The Nicene Creed.

 Excursus on the Word Homousios  . 

 Excursus on the Words γεννηθέντα οὐ ποιηθέντα .

 The Canons of the 318 Holy Fathers Assembled in…

 The Canons of the 318 Holy Fathers Assembled in the City of Nice, in Bithynia.

 Excursus on the Use of the Word “Canon.”

 Canon II.

 Canon III.

 Canon IV.

 Canon V.

 Excursus on the Word Προσφέρειν .

 Canon VI.

 Excursus on the Extent of the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome Over the Suburbican Churches.

 Canon VII.

 Excursus on the Rise of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

 Canon VIII.

 Excursus on the Chorepiscopi.

 Canon IX.

 Canon X.

 Canon XI.

 Excursus on the Public Discipline or Exomologesis of the Early Church.

 Canon XII.

 Canon XIII.

 Excursus on the Communion of the Sick.

 Canon XIV.

 Canon XV.

 Excursus on the Translation of Bishops.

 Canon XVI.

 Canon XVII.

 Excursus on Usury.

 Canon XVIII.

 Canon XIX.

 Excursus on the Deaconess of the Early Church.

 Canon XX.

 Excursus on the Number of the Nicene Canons.

 The Captions of the Arabic Canons Attributed to the Council of Nice.

 Proposed Action on Clerical Celibacy.

 The Synodal Letter.

 On the Keeping of Easter.

 Excursus on the Subsequent History of the Easter Question.

Canon IX.

If any presbyters have been advanced without examination, or if upon examination they have made confession of crime, and men acting in violation of the canon have laid hands upon them, notwithstanding their confession, such the canon does not admit; for the Catholic Church requires that [only] which is blameless.

Notes.

Ancient Epitome of Canon IX.

Whoever are ordained without examination, shall be deposed if it be found out afterwards that they had been guilty.

Hefele.

The crimes in question are those which were a bar to the priesthood—such as blasphemy, bigamy, heresy, idolatry, magic, etc.—as the Arabic paraphrase of Joseph explains. It is clear that these faults are punishable in the bishop no less than in the priest, and that consequently our canon refers to the bishops as well as to the πρεσβύτεροι in the more restricted sense. These words of the Greek text, “In the case in which any one might be induced, in opposition to the canon, to ordain such persons,” allude to the ninth canon of the Synod of Neocæsarea. It was necessary to pass such ordinances; for even in the fifth century, as the twenty-second letter to Pope Innocent the First testifies, some held that as baptism effaces all former sins, so it takes away all the  impedimenta ordinationis which are the results of those sins.

Balsamon.

Some say that as baptism makes the baptized person a new man, so ordination takes away the sins committed before ordination, which opinion does not seem to agree with the canons.

This canon occurs twice in the  Corpus Juris Canonici .  Decretum Pars I. Dist. xxiv. c. vij., and Dist. lxxxj., c. iv.