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Fone_Bone_2001
Guest
I agree.Many think them (Eastern Catholics) to be Orthodox in Communion with Rome, and I for one like this mentality, as long as Catholic teaching is completely followed.
The churches of Alexandria and Antioch were part of the group that rejected Chalcedon (AD 451). So I don’t think it’s true that “the other four” broke off from Rome, as those two had already long been out of communion with both Rome and Constantinople…However, about 1000 years ago, due to a variety of unfortunate problems, the other four cities, allied with the Byzantine Empire, mutually broke off from Rome, forming the various Eastern Orthodox Churches. Although doctrinally, they are virtually identical to Catholics, they refuse to acknowledge that the pope is more than a “first among equals”. (A couple groups broke of much earlier in the 400s AD also, to form what are known as the Oriental Orthodox Churches).
Could you cite the exact event that took place. Im interested and would like to look into it.
Can’t we all admit that this is a vast oversimplification?The Great Schism of 1054. You can trace the history back from there. Basically Rome is asserting more power while Constantinople says no to it. Of course from the Catholic side they say that such authority has always been there and Constantinople is merely trying to make the Pope less than what he is. From the Orthodox side, they maintain that such authority never existed in the Church in the First Millennium and thus to make a claim is “unorthodox” or heterodox.
The pope of Rome attempted to exercise authority over eastern churches at other points as well, with no break in communion (although sometimes the other churches didn’t listen). On another thread a poster exploring both Catholic and Orthodox Christianity linked to a letter in which Pope St. Leo I “tried to boss around the Church of Alexandria” (his words).
And it didn’t work, but there was no break in communion.
Then there were times the eastern churches did cooperate: for instance, when eastern bishops signed the Formula of Pope St. Hormisdas.
Furthermore, in 1054 no break in communion had self-evidently occurred, just excommunications of individual prelates.
I know you’re trying to keep things simple for someone asking basic questions, Constantine, but I still think accuracy matters. Wouldn’t it be more accurate to say something like, “Many circumstances - cultural, linguistic, political, theological, ecclesiological - drove greater and greater wedges between Rome and Constantinople until they finally acknowledged that they were not in communion with each other in the late twelfth century”?
Exactly. I’m not saying that Cardinal Humbert didn’t behave like a jerk, but wasn’t he sent to discuss the closing of Latin parishes in Constantinople’s jurisdiction? And correct me if I’m wrong, but the pope of Rome did not dispute the patriarch of Constantinople’s right to do so, did he?1054? What Pope was asserting what power of Constaninople in 1054? Do you remember why the legates were sent?
Actually, I think two things have to be noted here:Politically, the unfortunate event in 1054 had the deceased Patriarch of the West excommunicating the person of the Patriarch of Constantinople through a legate, and said Patriarch of Constantinople also excommunicating said deceased Patriarch of the West.
(a) The legates’ excommunication of Patriarch Cerularius was invalid, since Pope Leo IX had died.
(b) The patriarch of Constantinople excommunicated the papal legates, not the pope of Rome himself.
Exactly.As I understand it, this event was taken as it was (absurd) by the faithful of East and West both, and communion and communication both continued in years to come.
I think the first true sign of a lack of communion took place in the late twelfth century, when a Patriarch of Antioch (not sure which one, Chalcedonian or Miaphysite) first directed that Latin Christians were not to be given Holy Communion.
Does anyone know when the pope of Rome was struck from the diptychs in churches in communion with Constantinople?
When? I’m 99% certain that Cardinal Humbert never became Pope…Actually, the Patriarch of Constantinople excommunicated Cardinal Humbert who later became Pope of Rome.