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frjohnmorris
Guest
I always try to be respectful in my comments on this discussion. If I have offended anyone, I ask your forgiveness. I do think that the discussion over St. Photius got a little rough, however. Since I am an historian, I always try to provide some historical prospective to the discussion.Agreed, but my point extended a little beyond that. Based on my personal experience, I’d say the anti-Catholic rhetoric among Orthodox surpasses the anti-Orthodox rhetoric among Catholics quite a bit. This is also evidenced by the fact that the Catholic communion has Churches which revere post-schism Saints and allows Orthodox to receive communion in Catholic liturgies. The reverse is not true. Given that situation, I am somewhat offended when Orthodox complain about Catholics not being sufficiently respectful. This is not meant as personal commentary on frjohnmorris, and if I overstated the case, I apologize, but this is how it appears to me.
The Orthodox position is that sharing Communion is the result of a real union, not a means towards a union. We cannot pretend that a union exists that does not exist. If we do not resolve our differences, we will not be really united. Not sharing Communion is a visible sign of the tragedy of our disunion and hopefully will stimulate us to work towards reunion.
Some Catholics and some Orthodox are not respectful towards each other. We both have undiplomatic people.
We usually commemorate the same Saints that the Melkite Eastern Catholics because we were united until 1724. There are so many Saints that it is not possible to commemorate them all. Therefore each local Church commemorates the major Saints of the ancient Church like Pope St. Gregory the Great, but mostly commemorate ancient martyrs and other Saints like St. Ambrose, Pope St. Leo and St. Augustine that are common to both Roman Catholic and Orthodox calendars. There are a few exceptions like St. Joseph of Damascus who was martyred by the Muslims in 1860 and St. Raphael who was the first Bishop over what eventually became the Antiochian Archdiocese back in the days when we were under the Russians. But we usually commemorate the same Saint as the Roman Catholics because there are enough pre-schism Saints to fill the calendar. We also celebrate the same major feast days as Roman Catholics.
Archpriest John W. Morris