A Council That Still Matters
A council of Christian leaders that took place in 325 mattered.
As we celebrate its 1700th anniversary, it still does.
A man named Arius (who lived between 250-336) argued that the scriptural titles for Christ, which seemed to point to Christ’s equality with God, were merely courtesy titles. In truth, Arius said, Christ was to be seen as a creature—although the first among all creatures. So, while the Son is not like any other creature, Arius argued that He is a creature, nonetheless. He even said that the Son was a perfect creature and outranked all other creatures but was indeed created. Hence the phrase of Arius, “There was once when He was not.”
So much for the Trinity.
Arius was attempting to draw on a number of biblical passages. In John 14, you have Jesus saying that the Father is greater than He is. In Mark 13, Jesus says that no one knows when the second coming will be – not even Him – only the Father. So, Arius and his followers maintained that Jesus was similar to the Father in nature or essence, but not the same as the Father in nature or essence.
This received a swift and hostile reaction from many within the Church who were able to marshal an impressive number of biblical passages (e.g., John 3:16, 14:9) – which form the basis of orthodox Christology to this day – to combat his ideas and point to the fundamental unity between the Father and the Son.
Also, the passages that the Arians used were shown to be misinterpreted, missing out on the subordination of the Son to the Father during the incarnation, and how His language reflected that state of subordination. In other words, in His incarnation, Jesus filled a different role.
It was also argued that the divinity of Christ was of central importance to the Christian idea of salvation. If what Arius was maintaining was true, Christ could not save anyone, since no mere “creature” can save another creature. Only God can save and even Arius seemed to agree that, according to the New Testament, salvation was meant to come through Jesus.
A council was convened by the Roman Emperor Constantine of all the bishops of the Christian world in Nicaea in the year 325 to deal with it. Hence it has forever been known as the Council of Nicaea. It was the first ecumenical – or worldwide – Christian council. Even St. Nicholas of Turkey – now known as Santa Claus – was in attendance.
The conclusion was that Jesus was God Himself in human form, the second Person of Trinity, and any other view was heresy of the highest order.
Specifically, it was determined that Jesus was homo (same) ousios (substance) – “one in being” or “one in substance” – with the Father. This was selected as opposed to homoiousios, which meant of “like substance” or “like being.” In Gibbon’s monumental work The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire, he notes that never had there been so much energy spent on one vowel. But that vowel mattered because it defined the very person of Christ.
The Council of Nicaea produced what would eventually become known as the Nicene Creed, which stated that Jesus Christ was of the same substance with the Father.
So historic Christian orthodoxy was upheld, and Arianism was condemned as heresy.
Now, here’s a great example of why studying history matters.
Arianism is again on the rise.
According to an annual State of Theology survey, jointly conducted by Ligonier Ministries and Lifeway Research, of the five most common mistaken beliefs held by evangelicals (yes, evangelicals, not the public at large), two are directly tied to Arianism. A whopping 73% agreed with the statement that “Jesus is the first and greatest being created by God,” and 43% affirmed that “Jesus was a great teacher, but he was not God.” So much for “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30).
Though outside of classical Arian theology, the Trinity seems particular in duress. Among the top five revelations from the study was that 60% believed that “the Holy Spirit is a force but is not a personal being.”
The report references Ligonier founder R. C. Sproul’s teaching that everyone’s a theologian. “However, Dr. Sproul would be quick to add that not everyone is a good theologian.”
But orthodoxy is not the only reason the Council matters. Nicaea, now known as Iznik, no longer has a single Christian in residence. Not only is the creed not recited in churches, there are no churches.
So the Council of Nicaea still matters as a reminder for the reason for upholding orthodoxy: we have truth to tell,
... and the world still needs it.
James Emery White
Sources
“The State of Theology,” USA 2022, read online.
Stefani McDade, “Top 5 Heresies Among American Evangelicals,” Christianity Today, September 19, 2022, read online.
Daniel Silliman, “The Nicene Church Disappeared from Nicaea,” Christianity Today, May 19, 2025, read online.
Daniel Silliman, “How the Nicene Creed Became Cool Again,” Christianity Today, May/June 2025 Issue, read online.