Monothelite

 
Pronunciation: /məˈnɒθəlʌɪt/
(also Monothelete /-liːt/)

noun

Christian Theology
  • an adherent of the doctrine that Jesus had only one will, proposed in the 7th century to reconcile Monophysite and orthodox parties in the Byzantine Empire but condemned as heresy.

Origin:

late Middle English: via ecclesiastical Latin from ecclesiastical Greek monothelētēs, from monos 'single' + thelētēs (from thelein 'to will')