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GerardP
Guest
The Orthodox Patriarchs do not believe in it. For the Pope to put it aside is to engage in false eirenism condemned by Pius XII.The filioque is not included in every form of the creed. To exclude it does not mean that one does not believe.
No. More likely it’s to form a phalanx and influence political policy.The pupose of the meeting and praying the creed between the Holy Father and the Patriarch was to teach Catholics and Orthodox Christians through example.
What did they want to teach?
Except one group doesn’t have the true faith.
- We are brothers and sisters, because we are sons and daughters of God.
And those without the full truth are in fatal error.
- We do have common beliefs and a common apostolic history.
That was not taught in any explicit way or any particular implicit way. Handing a tissue to someone who sneezes does the same thing.
- We are commanded to love and capable of it.
Dialogue towards what? Cardinal Bea used to at least have the clarity of speech to say that conversion to the Catholic Church is the goal.
- We can dialogue instead of war against each other.
Flower power. The differences themselves are intrinsically antagonistic.
- We can accept that there are differences between us that must be resolved, but that does not mean that we have to be antagonistic toward each other.
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- Antagonism is not going to resolve the differences between us
Pacifism in dialogue is not going to resolve them at all.
No it doesn’t. Original sin prevents that from happening. It will only come together when gathered by Christ and He separates the wheat from the chaff forcibly.
- The world needs us to come together as a family.
No there won’t. He told us, the world would hate us. If peace exists exclusively among Christians (which won’t happen till everyone is Catholic first.) Non-Catholics will persecute us.
- There will be peace in the world if there is peace between Christians.
How about more love and warmth by not mincing words? The SSPX actually gets more respect from the Orthodox because they stick to tradition and they don’t engage in ambiguous language for some ill-defined “unity.”
- We must treat each other with the same love and warmth as our leaders, despite our differences.
No. We obviously know our common beliefs. The problem is non-Catholics are wrong. Truth and error can’t co-exist in faith.
- Our differences have not been forgotten, the problem is that we fail to remember our common beliefs.