---- hundred years later. I doubt Constantine had any place in the decision.
I admit I have no idea who designed the seal. I don't remember ever seeing it.
The authority of the Latin Church rests with the bishops, not with the emperors. Were that true, then the Arian debate would never have happened, and various schisms would never have occurred either.
The Orthodox Church became the compulsory religion of the Empire through Constantine I. However, the Arian Christianity came from the epistles of Paul and teachings of Bishop Arius. I think it is a century or older than Athanasian Trinitarian Orthodox Christianity. This was the only legal Christian Church under Emperor Theodosius II. He was emperor and head of the Church. He began the systematic persecution of Non-Athanasian Christians and all Pagans.
At his death, the Empire was again divided into an Eastern and Western half. The religion was still Emperor directed. He even appointed the Patriarchs. The Eastern Empire had almost all of the resources, trade, money and educated populations. In 406 CE, a series of German Barbarians invaded Gaul, entered Spain and conquered Carthage. Britain was abandoned by the Romans (much like Canaanite cities abandoned by Egypt.) In both cases, Barbarians invaded, ravaged, raped, and destroyed the societies.
The troops were pulled all back into Italy under Stilicho to defend the historic centre of the Empire. The rest fell into German Arian chaotic tribalism. Finally, Italy fell to Barbarian mercenaries under Odoacer in 476 CE. The Eastern Emperor sent the powerful Ostrogoth Tribe of Germans to conquer Italy in the name of the Empire. A Barbarian Arian Ostrogothic King, Theodoric, ruled Italy.
Some 60 years later, the Eastern Emperor, Justinian, vowed to reconquer the West. During that time, Rome was out of reach of the real Emperor. The more recently proclaimed Patriarch of Rome was beyond the touch of the Emperor. This was the beginning of the Roman Catholic Church in schism from the Imperial Orthodox Catholic Church.
Eastern Patriarchs and bishops obeyed Justinian or subsequent Byzantine Emperors. Emperors were superior to Patriarchs and bishops. In Rome, there was no Orthodox King or Emperor. The Arian King Theodoric ruled independently despite his pledge to recognise the Eastern Emperor as Roman Emperor on the condition that the Emperor makes no military moves against him. Rome was cut off completely from the main Orthodox Catholic Church. This was the beginning of the Roman Catholic Schismatic Church, which spread authority over the remains of the Western Empire.
The schism between orthodox Christianity (Latin and Greek) and the Egyptian (Coptic) Church for example, was a huge economic blow to the empire. Had the emperors had any say at all, that would never have happened. The Typos of Emperor Constans II was an Imperial edict issued by him in 647/8 and was meant to silence theological debate. It didn't.
Pope St. Martin of Rome refused to accept it, and was kidnapped by the Easterners, taken to Constantinople, tried, tortured and exiled to the Crimea. St. Maximus the Confessor was likewise tried for his refusal, he had his hand cut off and his tongue cut out, and likewise exiled.
.
I think that is also confirmed by Gibbon's history of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
(The authority of the Emperor held more sway in the Greek Church, for certain geopolitical reasons, but has never had any authority in the Latin West.)
Agreed.
Peter, in the Latin Tradition, is regarded as the head of the Church on earth (from Matthew 16:18, John 21), and Paul one of its foremost Apostles. They would be an obvious choice.
God bless,
Thomas
Peter is an obscure personality in Rome, mostly mythological in my opinion. Paul in fact was revered but his teachings led straight into Arianism. That was overlooked in the political situation that led to the Roman Catholic Church. Gregory the Great or Leo fostered the notion that the Bishop of Rome was head of all Christianity. However, Christians in the Eastern Empire, the Serbs, Bulgars, Armenians, and Georgians stuck to the original Patriarchal system. The Copts were distant enough to keep old traditions long outlawed in the Empire.
Then Justinian’s reconquest of Italy was nullified by Lombard recon quest. When it was revived at Frankish pressure in the Papal States, Roman Bishops were called Popes or Papa. It was solidified when the Frankish empire of Charlemagne protected the autonomy of the Papal States. Popes became Temporal or Monarchs of a Nation. It lasted until 1870 when French troops left to fight the Prussians. The newly united Kingdom of Italy conquered it. The pope lacked an earthly kingdom until Benito Mussolini restored the Pope's Kingdom as Vatican City which was immediately recognised by Adolph Hitler in his Concordat with Pope Pius XII (1935 I think) making it an Official Religion of the Third Reich along with Lutheranism.
The Super-Christian USA was rather late in recognising the Pope and Vatican City as political identities.
Amergin