V
Vico
Guest
I’m not sure why you disagree. How can a definitive statement of what is heterodox be made without agreement by the Orthodox Church, and also how can the Catholic Church not have a synod and expect it to be accepted?I disagree with that (it’s supremacy by the way, not primacy), but if that’s the feeling in the west than they can go ahead and call a synod to recant. It doesn’t particularly make a difference to the East.
Yet, I think we agree that at least one issue is “supremacy”. But I use the term primacy as understood by the Catholic Church, which has universal jurisdiction within the context of the infallibility of the unified conciliar Church (such as confirmation of dogmas of faith). SCOBA identified the issues as “proper exercise of primacy”:
"2. A Central Point of Disagreement. In the course of our discussions, it has become increasingly clear to us that the most divisive element in our traditions has been a growing diversity, since the late patristic centuries, in the ways we understand the structure of the Church itself, particularly our understanding of the forms of headship that seem essential to the Church’s being at the local, regional and worldwide levels. At the heart of our differences stands the way each of our traditions understands the proper exercise of primacy in the leadership of the Church, both within the various regions of the Christian world and within Christianity as a whole. In order to be the Body of Christ in its fullness – to be both “Orthodox” and “Catholic” – does a local community, gathered to celebrate the Eucharist, have to be united with the other Churches that share the Apostolic faith, not only through Scripture, doctrine, and tradition, but also through common worldwide structures of authority – particularly through the practice of a universal synodality in union with the bishop of Rome? "
scoba.us/articles/towards-a-unified-church.html