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Price, Richard & Gaddis, Michael (translators),  
The Acts of the Council of Chalcedon (Liverpool University Press - 2007)
     
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Price, Richard & Whitby, Mary (editors) Chalcedon in Context: Church Councils 400-700 (Liverpool University Press - 2011)
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  Canon 1  
 
We have judged it right that the canons of the Holy Fathers made in every synod 
even until now, should remain in force. 
 
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 Canon 2  
 
If any Bishop should ordain for money, and put to sale a grace which cannot be 
sold, and for money ordain a bishop, or chorepiscopus, or presbyters, or 
deacons, or any other of those who are counted among the clergy; or if through 
lust of gain he should nominate for money a steward, or advocate, or 
prosmonarius, or any one whatever who is on the roll of the Church, let him who 
is convicted of this forfeit his own rank; and let him who is ordained be 
nothing profited by the purchased ordination or promotion; but let him be 
removed from the dignity or charge he has obtained for money. And if any one 
should be found negotiating such shameful and unlawful transactions, let him 
also, if he is a clergyman, be deposed from his rank, and if he is a layman or 
monk, let him be anathematized. 
 
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 Canon 3  
 
It has come to [the knowledge of] the holy Synod that certain of those who are 
enrolled among the clergy have, through lust of gain, become hirers of other 
men’s possessions, and make contracts pertaining to secular affairs, lightly 
esteeming the service of God, and slip into the houses of secular persons, whose 
property they undertake through covetousness to manage. Wherefore the great and 
holy Synod decrees that henceforth no bishop, clergyman, nor monk shall hire 
possessions, or engage in business, or occupy himself in worldly engagements, 
unless he shall be called by the law to the guardianship of minors, from which 
there is no escape; or unless the bishop of the city shall commit to him the 
care of ecclesiastical business, or of unprovided orphans or widows and of 
persons who stand especially in need of the Church’s help, through the fear of 
God. And if any one shall hereafter transgress these decrees, he shall be 
subjected to ecclesiastical penalties. 
 
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 Canon 4  
 
Let those who truly and sincerely lead the monastic life be counted worthy of 
becoming honour; but, forasmuch as certain persons using the pretext of 
monasticism bring confusion both upon the churches and into political affairs by 
going about promiscuously in the cities, and at the same time seeking to 
establish Monasteries for themselves; it is decreed that no one anywhere build 
or found a monastery or oratory contrary to the will of the bishop of the city; 
and that the monks in every city and district shall be subject to the bishop, 
and embrace a quiet course of life, and give themselves only to fasting and 
prayer, remaining permanently in the places in which they were set apart; and 
they shall meddle neither in ecclesiastical nor in secular affairs, nor leave 
their own monasteries to take part in such; unless, indeed, they should at any 
time through urgent necessity be appointed thereto by the bishop of the city. 
And no slave shall be received into any monastery to become a monk against the 
will of his master. And if any one shall transgress this our judgment, we have 
decreed that he shall be excommunicated, that the name of God be not blasphemed. 
But the bishop of the city must make the needful provision for the monasteries. 
 
 
 Canon 5  
 
Concerning bishops or clergymen who go about from city to city, it is decreed 
that the canons enacted by the Holy Fathers shall still retain their force. 
 
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 Canon 6  
 
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. 
Neminem absolute ordinari, nec presbyterum, nec diaconum, nec quemlibet omnino 
eorum qui sunt in ordine ecclesiastico, nisi specialiter in ecclesia civitatis, 
aut vici, aut martyrio vel monasterio is qui ordinandus est, praedicetur. Eos 
autem qui absolute ordinantur, decrevit sancta synodus irritam habere ejusmodi 
ordinationem: et nusquam posse operari ad injuriam ejus qui ordinavit. 
 
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 Canon 7  
 
We have decreed that those who have once been enrolled among the clergy, or have 
been made monks, shall accept neither a military charge nor any secular dignity; 
and if they shall presume to do so and not repent in such wise as to turn again 
to that which they had first chosen for the love of God, they shall be 
anathematized. 
 
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 Canon 8  
 
Let the clergy of the poor-houses, monasteries, and martyries remain under the 
authority of the bishops in every city according to the tradition of the holy 
Fathers; and let no one arrogantly cast off the rule of his own bishop; and if 
any shall contravene this canon in any way whatever, and will not be subject to 
their own bishop, if they be clergy, let them be subjected to canonical censure, 
and if they be monks or laymen, let them be excommunicated. 
 
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 Canon 9  
 
If any Clergyman have a matter against another clergyman, he shall not forsake 
his bishop and run to secular courts; but let him first lay open the matter 
before his own Bishop, or let the matter be submitted to any person whom each of 
the parties may, with the Bishop’s consent, select. And if any one shall 
contravene these decrees, let him be subjected to canonical penalties. And if a 
clergyman have a complaint against his own or any other bishop, let it be 
decided by the synod of the province. And if a bishop or clergyman should have a 
difference with the metropolitan of the province, let him have recourse to the 
Exarch of the Diocese, or to the throne of the Imperial City of Constantinople, 
and there let it be tried. 
 
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 Canon 10  
 
It shall not be lawful for a clergyman to be at the same time enrolled in the 
churches of two cities, that is, in the church in which he was at first 
ordained, and in another to which, because it is greater, he has removed from 
lust of empty honour. And those who do so shall be returned to their own church 
in which they were originally ordained, and there only shall they minister. But 
if any one has heretofore been removed from one church to another, he shall not 
intermeddle with the affairs of his former church, nor with the martyries, 
almshouses, and hostels belonging to it. And if, after the decree of this great 
and ecumenical Synod, any shall dare to do any of these things now forbidden, 
the synod decrees that he shall be degraded from his rank. 
 
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 Canon 11  
 
We have decreed that the poor and those needing assistance shall travel, after 
examination, with letters merely pacifical from the church, and not with letters 
commendatory, inasmuch as letters commendatory ought to be given only to persons 
who are open to suspicion. 
 
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 Canon 12  
 
It has come to our knowledge that certain persons, contrary to the laws of the 
Church, having had recourse to secular powers, have by means of imperial 
rescripts divided one Province into two, so that there are consequently two 
metropolitans in one province; therefore the holy Synod has decreed that for the 
future no such thing shall be attempted by a bishop, since he who shall 
undertake it shall be degraded from his rank. But the cities which have already 
been honoured by means of imperial letters with the name of metropolis, and the 
bishops in charge of them, shall take the bare title, all metropolitan rights 
being preserved to the true Metropolis. 
 
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 Canon 13  
 
Strange and unknown clergymen without letters commendatory from their own 
Bishop, are absolutely prohibited from officiating in another city. 
 
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 Canon 14  
 
Since in certain provinces it is permitted to the readers and singers to marry, 
the holy Synod has decreed that it shall not be lawful for any of them to take a 
wife that is heterodox. But those who have already begotten children of such a 
marriage, if they have already had their children baptized among the heretics, 
must bring them into the communion of the Catholic Church; but if they have not 
had them baptized, they may not hereafter baptize them among heretics, nor give 
them in marriage to a heretic, or a Jew, or a heathen, unless the person 
marrying the orthodox child shall promise to come over to the orthodox faith. 
And if any one shall transgress this decree of the holy synod, let him be 
subjected to canonical censure. 
 
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 Canon 15  
 
A woman shall not receive the laying on of hands as a deaconess under forty 
years of age, and then only after searching examination. And if, after she has 
had hands laid on her and has continued for a time to minister, she shall 
despise the grace of God and give herself in marriage, she shall be 
anathematized and the man united to her. 
 
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 Canon 16  
 
It is not lawful for a virgin who has dedicated herself to the Lord God, nor for 
monks, to marry; and if they are found to have done this, let them be 
excommunicated. But we decree that in every place the bishop shall have the 
power of indulgence towards them. 
 
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 Canon 17  
 
Outlying or rural parishes shall in every province remain subject to the bishops 
who now have jurisdiction over them, particularly if the bishops have peaceably 
and continuously governed them for the space of thirty years. But if within 
thirty years there has been, or is, any dispute concerning them, it is lawful 
for those who hold themselves aggrieved to bring their cause before the synod of 
the province. And if any one be wronged by his metropolitan, let the matter be 
decided by the exarch of the diocese or by the throne of Constantinople, as 
aforesaid. And if any city has been, or shall hereafter be newly erected by 
imperial authority, let the order of the ecclesiastical parishes follow the 
political and municipal example. 
 
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 Canon 18  
 
The crime of conspiracy or banding together is utterly prohibited even by the 
secular law, and much more ought it to be forbidden in the Church of God. 
Therefore, if any, whether clergymen or monks, should be detected in conspiring 
or banding together, or hatching plots against their bishops or fellow-clergy, 
they shall by all means be deposed from their own rank. 
 
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 Canon 19  
 
Whereas it has come to our ears that in the provinces the Canonical Synods of 
Bishops are not held, and that on this account many ecclesiastical matters which 
need reformation are neglected; therefore, according to the canons of the holy 
Fathers, the holy Synod decrees that the bishops of every province shall twice 
in the year assemble together where the bishop of the Metropolis shall approve, 
and shall then settle whatever matters may have arisen. And bishops, who do not 
attend, but remain in their own cities, though they are in good health and free 
from any unavoidable and necessary business, shall receive a brotherly 
admonition. 
 
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 Canon 20  
 
It shall not be lawful, as we have already decreed, for clergymen officiating in 
one church to be appointed to the church of another city, but they shall cleave 
to that in which they were first thought worthy to minister; those, however, 
being excepted, who have been driven by necessity from their own country, and 
have therefore removed to another church. And if, after this decree, any bishop 
shall receive a clergyman belonging to another bishop, it is decreed that both 
the received and the receiver shall be excommunicated until such time as the 
clergyman who has removed shall have returned to his own church. 
 
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 Canon 21  
 
Clergymen and laymen bringing charges against bishops or clergymen are not to be 
received loosely and without examination, as accusers, but their own character 
shall first be investigated. 
 
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 Canon 22  
 
It is not lawful for clergymen, after the death of their bishop, to seize what 
belongs to him, as has been forbidden also by the ancient canons; and those who 
do so shall be in danger of degradation from their own rank. 
 
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 Canon 23  
 
It has come to the hearing of the holy Synod that certain clergymen and monks, 
having no authority from their own bishop, and sometimes, indeed, while under 
sentence of excommunication by him, betake themselves to the imperial 
Constantinople, and remain there for a long time, raising disturbances and 
troubling the ecclesiastical state, and turning men’s houses upside down. 
Therefore the holy Synod has determined that such persons be first notified by 
the Advocate of the most holy Church of Constantinople to depart from the 
imperial city; and if they shall shamelessly continue in the same practices, 
that they shall be expelled by the same Advocate even against their will, and 
return to their own places. 
 
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 Canon 24  
 
Monasteries, which have once been consecrated with the consent of the bishop, 
shall remain monasteries for ever, and the property belonging to them shall be 
preserved, and they shall never again become secular dwellings. And they who 
shall permit this to be done shall be liable to ecclesiastical penalties. 
 
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 Canon 25  
 
Forasmuch as certain of the metropolitans, as we have heard, neglect the flocks 
committed to them, and delay the ordinations of bishops the holy Synod has 
decided that the ordinations of bishops shall take place within three months, 
unless an inevitable necessity should some time require the term of delay to be 
prolonged. And if he shall not do this, he shall be liable to ecclesiastical 
penalties, and the income of the widowed church shall be kept safe by the 
steward of the same Church. 
 
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 Canon 26  
 
Forasmuch as we have heard that in certain churches the bishops managed the 
church-business without stewards, it has seemed good that every church having a 
bishop shall have also a steward from among its own clergy, who shall manage the 
church business under the sanction of his own bishop; that so the administration 
of the church may not be without a witness; and that thus the goods of the 
church may not be squandered, nor reproach be brought upon the priesthood; and 
if he [i.e., the Bishop] will not do this, he shall be subjected to the divine 
canons. 
 
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 Canon 27  
 
The holy Synod has decreed that those who forcibly carry off women under 
pretence of marriage, and the aiders or abettors of such ravishers, shall be 
degraded if clergymen, and if laymen be anathematized. 
 
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 Canon 28  
 
Following in all things the decisions of the holy Fathers, and acknowledging the 
canon, which has been just read, of the One Hundred and Fifty Bishops 
beloved-of-God (who assembled in the imperial city of Constantinople, which is 
New Rome, in the time of the Emperor Theodosius of happy memory), we also do 
enact and decree the same things concerning the privileges of the most holy 
Church of Constantinople, which is New Rome. For the Fathers rightly granted 
privileges to the throne of old Rome, because it was the royal city. And the One 
Hundred and Fifty most religious Bishops, actuated by the same consideration, 
gave equal privileges to the most holy throne of New Rome, justly judging that 
the city which is honoured with the Sovereignty and the Senate, and enjoys equal 
privileges with the old imperial Rome, should in ecclesiastical matters also be 
magnified as she is, and rank next after her; so that, in the Pontic, the Asian, 
and the Thracian dioceses, the metropolitans only and such bishops also of the 
Dioceses aforesaid as are among the barbarians, should be ordained by the 
aforesaid most holy throne of the most holy Church of Constantinople; every 
metropolitan of the aforesaid dioceses, together with the bishops of his 
province, ordaining his own provincial bishops, as has been declared by the 
divine canons; but that, as has been above said, the metropolitans of the 
aforesaid Dioceses should be ordained by the archbishop of Constantinople, after 
the proper elections have been held according to custom and have been reported 
to him. 
 
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 Canon 29  
 
It is sacrilege to degrade a bishop to the rank of a presbyter; but, if they are 
for just cause removed from episcopal functions, neither ought they to have the 
position of a Presbyter; and if they have been displaced without any charge, 
they shall be restored to their episcopal dignity 
 
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 Canon 30  
 
Since the most religious bishops of Egypt have postponed for the present their 
subscription to the letter of the most holy Archbishop Leo, not because they 
oppose the Catholic Faith, but because they declare that it is the custom in the 
Egyptian diocese to do no such thing without the consent and order of their 
Archbishop, and ask to be excused until the ordination of the new bishop of the 
metropolis of Alexandria, it has seemed to us reasonable and kind that this 
concession should be made to them, they remaining in their official habit in the 
imperial city until the Archbishop of the Metropolis of Alexandria shall have 
been ordained. 
 
 
 
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