Catholic dogma and the Oriental Tradition

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I was recently asked by a relatively new member who is attracted to the Maronite Church to give an account of how an Oriental views the Catholic Dogmas (it’s on the Public Message board in my account if anyone wants to see). The following will be concise summaries of my thoughts. I know long-time members are already aware of my views on the matter, so please bear with me as the following will probably be old news.

ON PAPAL PRIMACY
The Oriental Tradition has a High Petrine understanding of ecclesiology. See here: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=5376939&postcount=248

To Orientals, terms like “supreme authority” pose no problem, because we don’t understand “supreme” in the same way that many Latins and many Easterns do. To us, it simply means “highest.” In contrast, many Latins and many Easterns interpret “supreme” to mean “highest and only,” which denotes absolutism. To the Oriental Tradition, “supreme” does not preclude, and in fact includes, the notion of collegiality. Collegiality is the ecclesiological principle of the Catholic Church, understood either universally or locally – i.e., the supreme authority in the Church is a college of bishops in union with its supreme head bishop.

The distinction between the Oriental Orthodox and the Catholic Church is that whereas the Oriental Orthodox understand the supreme office to end at the Patriarchal level, the Catholic Church understands that there is a supreme office for the universal Church as well. In addition, the Catholic Church understands this supreme office to have been instituted by Christ in the person of St. Peter, and handed down through the Apostolic Succession.

ON PAPAL INFALLIBILITY
Like the Primacy, this matter also revolves around an Absolutist, High, and Low Petrine view. See here: forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=6662978&postcount=59 And as with the Primacy, the Oriental Tradition is of the High Petrine view. Now, the term “infallibility” is not explicitly found in Tradition; rather, we have descriptions of the church in Rome as one where “the Faith cannot fail,” etc. See St. Ignatius of Antioch, Tertullian, St. Cyprian, etc.

Simply put, being an advocate of the High Petrine view, I cannot conceive of an infallible body without an infallible head. The Absolutist and Low Petrine proponents are able (for some reason I personally cannot fathom) to easily divorce the body from the head, and vice versa. The High Petrine view does not do this.

ON THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
Many Eastern Orthodox apologists understand that the real cause of disagreement is the different conceptions (no pun intended) in East and West on the definition of Original Sin. On that basis, the Oriental Tradition has less reason to reject it than the Eastern Tradition because the Oriental understanding of Original sin is practically identical to the Western understanding.

Easterns, while not denying the detrimental spiritual effects, understand physical death to be the sine qua non of original sin. Since the Blessed Mother died, then she necessarily had original sin. In distinction, Westerns and Orientals, while not denying the detrimental physical effects, understand spiritual death (i.e., deprivation of Grace) to be the sine qua non of original sin (btw, a view also held by such imminent Eastern Fathers as St. Gregory Palamas). Unlike many Easterns, Westerns and Orientals don’t often view physical death as an evil. Pope St. Athanasius, for instance, taught that physical death is the natural condition of human nature even before the Fall, and Adam and Eve were preserved from death by Grace. The Syrian Tradition has an even less morbid understanding of physical death, seeing it as the gateway to eternal life.

Hence, to an Oriental (and Latin), that Mary died does not necessarily denote the presence of Original Sin. Interestingly, Eastern Fathers such as St. Andrew of Crete (who called Mary the “Immaculate Fruition” from a barren womb) and St. Gregory Palamas (who said Mary was she from whom Christ obtained flesh that was both “new and ours”) had no problem with the Immaculate Conception.

CONTINUED
 
CONTINUED

Aside from this, the OO polemic against the IC is identical to the EO polemic, all based on a misunderstanding of the dogma. I’ll just provide the refutation for two of them here (if you want to discuss more, perhaps you would like to start a new thread):
  1. It is sometimes claimed that the IC makes Mary’s conception unnatural, and therefore she is not human like us.
    RESPONSE: The idea that Mary was not born through natural means by Sts. Joachim and Hannah was actually condemned by Pope Benedict XIV in the 17th century. It should be noted that the Dogma of the IC refers not to her physical conception, but her spiritual conception (i.e., she was united to God from the first moment of her existence). This union with God is the same union we achieve at Baptism – it is not physical, but spiritual.
  2. It is claimed that there are Fathers who state that Mary received the Grace to be able to bear Christ at the Annunciation, yet the IC claims that Mary received ALL Graces at the IC.
    RESPONSE: The dogma of the IC does not claim that Mary received ALL Graces at the IC. It simply states that she was preserved from all stain of Original Sin. This means that she possessed the Grace of Original Sanctity and Original Justice; this means she was united to God since the first moment of her existence. That is all that the Dogma teaches. Whether she received all Graces at her conception, or whether she received other Graces later in her life, is not a matter that the Dogma rules upon.
As an aside, I would like to mention that there should be no problem from the Eastern side either of the orthodoxy of the Dogma. It is only a matter of terminology in how the East defines Ancestral Sin on the one hand, and how Westerns/Orientals define Original Sin on the other. The Dogma does not deny that Mary died, so the issue does not revolve around the question of her death. The Dogma is easily as valid if reworded so that it is bereft of any terminological bias – to wit, “Mary was united to God from the first moment of her existence.” This not only avoids the Traditional prejudices involved in the different definitions of Original/Ancestral Sin, but highlights the actual intent of the Dogma, which refers to her spiritual, not physical conception.

ON THE ASSUMPTION
Not much needs to be said on this point. This is a universal belief of all apostolic Churches.

ON PURGATORY
The Catholic dogma on Purgatory states only this:
  1. That there is a period of cleansing/purification/perfection for the soul after death;
  2. that the Church’s suffrage and prayers, especially the Sacrifice of the Mass, is of benefit to these souls for the sake of their cleansing/purification/perfection.
That is it. Nothing there that contradicts any Oriental (or Eastern) teaching on the matter. The problem comes when certain polemicists (on all sides of the issue) wish to impose particular Latin theologoumena on the dogma, and argue against the theologoumena as if they were the dogma.

ON INDULGENCES
The Catholic dogma on Indulgences states only this:
  1. That the Church has received from Christ the power to grant indulgences;
  2. That these indulgences are salutary for the faithful.
I’ll refer you to some old posts for further explanation:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=6280971&postcount=35
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=6280975&postcount=36

Reading the whole thread, which is only 4 pages, might be beneficial as well.

Brother Unworthyapostle (the member who originally asked me the question), I hope this has helped. If you have any other questions, feel free to ask.

PLEASE NOTE: I POSTED THIS IN RESPONSE TO A REQUEST. I UNDERSTAND THAT THERE ARE THOSE WHO MAY WANT TO DISCUSS SPECIFIC POINTS. IF YOU DO SO, I REQUEST YOU START A NEW THREAD, SINCE IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE TO KEEP TRACK ON THIS ONE THREAD ALL OF THE DIFFERENT ISSUES THAT THIS THREAD CAN CONCEIVABLY INITIATE.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
You always have the coolest, most informative posts. You rock!😃
 
I St. Gregory Palamas (who said Mary was she from whom Christ obtained flesh that was both “new and ours”) had no problem with the Immaculate Conception.
St Gregory did not have an IC Latin understanding. I believe he procalimed some type of generational purifaction–an understanding that is unique amongst the Fathers.
 
It should be noted that the Dogma of the IC refers not to her physical conception, but her spiritual conception
Mary was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin at the first moment of her animation, and sanctifying grace was given to her before sin could have taken effect in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm

Sounds like there is a physical aspect inherent to the doctrine. 🤷
This union with God is the same union we achieve at Baptism
Really?

The formal active essence of original sin was not removed from her soul, as it is removed from others by baptism; it was excluded, it never was in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm
 
mardukm,

Thanks for this excellent post and terrific insight into a Church which is still quite obscure to me. Thanks for lifting the veil some more, the more I discover about the whole of Christian tradition the more in awe I stand of it.
 
Mary was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin at the first moment of her animation, and sanctifying grace was given to her before sin could have taken effect in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm

Sounds like there is a physical aspect inherent to the doctrine. 🤷

Really?

The formal active essence of original sin was not removed from her soul, as it is removed from others by baptism; it was excluded, it never was in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm
The traditional Marian prayer, which expresses it well, and said each day by those in the Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary is worded like this:

V. Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit.
R. As it was in the beginning, is now and will be forever. Amen.
V. In Your Conception, O Virgin Mary, You were Immaculate.
R. Pray for us to the Father whose son, Jesus, you brought forth into the world.
Let us pray.
Father, you prepared the virgin Mary to be the worthy mother of your Son. You let her share beforehand in the salvation Christ would bring by his death, and kept her sinless from the first moment of her conception. Help us by her prayers to live in your presence without sin. We ask this in the name of Jesus the Lord.
R. Amen.
V. The Virgin Mary’s Immaculate Conception
R. Be our Health and our Protection.
 
Mary was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin at the first moment of her animation, and sanctifying grace was given to her before sin could have taken effect in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm

Sounds like there is a physical aspect inherent to the doctrine. 🤷
I don’t see the word physical in your first quote; where is the “sound” coming from?
Really?

The formal active essence of original sin was not removed from her soul, as it is removed from others by baptism; it was excluded, it never was in her soul.
newadvent.org/cathen/07674d.htm
Really. Not removed but excluded, but nevertheless leading to absence of the “formal active essence of original sin” from the soul.
 
I don’t see the word physical in your first quote;
So you also believe that the IC is purely spiritual? There was no physical aspect? Can you show where the doctrine states this?
 
Not removed but excluded, but nevertheless leading to absence of the “formal active essence of original sin” from the soul.
Yeah. Whatever. Mardukm said it was the same as our baptism, but New Advent says “not really”. 🤷
 
Dear brother Mickey,
Yeah. Whatever. Mardukm said it was the same as our baptism, but New Advent says “not really”. 🤷
I’m not sure what your point is exactly. It seems you are trying to say that I stated that the IC is a baptism.

Actually, what I stated was simply that the EFFECT of Baptism on us is the same EFFECT that the IC had on Mary - unity with God. I did not equate Baptism with the IC, but rather the EFFECT.

Specifically, the Graces effecting our unity with God (Original Holiness and Original Justice) that we receive at Baptism are the same Graces effecting Mary’s unity with God that she received at the first moment of her existence.

Though they have the same effect, the IC is not identical to Baptism. Baptism presupposes that the infusion of Grace is ameliorative (it takes something away - namely, Original Sin). The IC, on the other hand, teaches that the infusion of Grace was preventative.

Hope that helps.

I won’t be back for the next several days, At that time, I will provide a response to your other posts.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Thanks for your wonderful posts,** mardukm** :).

I want to comment to some of our Orthodox brethren here that our purpose should always be to seek unity. mardukm’s post is focused on helping us to find common ground. Some other people’s posts here seem focused on trying to ensure that we remain broken apart. If that is anyone’s purpose, it is contrary to the purpose of the present Orthodox patriarchs, of the Pope in Rome, and of Jesus at the Last Supper, Who prayed that we might all be one so that we might rise to perfection as one and “so that the world might believe.”

Let’s do whatever we can, without compromising sound doctrine, to explore what possibilities for unity exist. If our doctrines can come together on points where differences of language or theologoumena have historically divided us, praise be to God, let’s look and see what God can do for us!
 
When was it written?
Marians of the Immaculate Conception (MIC) were founded in Poland in 1673. I believe the prayer (chaplet) began with the founding as a part of their Rule. (The order spead especially in Poland, Lithuania, and Portugal.) Two martyred Marians (MIC) of the Russian Greek Catholic Church were Archimandrite Fabian Abrantovich and Archimandrite Andrei Tsikoto.

The interesting thing is that the Marians originally tried to get the rule of the Conceptionists approved as their own.
  1. Congregation of the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady (Conceptionists) were founded in 1484 at Toledo, Spain, by St. Beatrix de Silva, and wore the blue mantle. The popularity of the Conceptionist devotion lead eventually to:
  2. Congregation of the Oblates of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary was founded in the year 1583 by Venerable Ursula Benincasa, and recognized as part of the Theatines in 1633. They initiated the wearing of the Blue Scapular of the Immaculate Conception as a sign (approved in 1671) and the scapular is now also Marian due to a grant by the Theatines.
 
Yeah. Whatever. Mardukm said it was the same as our baptism, but New Advent says “not really”. 🤷
Nope. He said that the union effected was the same not that the process was the same.
 
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