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Ecumenical Council

ek-yoo-MEN-ik-ulnoun

A churchwide assembly of bishops convened to settle doctrine and order for the whole Church — e.g. Nicaea (325), Chalcedon (451).

Not To Be Confused With

An ecumenical (“whole-world”) council claims authority for the entire Church; a local or regional synod speaks for one area. Traditions differ on how many councils count as fully ecumenical.

From Greek oikoumenē, “the whole inhabited world.” The first seven councils defined the Trinity and the person of Christ and remain a shared reference point. Their anathemas drew the boundaries of orthodoxy.

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Ecumenical Council — Definition | Theologos Media