T
The_Scott
Guest
Hi,
This question is geared more towards Eastern Orthodox, but Prostestants/non-denominational/non-Catholic can chip in as well.
Can an organization be one with several leaders?
Let me explain:
The Nicene Creed states that “* in One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church?” I’d like to focus on the adjective “one” in that sentence.
Now, Catholics say that, while Christ is the Head of the Church, the Pope is the Vicar (representative) of Christ and therefore the temporal leader of the Church. There can only be one pope at any time. Many can claim the papacy (think the Great Schism in during the High Middle Ages), but only one of the papal claimants is the legitimate pontiff. Furthermore, the pope is the leader of the body of bishops, and therefore the leader of the bishopric within the Church. There is only one leader.
Now, Eastern Orthodox, as I understand it, claim that all bishops are equal in power and status, with the Patriarch (Bishop) of Constantinople being the first among equals (with only a primacy of honor - nothing more). So you could say that the Eastern Orthodox have several dozen leaders, since no one bishop claims primacy.
Now, with that in mind, let me re-ask that question: can an organization (in this case, the Church) be “one” (as stated in the Nicene Creed) with multiple leaders (bishops)? Can it be unified with, more or less, a confederation of Sees?
I’d like to hear what people think!
Thank you!
Scott*
This question is geared more towards Eastern Orthodox, but Prostestants/non-denominational/non-Catholic can chip in as well.
Can an organization be one with several leaders?
Let me explain:
The Nicene Creed states that “* in One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church?” I’d like to focus on the adjective “one” in that sentence.
Now, Catholics say that, while Christ is the Head of the Church, the Pope is the Vicar (representative) of Christ and therefore the temporal leader of the Church. There can only be one pope at any time. Many can claim the papacy (think the Great Schism in during the High Middle Ages), but only one of the papal claimants is the legitimate pontiff. Furthermore, the pope is the leader of the body of bishops, and therefore the leader of the bishopric within the Church. There is only one leader.
Now, Eastern Orthodox, as I understand it, claim that all bishops are equal in power and status, with the Patriarch (Bishop) of Constantinople being the first among equals (with only a primacy of honor - nothing more). So you could say that the Eastern Orthodox have several dozen leaders, since no one bishop claims primacy.
Now, with that in mind, let me re-ask that question: can an organization (in this case, the Church) be “one” (as stated in the Nicene Creed) with multiple leaders (bishops)? Can it be unified with, more or less, a confederation of Sees?
I’d like to hear what people think!
Thank you!
Scott*
