July 6, 1054
July 6, 1054 • Schism between East and West Began.
Did Leo I (left) send the wrong man as legate?
The division of the Roman Empire into halves was eventually echoed in the
church. The break came when Michael Cerularius was Patriarch of Constantinople
and St. Leo pope in Rome. In 1053, Cerularius circulated a treatise criticizing
the practices of the Western church in strong terms. Catholics did not allow
their clergy to marry. This was contrary to scripture and tradition said
Cerularius. Catholics used unleavened bread in their Eucharist, he charged. But
the most serious concern was that the Latin church had added the word "filoque"
to the Nicene creed, saying the Holy Spirit proceeded from both Father and Son.
It would seem that this was more political to Leo than religious, as it was
pressed upon him by the Franks. Cerularius excommunicated all bishops of
Constantinople who used the Western ritual and closed down their churches. This
incensed Leo. He demanded that Cerularius submit to the pope. Any church which
refused to recognize the pontiff as supreme was an assembly of heretics, he
said--a synagogue of Satan. The Eastern patriarch wasn't about to accept this
characterization. The five patriarchs, Antioch, Jerusalem, Alexandria,
Constantinople and Rome were equals. The bishop of Rome, as patriarch of the
West, was given the courtesy title of "first among equals" and in a tie vote he
could make the final determination according to tradition up to that point. His
growing claims to authority were deemed unacceptable to his fellow patriarchs,
who believed (and who still believe) that Christ alone is the head of the
church.
Leo sent legates, headed by an unyielding man, Cardinal Humbert, to discuss the
issues. Before they could complete their mission, Leo died. Humbert was so rude
to Cerularius that Cerularius refused to speak with him. Aggravated by this
treatment, the legates marched into St. Sophia on this day, July 6, 1054, and
placed a bull on the altar, excommunicating Cerularius. After this act, Humbert
made a grand exit, shaking the dust off his feet and calling on God to judge.
Cerularius convoked a council and once more blasted Western practices. Humbert
was anathematized. The Orthodox condemned all who had drawn up the bull. There
was no chance of reconciliation between the factions. The once-united Church was
now divided into two: Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic. In many areas,
Orthodox churches submitted to Rome while maintaining many of their rites and
traditions. These became the Byzantine rite or Uniate churches, which still
exist in many countries as distant in time and place as the United States.
The rift was inevitable. Traditions and doctrine had been diverging for hundreds
of years. East and West would be even farther apart after the cruelties of the
crusaders. Many of the crusaders' violent acts were against fellow-believers of
the East whom, in simple ignorance they did not recognize as Christians. The
unity of love which Christ had said should mark his followers was broken.
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