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frjohnmorris
Guest
I am afraid that you are being overly optimistic. You can make the argument that until the Church has officially spoken through an Ecumenical Council that there is room for pious opinion, disagreement among theologians, or what we Orthodox call theologoumena There are real issues that divide us that have to be resolved. For example, the authority of the Bishop or Rome. We can recognize a primacy of honor but not of jurisdiction. We cannot recognize papal infallibility or authority superior to that of an Ecumenical Council. Another matter would be birth control. Although there are those within the Orthodox Church, chiefly in certain monastic circles, who agree with Rome, most others do not believe that when used properly within marriage that non-abortive methods of birth control are sinful. It is just like trying to save or restore a troubled marriage. To save the marriage the couple must resolve their differences. They cannot have successful marriage if they pretend that the differences do not exist.The problem with East and West was a failure to recognize who the other was and to accept that each Church has their right to be. Differences in Church teachings were in my book all right but to these men it wasn’t. They fought over something that really needed to be done and what was that. It was simply to let the other to be. I believe at the time of these disagreements that our Church both East and West were just coming into their own makeup and what I call personality and characteristics that would make them come into their identities and eventual maturity. At the time of their disagreements are what I called very immature times that caused brothers to dislike each other. I am referring here to theological expressions and not of external political expressions. Our theologies were just coming into their own distinct expression which would take a lot more time before our “maturities” set in. I see the Church as not split up even though history and the books record it. I see it more as a development that was necessary for both our identities and our theologies to be brought forth as we see it today. In other words I do not see the Church, for instance Orthodox or Catholic as been split up rather I see because of these lack of contacts from those years that these disagreements came that our own behaviours have since steadily believe that we were split up. We believe it to be so because we are told it to be so. But in reality there is really nothing that really separates us except these lack of contacts. If anything is to be true is the more we would learn about the other the closer we would come together. In other words this so called schism in my eyes is only our own lack of who the other is. All of this (Orthodox and Catholic relationship) will end tomorrow if we will only learn about each other. Wounds will never replace the honest curiosity of knowing what God is doing in each of His Churches both Orthodox and Catholic. It is on this principal which men have failed miserably from the past and to what we need to do today if this unity is to come.
You are right about these men from the past however as I see it the right time for discovering each other is now and not back then. It was not the right time and sadly later on politically minded men made it more difficult. But the time has passed into our time when spiritually minded mature Orthodox and Catholics can discover each other for the first time and come to know each other as brothers and sisters of the same apostolic structure. Here I am referring to our Laity which now has this opportunity to know more than ever before.
Archpriest John Morris