That’s more a matter of political correctness than anything else. Official Catholic documents make it clear that the Immaculate Conception, Papal Infallibility and UOJ are dogmas.
It’s definitely
not political correctness.
Immaculate Conception: It’s
far from a foregone conclusion that eastern Orthodox deny this. The dogma - which yes, is universally binding - was defined in theological terms relevant only to the vocabulary of western Christianity. It confuses the East more than anything else.
The day you hear it explicitly and definitively asserted in an Orthodox Divine Liturgy that the All-Holy Theotokos was conceived
without grace in her soul, is the day you can tell me that the Orthodox are in heresy for denying the Immaculate Conception.
Random Internet people
saying it’s false because they don’t understand the western vocabulary with which we Latins describe ancestral sin? That doesn’t count as denial.
Papal infallibility: I have yet to meet one eastern Orthodox who is willing to understand this correctly… I’m not saying they’re not out there, but until I speak with even one, their denial remains a miscommunication.
UOJ: What is that? I’m sorry, I confess I’ve never seen that acronym.
Since the passage of that recent Canon (I never remember the number) it’s been made clear that Eastern Catholics must hold to the same post-schism western dogmas that western Catholics must, such as papal infallibility, and I simply am not able to accept those as dogmas.
Are you sure? Properly understood, they make a lot of sense and are quite patristic. Concerning papal infallibility specifically, if you do a search for posts on the subject by poster
Mardukm, I think you’ll be happy you did…
Don’t even try to tell me that the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady and her glorious Assumption into Heaven, and accepting Papal Infallibility are suggestions according to the Church.
I wouldn’t dream of it. Of course they are not suggestions but rather universally binding dogmas.
I briefly addressed above why current Orthodox belief and worship simply does not convince the Catholic hierarchy that there is a
substantive denial of these dogmas…
The Orthodox Church may not be heretical on paper, but according to the Catholic Church’s definition (heretics accept some revealed Truth but not all), the Orthodox Church is technically in heresy. Schismatics according to the same source refuse to submit to the authority of the Holy Father, but accept all revealed Truths.
So the Catholic Church is lying? Official documents do not consider them to be in heresy, but
really they are? That is quite a… bold assertion. What, are we worried about their feelings or something?
And they’re not schismatics, because they’re not guilty of the schism; they didn’t cause it. They’re literally considered to be sister churches that are
in schism, but no living Orthodox is either a schismatic or a heretic. That’s not political correctness; it’s the truth.
Unless someone wants to explain to me why I (and all other Catholics here) would be refused the Sacraments if I refused to believe in the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, but why our Orthodox brothers and sisters wouldn’t be…
Because you’re a Latin Catholic; if you deny it, we presume you know what you’re talking about.
The Immaculate Conception was defined in an exclusively western way, so Christians of the Byzantine tradition often don’t even understand it. I’m not saying
it’s only binding on the Latin Church - far from it! It is a universally binding dogma of the Catholic Church. But the terminology with which it was defined is meaningless in the East, which has a very different way of understanding original sin/ancestral sin.
As much as it infuriates some Orthodox… we simply don’t believe them when they say they deny the Immaculate Conception. The sublime things they say about the Theotokos - even in their Divine Liturgy - simply belie that assertion.
Now do see the problem I’m having?
I do, and I
agree with you in principle. It’s just that you’re mistaken about the Orthodox. The only error in their beliefs is the belief that
we are heterodox (well, some of them have an inaccurate ecclesiology as well, but this is by no means universal throughout their church).
That, then, is or
should be the
only difference between an eastern Orthodox community and an eastern Catholic one: the latter realizes that the Latin Church
is fully orthodox, and so they realize how insane it is not to be in communion with the bishop of Rome.
As for the Canon Law, I have my own explanations for that to keep me freaking out about worrying about non-Catholics worthily receiving our Sacraments.
Are you willing to share them? I’m curious, because - as has been quoted here - canon law does indeed
explicitly say that it “does not object to the reception of Communion by Christians” of the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox Church, the Assyrian Church of the East, the Polish National Catholic Church, or any other church the CDF deems to be in a similar status regarding the legitimacy of their churches and Sacraments…
(although it also urges these Christians to respect the discipline of their own churches, of course)