M
MariaG
Guest
If you reread my post, I did in fact mention that the Eastern churhces will refer to Roman Church or Roman Catholic in order to differentiate the RiteMy point was not directed towards Protestant-Catholic relations, as the Protestants have obviously used the term in a negative standpoint, rather, they where about Eastern Christian relations. I was specifically referencing the term “Roman Church” rather than “Roman Catholic” which is used to distinguish within the Catholic Church. I can give you one of the earliest sources from Christian history, the Second Council of Nicea, written by Pope Hadrian himself.
“If you persevere in that orthodox Faith in which you have begun, and the sacred and venerable images be by your means erected again in those parts, as by the lord, the Emperor Constantine of pious memory, and the blessed Helen, who promulgated the orthodox Faith, and exalted the holy **Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church **your spiritual mother, and with the other orthodox Emperors venerated it as the head of all Churches, so will your Clemency, that is protected of God, receive the name of another Constantine, and another Helen, through whom at the beginning the holy Catholic and Apostolic Church derived strength, and like whom your own imperial”
Granted, this could be referred to as the “rite” statement, yet this is using the traditional “Catholic and Apostolic” title and is in reference to the Church herself. A rite by definition is an order of service for celebrating a particular sacrament(s) which is not being used here. Semantics, but nonetheless present.
Despite this, your objections to what I have said are off from my Eastern point. I completely agree with you in regards to the Protestant factor.
God Bless.
I also found through an engine search the words you quoted. Due to the length of the article, I could not find the exact words. could you please tell me exactly where those are found (link below). The first paragraph are the words of the Emperor to the Pope. I cannot seem to find the words of the pope responding back using these words, although as I said previously, it will be used on occassion to distinguish between different rites in the Church.
This unfortunately, as you have said, is not how it is used by non-Catholics but rather is done usually to refer to the Catholic Church as a whole indiscriminate of the rite. These people do not want to use the name that the whole Catholic Church uses for herself. This is a significant difference.
Second Council of Nicaea
God Bless,
Maria