Confessor,” the
patriarch endured condemnation and severe beatings during a
fifth-century dispute about the humanity and divinity of Jesus Christ.
Though he died from his injuries, his stand against heresy was later
vindicated at the Church’s fourth ecumenical council in 451.
St. Flavian is closely associated with Pope St. Leo the Great, who also
upheld the truth about Christ’s divine and human natures during the
controversy. The Pope’s best-known contribution to the fourth council – a
letter known as the “Tome of Leo” – was originally addressed to St.
Flavian, though it did not reach the patriarch during his lifetime.
Flavian's date of birth is unknown, as are most of his biographical
details. He was highly-regarded as a priest during the reign of the
Eastern Roman Emperor Theodosius II (which lasted from 408 to 450), and
he became Archbishop of Constantinople following the death of Patriarch
Saint Proclus in approximately 447.
Early in his patriarchate, Flavian angered a state official named
Chrysaphius by refusing to offer a bribe to the emperor. The ruler's
wife Eudocia joined the resulting conspiracy which Chrysaphius hatched
against Flavian, a plot that would come to fruition in an illegitimate
Church council and the patriarch's death.
As head of the Church in Constantinople, Flavian had inherited a
theological controversy about the relationship between deity and
humanity in the person of Jesus Christ. In an occurrence that was not
uncommon for the time, the doctrinal issue became entangled with
personal and political rivalries. Flavian's stand for orthodoxy gave his
high-ranking court opponents a chance to act against him by encouraging
the proponents of doctrinal error and manipulating the emperor in their
favor.
The theological issue had arisen after the Council of Ephesus, which in
431 had confirmed the personal unity of Christ and condemned the error
(known as Nestorianism) that said he was a composite being made up of a
divine person and a human person. But questions persisted: Were Jesus'
eternal divinity, and his assumed humanity, two distinct and complete
natures fully united in one person? Or did the person of Christ have
only one hybrid nature, made up in some manner of both humanity and
divinity?
The Church would eventually confirm that the Lord's incarnation involved
both a divine and a human nature at all times. When God took on a human
nature at the incarnation, in the words of Pope St. Leo the Great, “the
proper character of both natures was maintained and came together in a
single person,” and “each nature kept its proper character without
loss.”
During Flavian’s patriarchate, however, the doctrine of Christ’s two
natures had not been fully and explicitly defined. Thus, controversy
came up regarding the doctrine of a monk named Eutyches, who insisted
that Christ had only “one nature.” Flavian understood the “monophysite”
doctrine as contrary to faith in Christ’s full humanity, and he
condemned it at a local council in November of 448. He excommunicated
Eutyches, and sent his decision to Pope Leo, who gave his approval in
May 449.
Chrysaphius, who knew Eutyches personally, proceeded to use the monk as
his instrument against the patriarch who had angered him. He convinced
the emperor that a Church council should be convened to consider
Eutyches’ doctrine again. The resulting council, held in August 449 and
led by Dioscorus of Alexandria, was completely illegitimate, and later
formally condemned. But it pronounced against Flavian and declared him
deposed from the patriarchate.
During this same illicit gathering, known to history as the “Robber
Council,” a mob of monks beat St. Flavian so aggressively that he died
from his injuries three days later. Chrysaphius seemed, for the moment,
to have triumphed over the patriarch.
But the state official’s ambitions soon collapsed. Chrysaphius fell out
of favor with Theodosius II shortly before the emperor’s death in July
450, and he was executed early in the reign of his successor Marcian.
St. Flavian, meanwhile, was canonized by the Fourth Ecumenical Council
in 451. Its participants gave strong acclamation to the “Tome of Leo” –
in which the Pope confirmed St. Flavian’s condemnation of Eutyches and
affirmed the truth about Christ’s two natures, both divine and human.