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DadDave
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I’ve seen it purported that the early Irish Christian church was more eastern / orthodox in praxis and spirituality than it was “Roman”? Is there any evidence for this?
In addition to what Jarek has said, it is worth pointing out that the Irish church owes a lot to the earlier churches of Britain and Gaul. Gaul was not evangelized from Rome, it was evangelized at the same time as central Italy and apparently the churches of Asia had a lot to do with that. Saint Ireneaus of Lyons in the second century was part of that effort.I’ve seen it purported that the early Irish Christian church was more eastern / orthodox in praxis and spirituality than it was “Roman”? Is there any evidence for this?
As for St Ireneaus I have not read anything of him besides his Against Heresies great work, which is not actually an example of spirituality, so I don’t know.Would St. Irenaus’s writings be a good example of a more eastern spirituality in the west? I’ve heard that St. Ambrose may be too?
The desert night is actually rather cold, and the huge change in temperatures between day and night in the desert could actually be a greater challenge. Anyway, many of the monastics would have likely been native, and they would be used to the temperatures. In any case, monastics aren’t prohibited from keeping themselves warm, you know. The monasteries would be losing a lot of their brothers to hypothermia otherwise.I’m Irish and I never would have known that we were more eastern in thought. Often when I think of all the hermitages on the cliffs in the west I think of how Eastern it all felt. And since Ireland is so cold, monasticism here in such a fashion must have been very difficult for them compared to the desert of Eygpt etc where apart from nighttime would have been relatively warm to live in.
I know that for some time, the Church of Scotland taught Church history to its ministry candidates in 3 periods - the Early Church, the Church up to the Synod of Whitby, and the Reformation to the Present - anything that happened between the acceptance of ‘Roman’ norms in these islands until Calvin and Knox came along didn’t interest them!amazon.co.uk/Celtic-Theology-Humanity-World-Writings/dp/0826448712/ref=sr_1_15?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1328199868&sr=1-15
One of the reviews for this says; ‘For those who like to think that the Celtic Christianity was something other than that practiced by the Roman Church,Thomas O’Loughlin leaves them in no doubt that they are wrong.’
I’ve read another book by the same author on ‘Discovering St Patrick’.
There seems to be a trend, in rejecting the Roman Catholic Church, to find some sort of replacement, and the drive is to say 'Oh well, the CELTIC church was not like this that or the other. There were eastern influences to be sure, particularly in the early monastic tradition, and no doubt some regional difference as to liturgies and liturgical calenders, but this was true elsewhere also.
It is uncertain whether St Patrick was raised to the episcopate in mainland Europe, or in Britain, but since Pope St Celestine had already sent a bishop called Palladius to evangelise Ireland, and the relationship with the Church in Britain, not to mention trade within the British isles and with Europe, would suggest Ireland was already coming under the influence of Rome.
This is a huge trend, and seems to be largely driven by wishful thinking.There seems to be a trend, in rejecting the Roman Catholic Church, to find some sort of replacement, and the drive is to say 'Oh well, the CELTIC church was not like this that or the other. There were eastern influences to be sure, particularly in the early monastic tradition, and no doubt some regional difference as to liturgies and liturgical calenders, but this was true elsewhere also.
It is uncertain whether St Patrick was raised to the episcopate in mainland Europe, or in Britain, but since Pope St Celestine had already sent a bishop called Palladius to evangelise Ireland, and the relationship with the Church in Britain, not to mention trade within the British isles and with Europe, would suggest Ireland was already coming under the influence of Rome.
While I appreciate much of what is in the article, the following is just uninformed bias:
I am sure he would have responded appropriately to you IF he was to respond to a bunch of hogwash talks, but I doubt that someone in his level would even consider reading more than 30 seconds into your version of Roman Catholicism.While I appreciate much of what is in the article, the following is just uninformed bias:
**St.Patrick’s presence on the Island of Lerins accounted for his Independence from Rome. St.Patrick liked to follow True Orthodoxy.
He followed the Church of Jerusalem and not Rome. Jerusalem was the Mother Church of Christianity. Patrick was never a Roman Catholic, he was a Celt and predated Roman Catholicism as we know it.**
St. Patrick believed in the Latin doctrines of Purgatory and the Procession of the Holy Spirit from Father and Son. He was sent to Ireland under the omophor of Pope St. Celestine and other Latin bishops.
We can expect the influence of Copts through the Tradition of monasticism everywhere. But this Coptic author’s denial of St. Patrick’s Roman Catholicism is just revisionist hogwash.
Blessings,
Marduk
I would love to hear his response to the facts that St. Patrick believed in the Latin doctrines of Purgatory and filioque, and was sent under the omophor of Pope St. Celestine. I would love to hear his reasons for claiming that St. Patrick was not Roman Catholic. Unfortunately, the scholarship that you claim for him did not go that far in his article to which you linked. Care to contact him?I am sure he would have responded appropriately to you IF he was to respond to a bunch of hogwash talks, but I doubt that someone in his level would even consider reading more than 30 seconds into your version of Roman Catholicism.
Blessings to all especially to you Marduk.