Extracts from the Acts.

 Extracts from the Acts.

 The Letter of Cyril to John of Antioch.

 Extracts from the Acts.

 The Tome of St. Leo.

 Extracts from the Acts.

 Session III.

 The Condemnation Sent by the Holy and Ecumenical Synod to Dioscorus.

 Extracts from the Acts.

 Session V.

 The Definition of Faith of the Council of Chalcedon.

 Extracts from the Acts.

 Decree on the Jurisdiction of Jerusalem and Antioch.

 The Decree with Regard to the Bishop of Ephesus.

 Decree with Regard to Nicomedia.

 The XXX Canons of the Holy and Fourth Synods, of…

 The XXX Canons of the Holy and Fourth Synods, of Chalcedon.

 Canon II.

 Canon III.

 Canon IV.

 Canon V.

 Canon VI.

 Canon VII.

 Canon VIII.

 Canon IX.

 Canon X.

 Canon XI.

 Canon XII.

 Canon XIII.

 Canon XIV.

 Canon XV.

 Canon XVI.

 Canon XVII.

 Canon XVIII.

 Canon XIX.

 Canon XX.

 Canon XXI.

 Canon XXII.

 Canon XXIII.

 Canon XXIV.

 Canon XXV.

 Canon XXVI.

 Canon XXVII.

 Canon XXVIII.

 Excursus on the Later History of Canon XXVIII.

 Canon XXIX.

 Canon XXX.

 Extracts from the Acts.

Canon VI.

Neither presbyter, deacon, nor any of the ecclesiastical order shall be ordained at large, nor unless the person ordained is particularly appointed to a church in a city or village, or to a martyry, or to a monastery. And if any have been ordained without a charge, the holy Synod decrees, to the reproach of the ordainer, that such an ordination shall be inoperative, and that such shall nowhere be suffered to officiate.

Notes.

Ancient Epitome of Canon VI.

In Martyries and Monasteries ordinations are strictly forbidden. Should any one be ordained therein, his ordination shall be reputed of no effect.

Van Espen.

The wording of the canon seems to intimate that the synod of Chalcedon held ordinations of this sort to be not only  illicit but also invalid,  irritis and  cassis . Nor is this to be wondered at, if we take into account the pristine and ancient discipline of the church and the opinion of many of the Scholastics (Morinus,  De SS. Ordinat ., Parte III., Exercit. V., cap. ix.).

Hefele.

It is clear that our canon forbids the so-called absolute ordinations, and requires that every cleric must at the time of his ordination be designated to a definite church. The only  titulus which is here recognized is that which was later known as  titulus beneficii . As various kinds of this title we find here (a) the appointment to a church in the city; (b) to a village church; (c) that to the chapel of a martyr; (d) the appointment as chaplain of a monastery. For the right understanding of the last point, it must be remembered that the earliest monks were in no wise clerics, but that soon the custom was introduced in every larger convent, of having at least one monk ordained presbyter, that he might provide for divine service in the monastery.

Similar prohibitions of  ordinationes absolutæ were also put forth in after times.

According to existing law, absolute ordinations, as is well known, are still  illicitæ , but yet  validæ , and even the Council of Chalcedon has not declared them to be properly invalidæ, but only as without effect (by permanent suspension).  Cf . Kober,  Suspension , S. 220, and Hergenröther,  Photius , etc., Bd. ii., S. 324.

Bright.

By the word μαρτυρίῳ (“martyry”) is meant a church or chapel raised over a martyr’s grave. So the Laodicene Council forbids Churchmen to visit the “martyries of heretics” (can. ix.). So Gregory of Nyssa speaks of “the martyry” of the Holy Martyrs (  Op . ii., 212); Chrysostom of a “martyry,” and Palladius of “martyries” near Antioch (  In Act. Apost. Hom ., xxxviii. 5;  Dial. , p. 17), and Palladius of “the martyry of St. John” at Constantinople (  Dial. , p. 25). See Socrates, iv. 18, 23, on the “martyry” of St. Thomas at Edessa, and that of SS. Peter and Paul at Rome; and vi. 6, on the “martyry” of St. Euphenia at Chalcedon in which the Council actually met. In the distinct sense of a visible testimony, the word was applied to the church of the Resurrection at Jerusalem (Eusebius,  Vit. Con ., iii. 40, iv. 40; Mansi, vi. 564; Cyril,  Catech ., xiv. 3), and to the Holy Sepulchre itself (  Vit. Con ., iii. 28). Churches raised over martyrs’ tombs were called in the West “  memoriæ martyrum ,” see Cod. Afric., lxxxiii. (compare Augustine,  De Cura pro Mortuis , VI.).

This canon is found in the  Corpus Juris Canonici , Gratian’s  Decretum , Pars I., Dist. lxx., can. j.