E
ebed_melech
Guest
A Simple Sinner,Who says that defining them is not? Certainly a good deal of storm and stress could have been avoided were the issues of Monophosytism, Nestorianism, Arianism. Miaphsytism and the like were left as pious options on the table rather than understandings hammered out (and subsequently rejected by some, e.g. Oriental Orthodox, Church of the East) at the Ecumenical Councils of Chalcedon, Ephesus, Nicea and the like.
Really, if there is such minimal value in an effort to achieve clarity of understanding in matters of theology, why be bothered to have suffered all that to begin with?
I am sorry but this is just so much sterotypical charicature-making that is little less than polemic when offered without better reason or argument. The whole “bookworm scholastic west” vs. the “pious all holy East” is a little worn out and, at face value offers little more to discuss.
As prevalent as such cliches are, they ignore the reality of the Orthodox academic theologian in the East who works to create a systematic theological understanding and framework, or the Franciscan friar who leads the severly aesthetic life in poverty that is truly humbling and prayer that can be profoundly simple. To essential contrast the “dry rational west” with the “lively spirited east” is somewhere between slightly insulting and very disingenous. Such slogans or simply cliches are best left at the door.
Doesn’t everything? You speak often with certitude of “The Eastern thinking” or “The Eastern approach” or “in Eastern theology”. How do you personally choose which luminaries you will follow or find to be reliable?
Your post here is simply excellent. One can in no way claim to refer to an “Eastern” perspective or a 'Western" perspective on most issues as if they existed as uniform and hermetically sealed realities. The Christian East is multiform (just consider the different trajectories of the Greek and Syriac theological streams for instance) as is the Christian West. One may refer to general tendencies, but ultimately there is rich diversity of approach on all sides.
I think our categories often make it easy for us to label without taking the time to fully appreciate what they mean.
God bless,
Gordo