C
Cavaradossi
Guest
Hart’s mistreatment of Lossky is not a “minor issue.” His mistreatment (or rather, his outright dismissal) of Lossky basically forms a major part in justifying his proclamation that the filioque is not a theological problem for unity. In fact, his use of Lossky is a bit more of a caricature than anything else, as some sort of anti-union bogeyman (or perhaps the better word is straw man), which he dismisses out of hand, without any theological reasoning at all.Setting the Lossky issue aside, what did you think of the rest of the article?
First you presume to tell me what God will say to me on the day of judgment, and now you tell me you can read my innermost thoughts.See, there is a pattern (and I am beginning to believe it to be intentional) wherein you read an article that is not to your liking, so you find the one or two things that are technically questionable, and you focus on those smaller issues to divert attention away from the entire rest of the article. Perhaps you think by nit-picking on lesser points, you can divert the discussion away from the majors.
I don’t think that an argument assuming reification as one of its premises is a “minor issue.” It is in fact a rather major issue as far as logic and reason are concerned.You did this before with both Mark Bonocore’s Timeline and Dave Armstrong’s listing of the large number of heretical Eastern Bishops.
And that is precisely why Hart’s theologically unsubstantiated maltreatment of Lossky in that article is a major and not minor issue with the article. He presents Lossky as a bogeyman which he handily pretends to defeat with his superior agreeableness. But being agreeable is hardly a marker of whether what one says is true or not. In fact, Hart’s article is remarkably void of theological opinions. What few opinions he does offer—like that the filioque could be defended as showing the relationship of the Spirit proceeding from the Father through the Son or that the Neo-Patristic synthesis of Florovsky and Lossky came at an unacceptably high cost theologically—are unfortunately not well substantiated in the article.The author’s PRIMARY point was that there really isn’t all that much that is separating East and West and that those differences could be overcome with a bit of attention EXCEPT for the fact that some Eastern polemicists DO NOT WANT any reconciliation with Rome.
If Rome will condemn the proposition that the Son is cause of the Holy Spirit and that the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son as one principle, limit the papal primacy to one of mediate jurisdiction, return some of its later dogmata to the status of theological opinions, and condemn certain errors of Aristotelian ontology, then I would be happy for the name of the bishop of Rome to be inserted back onto the diptychs.So, I’m asking straight up: Do you, Cavaradossi, want to see a reconciliation and healing of the division that has separated East and West for a thousand years?