Commemorating the Council of Nicaea and Renewing the Faith
(ANS – Jerusalem – March 30, 2026) – The annual seminar organized by the Jerusalem section of the School of Theology of the Pontifical Salesian University took place on March 23 at the Studium Theologicum Salesianum within the Ratisbonne Monastery. The topic was “Nicaea 1700: Remembering the Council and renewing the faith.”
The event, in
keeping with the school’s tradition, was marked by involvement of
representatives from the various churches in Jerusalem, gathered to reflect on
the importance of the council 1,700 years ago as a bond of unity for Christian
communities, and was attended by Bishops William Shomali, vicar for Jerusalem
and Palestine, and Giacinto Marcuzzo, bishop emeritus of the Latin Patriarchate
of Jerusalem.
Father David M.
Neuhaus, SJ, a lecturer at the Salesian School of Theology, delivered a paper
on “Council, Creed, and Canon: The Role of Nicaea in the Development
of the Biblical Canon,” examining the interactions between Emperor
Constantine, Eusebius of Caesarea, and Athanasius of Alexandria, “particularly
significant figures in this debate,” and specifically on the order for 50
Bibles that Constantine requested from Bishop Eusebius “to be written on
parchment prepared in a legible manner, and in a convenient and portable form.”
Archimandrite
Christodoulos, abbot of the Greek Orthodox Monastery of the Holy Cross in
Jerusalem, reflected on “The Spiritual Vision of Nicaea: worship, prayer
and confession,” concluding his address by stating that “divine grace does
not allow the members of Christ to be torn apart, but calls all to unity on the
foundation of the one faith and within the common Eucharistic life of the
Church.”
Marie-Armelle
Beaulieu, editor-in-chief of Terresainte.net, presented the
contribution of the Palestinian bishops present at the Council – no fewer than
18 – providing a broad overview of the Palestinian Church of the 4th century,
focusing in particular on Macarius of Jerusalem, the principal architect of the
construction of the basilica of the Holy Sepulcher, venerated as a saint in
both the East and the West.
Canon Richard
Sewell of the Anglican Communion, stating his desire to bring “an inclusive
Anglican perspective,” reflected on “Nicaea as the foundation of Christian
unity today,” asserting decisively that “if anything can save us, and the whole
Church, from the lack of faith that is our decisions; it is the founding
document of the Church’s original unity, which is none other than the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed.”
On the sidelines of the event, there was a presentation of the volume Nicaea I in 1700: Remembering the Council and Renewing the Faith, an anthology edited by Prof. Vincent Bosco, SDB, lecturer at the Ratisbonne; and Prof. Stanley Jayakumar Yesudass, SDB, lecturer at the Don Bosco Theological Centre in Chennai, India. The book brings together contributions from around a dozen scholars who explore the legacy of the council from various perspectives, and is the result of a process of research and collaboration between the two study centers and their lecturers.
In addition to the
content presented and shared during the symposium, the very organization of the
event held a specific value in itself: “In recent weeks we wondered whether we
should postpone the event until calmer times, but then we told ourselves that
perhaps today, in the midst of a difficult and worrisome historical situation,
amid winds of war that seek only to exacerbate divisions, this seminar would be
our simple contribution to reminding everyone that, in order to give our
communities a future of peace, it is essential to start from what unites us,
looking to our shared roots, and setting aside, for a moment, the elements that
seem to divide us,” explained the organizers of the initiative.










