Orthodox people say there’s nothing but the ecumenical councils? This sounds like another thing that is being thrown into the thread in order to pile up as many possible reasons why the Orthodox are wrong as an individual poster can think of and hopefully find other posters to agree with them, whether they correspond to reality or anything that’s actually being discussed or not. From a randomly-chosen
timeline of Church history from an Eastern Orthodox perspective, we find the following significant events happening after 787 AD (the date of the last council recognized so far by the EO):
- 988 Conversion of Rus’ (Russia) begins.
· 1054 The Great Schism occurs. Two major issues include Rome’s claim to a universal papal supremacy and her addition of the filioque clause to the Nicene Creed. The Photian Schism (880) further complicates the debate.
· 1066 Norman Conquest of Britain. Orthodox hierarchs are replaced with those loyal to Rome.
· 1095 The Crusades begun by the Roman Church. The Sack of Constantinople (1204) adds to the estrangement between East and West.
· 1333 St. Gregory Palamas defends the Orthodox practice of hesychast spirituality and the use of the Jesus prayer.
· 1453 Turks overrun Constantinople; Byzantine Empire ends.
· 1517 Martin Luther nails his 95 Theses to the door of the Roman Church in Wittenberg, starting the Protestant Reformation.
· 1529 Church of England begins pulling away from Rome.
· 1794 Missionaries arrive on Kodiak Island in Alaska; Orthodoxy introduced to North America.
· 1870 Papal Infallibility becomes Roman dogma.
· 1988 One thousand years of Orthodoxy in Russia, as Orthodox Church world-wide maintains fullness of the Apostolic Faith.
The timeline found at Orthodoxwiki, an Eastern Orthodox Wikipedia, is much more in-depth and contains hundreds of important events that occurred after the last council to be recognized by the EO which certainly shaped the way that church operates and relates to the world today (we’re talking major works by Gregory Palamas and many others, the conversion of Russia to Christianity, the consecration of the first Orthodox church in China, the first publication of the Philokalia, etc).