"Are you under the pope?" Asking for help formulating response

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I shared this with some people and am getting feedback. One person said, “I can’t quite agree with the right chart top line, since the Bishop of Rome could depose a Patriarch.”

That top row (left & right) represents the Roman Curia and they are all bishops in union with one another.

The Congregation for the Oriental Churches (created in 1917 from the Congregation for Propagation of the Faith) is part of the Roman Curia that has administrative functions. Some note on COC follow:

Pastor Bonus – Congregation for the Oriental Churches
**
Article 58 Competence.**
  • Concerns the structure, teaching, sanctifying and governing, or the status, rights, and obligations of persons, quinquennial reports and the ad limina visits. § 2. However, other congregations still competent, sometimes coordinating.

    Article 59 Easterners in Latin areas.
    Article 60 Oriental Territories.
  • Even Latins under in oriental territories are under this congregation.

    Article 61 Unity.
  • Code:
         Works with Council for Promoting Christian Unity and with the Council for Inter-religious Dialog.
canonlaw.wikispot.org/Book_3
 
In any case, if my “head bishop” assertion about the papacy were the norm when the canon you quoted was written, then that canon would implicitly apply to the pope’s universal authority.
We could go line-by-line on this. I am interested in your position.

I believe you have read the Apostolic canons and the canons of the Council of Nicea.

Let us start naming the powers of the Papacy and see what that gives us. Let us delineate some of the Powers the Supreme Pontiff exercises today which should have been recognized and accepted in the first century and attributable only to the Papacy, powers inherent in the office and claimed for it by the Roman Catholic church.

I would suggest that you begin, but anyone can start.
 
The Churches that are in communion with the Pope (Roman rite) are listed in “Catholicism for Dummies” by Fathers Tragilio and Breghenti.
They include Byzantine and many others.

Churches that are not in union with the Pope are not Catholic.

The same book lists the entire succession of Popes from St. Peter (32-67 AD) through today.
There have been 266 Popes in succession including Pope Benedict today.
Actually, for at least the first two or three centuries, Peter was not considered to be the first bishop of Rome, following the common custom that an Apostle who founded a see would not be listed as its first bishop (otherwise, Paul would have been the first bishop of many places).

See: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=8726508&postcount=126
 
Here are some.

According to what is righteous and beneficient use:

establishment of Catholic university
direction of Catholic missions
prohibition of reading good injurious to faith or morals
condemnation of propositions as heretical or in need of censure
interpretation of natural law
approve the liturgies
establish and aborogate feast days
canonization of saints
beatification and permission for public veneration
grant of permission of a private chapel for Mass
grant of plenary indulgences
grant of power to confirm to priests
establish impediments to matrimony
right to convoke, preside, direct, and confirm a council
authority to establish, interpret, alter, aborogate church law
authority over all appointments to its public offices
supreme judicial authority for ecclestical laws
dispense and grant permissions for ecclestical laws
 
When in doubt, go to the “Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition”.
This book from the Magisterium will almost always answer your questions. All Catholics are required to adhere to the “CCC 2nd Ed”.
The role of Bishops, Priests, Deacons and Laity are also included in the “CCC 2nd Ed”.

CCC: " 882 The Pope, Bishop of Rome and Peter’s successor, is the perpetual and visible source and foundation of the unity both of the bishops and of the whole company of the faithful.
For the Roman Pontiff, by reason of his office as Vicar of Christ, and as pastor of the entire Church has full, supreme, and universal power over the whole Church, a power which he can always exercise unhindered."

CCC: " 937 The Pope enjoys, by divine institution, supreme, full, immediate, and universal power in the care of souls."

CCC: “100 The task of interpreting the Word of God authentically has been entrusted solely to the Magisterium of the Church, that is, to the Pope and to the bishops in communion with him.”

The power to loose and bind on heaven and earth (Apostolic Tradition) - Matthew 16:18-19.
Continuation by Peter - ACTS 1:15-26.
But this is not the final word on the relationship between the Pope and Eastern Catholics - which is why my Church has published its own Catechism that goes into detail refining and explaining such points from a decidedly Eastern Catholic point of view.

Alex
 
I shared this with some people and am getting feedback. One person said, “I can’t quite agree with the right chart top line, since the Bishop of Rome could depose a Patriarch.”

I responded that I’ve never heard that a pope can depose a patriarch. He can’t appoint or approve them, so I don’t see how he could depose them. All he can do is sever communion. I asked for some more info.

…]

Will you please help me understand the bigger picture here?
The pope most certainly could appoint or depose a patriarch. He may choose not to so out respect for the autonomy of the Eastern Catholic Churches, but it would be within his right to do so.

If the Orthodox Churches returned to communion with the pope, he would have the same authority over them as well. It is simply the nature of his office.
 
The pope most certainly could appoint or depose a patriarch. He may choose not to so out respect for the autonomy of the Eastern Catholic Churches, but it would be within his right to do so.

If the Orthodox Churches returned to communion with the pope, he would have the same authority over them as well. It is simply the nature of his office.
Then there goes any hope for union. He had the power to excommunicate (from his Latin church), but not to depose. That power belonged to the synod of the patriarch, or to a general council.
 
Then there goes any hope for union. He had the power to excommunicate (from his Latin church), but not to depose. That power belonged to the synod of the patriarch, or to a general council.
But couldn’t he depose in conjunction with a synod or a council?

(*If he was invited to get involved in the first place)
 
Then there goes any hope for union. He had the power to excommunicate (from his Latin church), but not to depose. That power belonged to the synod of the patriarch, or to a general council.
:thumbsup

Eastern Christians are way more conservative theologically than today’s West. The pope has backed away from excommunicating all sorts of RC theologians who, one might say, deserve the discipline.

And in terms of how the Pope shares the authority to govern the Particular Churches in union with him - this is still a largely undeveloped area of RC ecclesiology.

For the UGCC, the whole issue of papal governance has more to do with how Rome today attempts to muzzle the movement for patriarchal particularity in our Church. The Orthodox patriarchates are against it (not just Moscow either).

So we’ve developed an attitude that says “it is always easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission.”

The pope is commemorated FOUR times in our Liturgy. In fact, when we had a UGCC Liturgy in our university chapel, Latin Catholics later laughed at how many times we commemorate the Pope (they were more than correct - rather than remove ektenias etc, the Pope should only be commemorated once).

Alex
 
We could go line-by-line on this. I am interested in your position.

I believe you have read the Apostolic canons and the canons of the Council of Nicea.
I have, but I hope and trust that you know I am no expert. I know what I know through irregular and amateur study of theology, ecclesiology, and Church history.

That said, I would love to continue this discussion in this manner. I don’t intend or predict it to be a debate of any kind; rather, learning about things with precision and detail from those with different perspectives inevitably strengthens the mind and helps give context to one’s knowledge. In this spirit I am eager to hear what you have to say as well, since I really do believe that the interpretations - on any subject - of those with whom one disagrees, help one understand things more broadly and clearly. Not to mention you seem very level-headed, precise, and honest - quite the opposite of a raging polemicist. 🙂
Let us start naming the powers of the Papacy and see what that gives us. Let us delineate some of the Powers the Supreme Pontiff exercises today which should have been recognized and accepted in the first century and attributable only to the Papacy, powers inherent in the office and claimed for it by the Roman Catholic church.
I don’t mind doing it that way, but truthfully, I wouldn’t know where to begin. There are a lot of things that he does today. Vico listed a bunch; is his list a good place to start?

In any case, I stand by what I asserted before as a broad principle, and as the heart of the Catholic understanding of the papacy: the pope of Rome’s supreme office is to the whole Catholic Church what a metropolitan bishop is to the dioceses of his synod, and what a patriarch is to his patriarchate - no more, and no less.

Of course he has universal jurisdiction, but that doesn’t mean he can do anything anywhere, and at any time. He is not the proper Ordinary in any particular diocese but in Rome, so his supreme and universal authority is of a different kind than the directly episcopal nature of a bishop’s authority over his diocese. Or to put it another way, he is not and should not be every Catholic’s bishop but rather the head bishop of the entire Catholic Church.

Anyway, I know I’m not getting into specifics and practical matters, for which I apologize. I hope Vico’s list was good to start with. I do have one question before we proceed, though:

why exactly are the Apostolic Canons supposed to be so absolutely comprehensive? What indication is there that that is the case? We’re not even sure when they were written, and they’re certainly not actually apostolic or Clementine in origin, as they seem to purport to be… anyway, I’m not disparaging them. They are good, and they were accepted by the early Church. I’m just not sure why anyone would expect a detailed summary of differing levels of episcopal jurisdiction to be found in them when they seem to *assume *but not explain its particulars.
The pope most certainly could appoint or depose a patriarch. He may choose not to so out respect for the autonomy of the Eastern Catholic Churches, but it would be within his right to do so.
Doesn’t canon law and ecclesiastical tradition give patriarchs certain rights, rights that the pope himself acknowledges when he, in today’s Church, raises a Metropolitan or major archeparch to the level of patriarch?

If so, I’m not sure it’s true that he can “depose” a patriarch for any reason whatsoever. I think that may be outside his *proper *authority. Of course, if the right circumstances permitted and required him to act, his universal and ordinary jurisdiction would in that case permit him to depose a patriarch.
Then there goes any hope for union. He had the power to excommunicate (from his Latin church), but not to depose. That power belonged to the synod of the patriarch, or to a general council.
Runningdude may be wrong about that (read that part of this reply, just above); I’m not sure, though.
 
But this is not the final word on the relationship between the Pope and Eastern Catholics - which is why my Church has published its own Catechism that goes into detail refining and explaining such points from a decidedly Eastern Catholic point of view.

Alex
Fascinating. Is this Catechism available yet in English?
 
Still, I’d be interested in seeing how it presents the role of the papacy. Perhaps this could be an indication where the ecumenical dialogue might go?
 
:thumbsup

Eastern Christians are way more conservative theologically than today’s West. The pope has backed away from excommunicating all sorts of RC theologians who, one might say, deserve the discipline.

And in terms of how the Pope shares the authority to govern the Particular Churches in union with him - this is still a largely undeveloped area of RC ecclesiology.

For the UGCC, the whole issue of papal governance has more to do with how Rome today attempts to muzzle the movement for patriarchal particularity in our Church. The Orthodox patriarchates are against it (not just Moscow either).

So we’ve developed an attitude that says “it is always easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission.”

The pope is commemorated FOUR times in our Liturgy. In fact, when we had a UGCC Liturgy in our university chapel, Latin Catholics later laughed at how many times we commemorate the Pope (they were more than correct - rather than remove ektenias etc, the Pope should only be commemorated once).

Alex
The Ukrainian situation is messy. I hope that the recent move of the Moscow Patriarchate away from the government of Russia prompts a change of heart with their attitude towards Ukraine, but I’m doubtful. The Ukrainians can only hope. If there is one field of Orthodox ecclesiology to be worked out, it is how to rearrange the Church into different national synods when national lines are redrawn (there is a precedent given for this, in canon 17 of Chalcedon, but it only properly applies to new cities and territories within the Empire).
 
Still, I’d be interested in seeing how it presents the role of the papacy. Perhaps this could be an indication where the ecumenical dialogue might go?
A review has an unofficial translation related to the Pope: For example, here are two key paragraphs that describe the Pope:
291. Each local congregation in administering the Eucharist by its bishop and through community of faith comes into communion with the other local congregations. Local congregations being in communion form the Local Church headed by a primate – a bishop, archbishop, metropolitan or patriarch. The first among the local Churches is the Roman Church, since it has the Pope of Rome – a successor of Apostle Peter – as its primate. He is the teacher and the rule of the apostolic faith, to whom the Lord gives a gift of infallibility in the matters of faith and morals. Just as apostle Peter expressed a love to Christ that was greater than that of the others and received a commission from Christ to tend his flock (cf. Jn 21:15-18), so the Roman Peter’s Chair “presides in love”244 and holds primacy among the local churches245. This primacy is effected through Peter’s ministry of the Roman bishops, which our Church confesses in the title “The Most Holy Universal Hierarch”.
Footnote 245 is translated below:[Footnote]245. VATICAN II, Dogmatic Constitution about the Church Lumen Gentium, 13, see also i.d. 18: “So that the episcopate itself would be kept in unity and indivisibility, He put Saint Peter over the other apostles and established in him a continuous and visible origin and foundation for the unity of faith and communion (cf. Vatican I, Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus, (18.07.1870): Denz. 1821 (3050 w.). And this teaching about establishment, continuity, power and sense of the sacred primacy of the Roman Hierarch and about his infallible teaching is again given by the Sacred Council to all believers for their steadfast believing.”
orthocath.wordpress.com/2011/10/14/first-look-at-the-new-ukrainian-catholic-catechism/

Where to buy it:

stjosaphateparchy.org/store.html
 
Still, I’d be interested in seeing how it presents the role of the papacy. Perhaps this could be an indication where the ecumenical dialogue might go?
Last estimate I saw published was December 2012
 
A review has an unofficial translation related to the Pope: For example, here are two key paragraphs that describe the Pope:
291. Each local congregation in administering the Eucharist by its bishop and through community of faith comes into communion with the other local congregations. Local congregations being in communion form the Local Church headed by a primate – a bishop, archbishop, metropolitan or patriarch. The first among the local Churches is the Roman Church, since it has the Pope of Rome – a successor of Apostle Peter – as its primate. He is the teacher and the rule of the apostolic faith, to whom the Lord gives a gift of infallibility in the matters of faith and morals. Just as apostle Peter expressed a love to Christ that was greater than that of the others and received a commission from Christ to tend his flock (cf. Jn 21:15-18), so the Roman Peter’s Chair “presides in love”244 and holds primacy among the local churches245. This primacy is effected through Peter’s ministry of the Roman bishops, which our Church confesses in the title “The Most Holy Universal Hierarch”.
Footnote 245 is translated below:[Footnote]245. VATICAN II, Dogmatic Constitution about the Church Lumen Gentium, 13, see also i.d. 18: “So that the episcopate itself would be kept in unity and indivisibility, He put Saint Peter over the other apostles and established in him a continuous and visible origin and foundation for the unity of faith and communion (cf. Vatican I, Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus, (18.07.1870): Denz. 1821 (3050 w.). And this teaching about establishment, continuity, power and sense of the sacred primacy of the Roman Hierarch and about his infallible teaching is again given by the Sacred Council to all believers for their steadfast believing.”
orthocath.wordpress.com/2011/10/14/first-look-at-the-new-ukrainian-catholic-catechism/

Where to buy it:

stjosaphateparchy.org/store.html
Thanks for the snippets. It sounds fairly traditional though there likely is a bit more that could give some nuance.

Are there other reviews that give more?
 
A review has an unofficial translation related to the Pope: For example, here are two key paragraphs that describe the Pope:
291. Each local congregation in administering the Eucharist by its bishop and through community of faith comes into communion with the other local congregations. Local congregations being in communion form the Local Church headed by a primate – a bishop, archbishop, metropolitan or patriarch. The first among the local Churches is the Roman Church, since it has the Pope of Rome – a successor of Apostle Peter – as its primate. He is the teacher and the rule of the apostolic faith, to whom the Lord gives a gift of infallibility in the matters of faith and morals. Just as apostle Peter expressed a love to Christ that was greater than that of the others and received a commission from Christ to tend his flock (cf. Jn 21:15-18), so the Roman Peter’s Chair “presides in love”244 and holds primacy among the local churches245. This primacy is effected through Peter’s ministry of the Roman bishops, which our Church confesses in the title “The Most Holy Universal Hierarch”.
Footnote 245 is translated below:[Footnote]245. VATICAN II, Dogmatic Constitution about the Church Lumen Gentium, 13, see also i.d. 18: “So that the episcopate itself would be kept in unity and indivisibility, He put Saint Peter over the other apostles and established in him a continuous and visible origin and foundation for the unity of faith and communion (cf. Vatican I, Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus, (18.07.1870): Denz. 1821 (3050 w.). And this teaching about establishment, continuity, power and sense of the sacred primacy of the Roman Hierarch and about his infallible teaching is again given by the Sacred Council to all believers for their steadfast believing.”
orthocath.wordpress.com/2011/10/14/first-look-at-the-new-ukrainian-catholic-catechism/

Where to buy it:

stjosaphateparchy.org/store.html
I see infallibility and primacy, but I don’t see universal jurisdiction. Is that what others see?
 
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