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AndrewAxland
Guest
There are some very vocal conservative Catholics who think that Pope Francis, in particular, is not fire-and-brimstone enough for their taste.Catholic Church too liberal on LGBT issues?
There are some very vocal conservative Catholics who think that Pope Francis, in particular, is not fire-and-brimstone enough for their taste.Catholic Church too liberal on LGBT issues?
With all respect, this is partly because the Catholic Church has continued to develop via the continuation of the Church’s teaching office, unified in Peter.They maintain the same faith as the early Church Fathers. You can read a spiritual book or commentary on scripture from the 4th or 5th century and pick up a book from the 20th or 21st century and they are harmonious. The same cannot be said about RCC literature.
While I disagree with your first point, to begin with, I’m glad you specified the “Latin RCCs,” because, of course, the Catholic Church includes multiple theological and liturgical traditions — Syriac, Coptic, Syro-Malabar, Chaldean, and yes, even Byzantine.Also the clear manner in which the Orthodox Church teaches the purpose of the Incarnation is missing in my opinion in Latin RCCs. There are many things, but these were some of the things that initially led us out of the RCC.
I definitely thought about it. We visited one Church about 4 hours away and enjoyed it, but I really began to think about how wrong it would be to choose communion with the Latin Church which I think was making big mistakes regarding the Sacraments and teaching Theology over communion with the Orthodox Church that I felt recognized the importance of keeping these things the way the Church was given them. It is very apparent in the liturgical hymns, almost every hymn clearly explains the purpose of the Incarnation, where in the RCC you hear mainly songs that originated in Protestantism and do not clearly explain anything. I was reading writings from St. John Chrysostom and St. Cyril of Alexandria, and felt that they were talking about a different faith than what I saw in the RCC, and yet the Orthodox Church was clearly referring to these same ideas, and even quoting from these fathers. It boiled down to why would I knowingly choose communion with the one that I felt had deviated over the one that kept the same faith as the Fathers. There are huge problems in the Orthodox Church here in the US, but none have anything to do with what I have been talking about, but more with the fact that most of these Orthodox Churches have a cultural tie with the country they came from, so language and culture become problems, but these are fixable, whereas I don’t have that much optimism that the others will be fixed anytime soon. I love that ROCOR is willing to start mission Churches as long is there are people willing to get it going.Can I ask you why you didn’t consider Eastern Catholicism? I ask b/c I’ve often thought about just becoming Orthodox and leaving the “odd” world of Eastern Catholicism behind. Of course I don’t want to go into an “our of the frying pan into the fire” situation so I’m weighing my options carefully.
Are you referring to problems in the RCC?whereas I don’t have that much optimism that the others will be fixed anytime soon.
I’ve argued with you before about this and it seems that you are unwilling to hear what I am actually saying. I’m talking specifically about the Theology which includes the theology behind the Sacraments. These do not change and that you think that in the second 1,000 years of the RCC that development into doing things contrary to the first 1,000 years is a good thing, makes sense for you to be RC. I’m just saying that the Orthodox think otherwise, that it is good to stay the same in Theology. No one mentioned icons or Byzantine culture.The Orthodox, while genuine expressions of the ancient faith, are ultimately confined to the first 1,000 years of development. That is why they “feel” so ancient and apostolic. But if you go to the earliest centuries, there wouldn’t even be a Byzantine Orthodox culture – at all. Definitely no icons in the first churches. (Byzantine icons are good and holy, of course.)
In other words, Byzantine Orthodoxy went through real developments, too. While the same basic faith, a first century Christian would not necessarily feel home in a modern Byzantine church – or even a sixth century one.
We have to be careful when we confuse cultural expression with authentic Faith.
Yes, I’m talking about the Latin Church’s choice of doing things different from the past or from the East that have been proven to be the more correct way. That they allow the East to continue doing these things correctly brings confusion to the matter.Are you referring to problems in the RCC?
Yes, I agree with this as well. Heck, I’m sure that even my marriage could be declared null if they really wanted too…perhaps on the grounds of being too young and not fully understanding what we were doing. (I’ve been married for nearly 15 years and have a completely different mindset now then I did then for sure!)I seriously began to question the whole null marriage thing, long before we decided to become Orthodox. The grounds by which you could declare a marriage null were common to every marriage I’ve ever seen.
I think this is a better approach as well. People mess up.At least in the Orthodox Church, we call a marriage a marriage and acknowledge that people sin and ruin marriage, and can allow a second and possibly third marriage with permission, but it is not the same joyous celebration as the first, but rather one of penance.
We use NFP as birth control We’re pretty sure we’re done (4 kids already, plus some health issues and age). It’s not that I disagree per se with the use of artificial contraception but I do think that they could be a little more lenient on it and use oikonomia more… life is not black and white but I don’t’ think that type of mentality is what fuels the RCC…for them things are very black and white…As for contraception, I don’t know. I think NFP is the preferred thing, but I think it is easy to accidently get pregnant if you do not chart it well, so I think some are willing to allow non-abortifacient contraception for those that struggle with NFP, but I am not sure. Personally, we stopped using birth control when we became Catholic, and have not gone back to it. Just having our third baby, I think my wife is done, but I’m guessing either we will just be celibate or use NFP again.
This is simply untrue. I don’t believe that the practice is correct, but this has nothing to do with how it came about (although it may be a practical factor for some who want to keep it).What I mean is that from the RCC side, the only reason they wait until high school for confirmation is so that they kind of force parents to keep their kids involved in the Church if they want them to be confirmed.
Not just elements! If so, that particular BCC is way off course . . .But again, you will find consistent Eastern Orthodox elements – including their theological traditions – in their Eastern Catholic counterparts.
I did not say that it was started this way, just the reason for why they continue to do it. I know that it had to do with waiting for the Bishop supposedly. This is still ridiculous because the Bishop still comes and does it for all the high school kids. It simply would be a bunch of newborns instead.but let’s keep the facts straight about what happened.
I agree that together they comprise the One, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, and that it is a grave matter that the prelates haven’t pulled their heads out of there collective [ * censored * ] and resolved this.One shouldn’t view the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox as two, but one in a state of schism.
You can start with the OCA (but, like ACROD, its origin is actually in the pig-headed bigotry of a certain RCC bishop I refused to name), and there are several more. I’ll leave it to our EO members to list them (I can’t even keep up with the EC, or the current count [which seems to change every year or two, and then there’s the one that we’re not sure whether or not went extinct, and . . . I leave it as “about two dozen”)there is not much interest in evangelizing new countries / nations.
There are us eastern Catholics.… and I can’t imagine a Catholic on a mission to Russia or Greece. …
Go back to the first century. NOT commentary but what the ECF actually said in writing.… the Orthodox Church. They maintain the same faith as the early Church Fathers. You can read a spiritual book or commentary on scripture from the 4th or 5th century and pick up a book from the 20th or 21st century and they are harmonious.