Are Eastern Catholics and Eastern Orthodox the same?

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But you were saying the title of Patriarch was unimportant because it in itself has been without meaning. The title of Pope should be subject to the same criteria, should it not?

The title of Patriarch is historically much more important than that of Pope, those who held it had roles which were quite meaningful and historical.

It just seems to me to be on par with the EP rejecting the title “Patriarch of Constantinople”, or the Patriarch of Alexandria rejecting that title.

My point being that you’re arguing that giving up the title is supposed to help relations with the East, and yet you make it clear that surrendering the title is something that only makes it clear in the context of the West.
It’s not that the title “Patriarch” is meaningless in and of itself. Indeed, I take your point that isolated from historical and cultural context “Patriarch” has much more meaning than “Pope”. The latter literally just means “Father”, which is what we call all priests. Also the Patriarch of Alexandria is still called “Pope.”

I meant specifically the title “Patriarch of the West.” Based on the reading I’ve done, this title was, in the West, used extremely rarely and haphazardly prior to the Counter-Reformation (this use likely due to exposure to Eastern statements labeling the Pope as such). After that it was used to make the Pope sound that much more impressive, during the era when Western Christendom was in chaos and the Popes were trying to re-impose order. This title finally was added to the long list of Papal titles in 1863, I’d hazard to guess mainly out of cultural values that in the English speaking world we would call Victorian or Gilded Age: the fancier and more opulent we can be the better, so let’s add extra titles if we can.

But the real authority of the Pope was and is in his older, historically substantial role as Supreme Pontiff. Elsewhere in the ecclesial West, the title Patriarch is also practically meaningless, just an extra honor. The Patriarch of Venice, for example, is in the end pretty much just another archbishop, but for historical reasons he’s honored with the title Patriarch.

If the West holds that the Bishop of Rome has a unique role in the Church shared by no other bishop, and the East (or at least the non-Catholic East) holds that he’s just another Patriarch, even if potentially the first in honor, who is claiming undue authority over other Patriarchs, then it makes sense to me to remove the source of confusion that the use of the word “Patriarch” in one of the Pope’s titles brings to the discussion. The Latin Church is organized differently than the Eastern Churches, and title “Patriarch” just doesn’t have much meaning in that Latin context. Calling the Pope “Patriarch of the West” or, worse, “Patriarch of Rome” distracts us from the real subject at hand: the Pope as Supreme Pontiff for the whole Church.

By the way, I think there was an additional, internal reason for the change: Latin Rite Catholics in places like Asia are sometimes uncomfortable with being called “Western,” so we are moving away from use of that word.
 
And also, actions speak louder than words, and the actions of the Roman Church show them to be much more in tune with Protestant sensibilities (e.g., Roman Catholic criticisms of VII as “Protestantizing” the RC Church) than Orthodox ones, at any rate.
I see what you’re saying, to an extent, but that seems like an odd example to use – RCs criticizing VII as “Protestantizing” the RCC is hardly complementary to Protestants!
 
It’s not that the title “Patriarch” is meaningless in and of itself. Indeed, I take your point that isolated from historical and cultural context “Patriarch” has much more meaning than “Pope”. The latter literally just means “Father”, which is what we call all priests. Also the Patriarch of Alexandria is still called “Pope.”

I meant specifically the title “Patriarch of the West.” Based on the reading I’ve done, this title was, in the West, used extremely rarely and haphazardly prior to the Counter-Reformation (this use likely due to exposure to Eastern statements labeling the Pope as such). After that it was used to make the Pope sound that much more impressive, during the era when Western Christendom was in chaos and the Popes were trying to re-impose order. This title finally was added to the long list of Papal titles in 1863, I’d hazard to guess mainly out of cultural values that in the English speaking world we would call Victorian or Gilded Age: the fancier and more opulent we can be the better, so let’s add extra titles if we can.

But the real authority of the Pope was and is in his older, historically substantial role as Supreme Pontiff. Elsewhere in the ecclesial West, the title Patriarch is also practically meaningless, just an extra honor. The Patriarch of Venice, for example, is in the end pretty much just another archbishop, but for historical reasons he’s honored with the title Patriarch.

If the West holds that the Bishop of Rome has a unique role in the Church shared by no other bishop, and the East (or at least the non-Catholic East) holds that he’s just another Patriarch, even if potentially the first in honor, who is claiming undue authority over other Patriarchs, then it makes sense to me to remove the source of confusion that the use of the word “Patriarch” in one of the Pope’s titles brings to the discussion. The Latin Church is organized differently than the Eastern Churches, and title “Patriarch” just doesn’t have much meaning in that Latin context. Calling the Pope “Patriarch of the West” or, worse, “Patriarch of Rome” distracts us from the real subject at hand: the Pope as Supreme Pontiff for the whole Church.

By the way, I think there was an additional, internal reason for the change: Latin Rite Catholics in places like Asia are sometimes uncomfortable with being called “Western,” so we are moving away from use of that word.
But to our minds, the title of Patriarch is the highest he can ever hope to claim. He may see himself as the Western equivalent of the Georgian Catholicos, but even he’s ultimately just a patriarch.
 
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