Despite the opposition from certain monks and an Armenian bishop, the council adopted the propositions of Gregory IV the Young and Nerses IV the Gracious, and signed the union with the Eastern Orthodox Church. However, despite these developments, the Eastern Orthodox Church turned away from the matter and did not follow through with the council, considering the two Churches not to be in union by its conclusion, notably due to the death of Manuel I Comnenus in 1180.
The council is still recognized by the Armenian Apostolic Church. In January 1999, Catholicos Karekin I wrote an article revisiting the Council of Hromkla and its contribution to the history and theology of the Armenian Apostolic Church.[1] Additionally, Catholicos Aram I dedicated a book to the topic in 2011.[2]
Emperor Manuel I Comnenus, who had a religious education, became quickly interested in the matter and decided to ask Nerses to send the statement of faith of the Armenian Apostolic Church to Constantinople.[3][4] This letter later became known as the "Exposition of the Faith of the Armenian Church".[5][6] In this letter, Nerses declared that the Armenian Apostolic Church acknowledged the two natures of Jesus Christ and that the Armenian Church was not Monophysite nor Miaphysite, but that it preferred to use the Cyrillian terminology of "one nature", based on its own tradition.[3][6] He also recognized dyothelism in the Exposition.[6] Nerses also defended iconodulism and acknowledged that some Armenians were iconoclasts, but he condemned their views.[3][7] The rest of the letter addressed practical organizational matters related to fasting, liturgy,[3][8][9] and the date of Christmas, which the Armenian Apostolic Church celebrated separately.[3]
Manuel I Comnenus was moved by Nerses' letter and proposals and suggested that Nerses came to Constantinople to continue the discussion.[4][10] However, Nerses responded that it would be better for the emperor to send a representative to Hromkla, the seat of the Catholicos, to hold the discussions there.[4][9] Two representatives were sent by the emperor: a theologian named Theorianos and an Eastern Orthodox Armenian hegumen named John Outman.[9] They brought along a series of demands from the emperor, covering not only doctrinal points but also liturgical and organizational issues, which troubled Nerses due to their severity.[4][9] In 1170, a discussion took place between these representatives and the Armenian bishops, including Nerses[3] and the future Gregory IV the Young. This discussion was preserved in the Patrologia Graeca.[9][11] It was then decided to organize a council in the upcoming years, and Nerses sent a synodal letter to address the issue of union to the Armenian clerics, summoning them to attend the council,[3][8][12][13][14] even if the Rubenids were at that time independent.[3]
After the death of Nerses IV the Gracious in 1173, his nephew succeeded him as Gregory IV the Young.[4][13] In 1174, Gregory IV managed to persuade the Byzantine emperor to set aside a significant portion of the demands and focus on doctrinal questions, mainly the issue of Monophysitism or Dyophysitism.[3][4][8][12] According to him, the Armenians were more committed to their own liturgical and cultural traditions than to the union, and asking for such concessions would be the surest way to thwart the union.[3]
We confess, as you do, the ineffable union of the two natures in Christ.
Consequences
Following the death of Manuel I Comnenus in 1180, the agreement signed during the Council of Hromkla was largely forgotten,[3] especially since in 1196, the Byzantines reintroduced the liturgical demands that Manuel had previously agreed to set aside.[18]
Despite the setback, the Council of Hromkla remains significant in the history of the Armenian Apostolic Church. In 1999, Catholicos Karekin I wrote an article reflecting on the council and its contribution to the history and theology of the Armenian Apostolic Church.[1] Similarly, Catholicos Aram I, the Catholicos of Cilicia, dedicated a book to the topic in 2011.[2]
^ abAram (2010). Saint Nersēs the gracious and church unity: Armeno-Greek Church relations (1165-1173). Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia. ISBN978-9953-0-1442-5.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqStopka, Krzysztof (2017). Armenia Christiana: Armenian religious identity and the Churches of Constantinople and Rome (4th-15th century). Jagiellonian studies in history. Jagiellonian University Press. ISBN978-83-233-4190-1.
^ abcdefMacEvitt, Christopher (2008). The crusades and the Christian world of the East: rough tolerance. The Middle Ages series. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN978-0-8122-4050-4.
^ abMutafian, Claude (2012). L'Arménie du Levant: XIe-XIVe siècle (Thesis). Paris: les Belles lettres. ISBN9782251444253.
^ abHalfter, Peter (1996). Das Papsttum und die Armenier im frühen und hohen Mittelalter: von den ersten Kontakten bis zur Fixierung der Kirchenunion im Jahre 1198. Forschungen zur Kaiser- und Papstgeschichte des Mittelalters. Köln Weimar Wien: Böhlau. ISBN978-3-412-15395-3.
^ abHamilton, Bernard (1980). The Latin Church in the Crusader States: the secular church. Variorum publication. London: Variorum Publ. ISBN978-0-86078-072-4.
^ abNersēs Lambronacʹi; Thomson, Robert William (2007). Commentary on the revelation of saint John. Hebrew university Armenian studies. Leuven Paris: Peeters. ISBN978-90-429-1866-5.
^Review on NERSES OF LAMBRON, Commentary on the Revelation of Saint John, Translation of the Armenian text, notes and introduction by Robert W. THOMSON (Hebrew University Armenian Studies, 9), Leuven, Peeters, 2007 by I. Dorffman Lazarev: https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/10804/1/Nerses_of_Lambron.pdfArchived 2024-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
^The ROC severed full communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 2018, and later severed full communion with the primates of the Church of Greece, the Patriarchate of Alexandria, and the Church of Cyprus in 2020.
^ abcdefghAutocephaly or autonomy is not universally recognized.
^UOC-MP was moved to formally cut ties with the ROC as of May 27th 2022.
^ abSemi-autonomous part of the Russian Orthodox Church whose autonomy is not universally recognized.