S
Sirach2
Guest
Ok, Joe. I understand that non-catholics are pulling weight again for sola scriptura and want to put you through hoops to prove the issue of magisterial authority — per the bible.
I’ll give this some more thought.
Texts which were written in the tradition of the East but that the West arrogantly claims it can understand better than those who are from the same heritage as those who wrote them. Perhaps the Vatican can next release a statement telling the Chinese that they have been misunderstanding the Tao Te Ching for the past 2400 years. Be honest, you very well know that there is plenty of opposition to the IC which dates back to the late middle ages when the doctrine first started to be taught. The Orthodox reacted so late because the IC frankly was none of their business, so they real had no reason to speak of it outside of dialogue with the Vatican.Yes, I believe the Pope can do this even while the Church is in Schism because all Apostolic Churches have the same founts of Tradition.
Specifically, Vatican 1 states in Pastor Aeternus that the Pope can only defend and uphold Sacred Tradition in his decrees, not make any new doctrines.
Here’s a test case: The dogma of the IC. There is much debate over it now, but there was not a single voice from the EO opposing the definition until about 40 years after its promulgation. That’s waaaaay too long for me to believe that the modern EO opposition to the IC has any doctrinal merit. It just seems so artificial. In fact, this first opposition was not against the doctrine per se, but merely against the very act of dogmatizing it with papal authority (i.e., it seems the opposition was not to the IC, specifically, but to the V1 papal dogma). It was only later that doctrinal arguments came forth from the Orthodox side. Further, the very great majority of texts supporting the IC are from Eastern/Oriental Fathers in the first millenium. A lot of the opposition, too, has to do with a misunderstanding of what the IC teaches.
Comparing the Orthodox to the Jehova’s Witnesses or Seventh Day Adventists is just preposterous. The same could be said of Vatican II, which largely based its liturgical overhaul on the appeal to recovering something which had been lost in antiquity. Perhaps you should consider fortifying your glass house before throwing stones and taking pot shots at the Eastern Orthodox which you know are untrue by the teachings of your own Church which has the decency not to try and lump us together with JW’s and SDA’s.There’s a comparable situation on the issue of “universal vs. eucharistic ecclesiology” as discussed in this thread (forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=609722 - I would appreciate your (name removed by moderator)ut in that thread, btw). EO apologists admit that the early Church at least since St. Cyprian lived according to a “universal ecclesiology.” But they claim they want to recover the original ecclesiology, and essentially claim that the Gates of Hades prevailed against the Church for these many centuries regarding this issue (as many EO regard “universal ecclesiology” as a heresy). I’m always wary of those who claim that they are “recovering” something original, even if they are from one of the Orthodox Churches. It just puts them on the same boat as the JW’s, or SDA’s, or the numerous other Protestant groups that claim the same thing in order to justify their existence, as far as I’m concerned.
I think I understand. So saying that Peter had spoken through Leo was about the Petrine office but it was not an example of universal Papal jurisdiction + Ecumenical council?The same reason why Ephesus focused on the teachings of Cyril against Nestorius, and Nicaea focused on the objections of Athanasius against Arius. These were influential men whose teachings were Orthodox. Their rank in the Church had nothing to do with it (Athanasius was, after all, a deacon at the time he started opposing Arius).
I am in agreement with your interpretation of this episode in the Council. The idea of “papal jurisdiction” over a council is foreign to the High Petrine view - that idea is only present among Absolutist Petrine advocates. The authority of an Ecumenical Council is COLLEGIAL through and through, and it is never the Pope ALONE that determines its outcome. As the Official Relatio of Vatican 1 asserted, in an Ecumenical Council, ALL the bishops are judges, not just the Pope. This is a great point of contention between High Petrine advocates and Absolutist Petrine advocates, if you have kept up with the debates between the two groups in the Eastern Catholicism Forum. Rest assured that the official position of the Catholic Church is High Petrine. Many of us here in CAF (Orientals, Easterns, and Latins alike) are fighting for this standard in the Catholic Church against the Absolutist Petrine advocates (mostly Traditionalist Catholics and members of the schismatic SSPX).This too is taken out of context. Firstly, this sort of praise is not unique to the Tome of Leo. For example, this is what they say after Cyril’s second letter to Nestorius is read.
Furthermore, we know from the acts that the praise for Leo’s tome was not unanimous.
As we can see here, the reading of the tome was actually interrupted several times by the Illyrian and Palestinian bishops, who objected to certain language in the tome which seemed to them to be Nestorian. Each time, their objections are answered by other bishops showing how the Tome of Leo agrees with things which St. Cyril wrote. We can see however, that this is a far cry from the mentality of, “the pope wrote it, therefore it is Orthodox,” which a lot of Catholic apologists try to say was the mind of the council. They are actively defending the Orthodoxy of the Tome of Leo by showing that it agrees with previous writings which are taken to be sources of right faith (i.e., the Christological writings of St. Cyril).
Chalcedon is actually a rather poor argument for any sort of papal jurisdiction over a council. Aside from causing the rather devastating break with the Copts, Syriacs, and Ethiopians which lasts to this day, Chalcedon was called against the will of pope Leo, who nevertheless assented to the emperor’s wishes, and sent legates as he did to Ephesus II. At the council itself, the legates held considerable clout, being the representatives of Rome, but they were not running the council, nor did they have the authority to really demand that the senators act according to their instructions from the Archbishop of Rome, as we can see from the first excerpt which I provided.
That’s what I thought you meant.The rejection of the Tome came later with the rejection of Chalcedon by certain miaphysite Christians…
=mardukm;8541284]Yes, I believe the Pope can do this even while the Church is in Schism because all Apostolic Churches have the same founts of Tradition.
Was papal infallibility (ex cathedra) a new doctrine?Specifically, Vatican 1 states in Pastor Aeternus that the Pope can only defend and uphold Sacred Tradition in his decrees, not make any new doctrines.
The bolded is exactly what I mean. How can the pope make this kind of statement without a general council?Here’s a test case: The dogma of the IC. There is much debate over it now, but there was not a single voice from the EO opposing the definition until about 40 years after its promulgation. That’s waaaaay too long for me to believe that the modern EO opposition to the IC has any doctrinal merit. It just seems so artificial. **In fact, this first opposition was not against the doctrine per se, but merely against the very act of dogmatizing it with papal authority (i.e., it seems the opposition was not to the IC, specifically, but to the V1 papal dogma). ** It was only later that doctrinal arguments came forth from the Orthodox side. Further, the very great majority of texts supporting the IC are from Eastern/Oriental Fathers in the first millenium. A lot of the opposition, too, has to do with a misunderstanding of what the IC teaches.
I will check out the thread and get back to you. I am discouraged by the comparison or the EO to JW’s and SDA’s, though I don’t think you meant it as it came off sounding.There’s a comparable situation on the issue of “universal vs. eucharistic ecclesiology” as discussed in this thread (forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=609722 - I would appreciate your (name removed by moderator)ut in that thread, btw). EO apologists admit that the early Church at least since St. Cyprian lived according to a “universal ecclesiology.” But they claim they want to recover the original ecclesiology, and essentially claim that the Gates of Hades prevailed against the Church for these many centuries regarding this issue (as many EO regard “universal ecclesiology” as a heresy). I’m always wary of those who claim that they are “recovering” something original, even if they are from one of the Orthodox Churches. It just puts them on the same boat as the JW’s, or SDA’s, or the numerous other Protestant groups that claim the same thing in order to justify their existence, as far as I’m concerned.
And also with you.Blessings,
I’m sorry, but I do not believe that there was any theological separation between the East/West/Orient on the matter of the Theotokos in the early Middle Ages. The Westerns can claim ANY Father of the united Church as their own in these early times just as much as the Eastern Church.Texts which were written in the tradition of the East but that the West arrogantly claims it can understand better than those who are from the same heritage as those who wrote them. Perhaps the Vatican can next release a statement telling the Chinese that they have been misunderstanding the Tao Te Ching for the past 2400 years.
We already know the basis for the early opposition to the IC in the Latin Church - it was a certain school of thought that imagined that spiritual conception (i.e., ensoulment) did not occur at the same moment as physical conception, but at a later time. These opponents believed that Mary was sanctified at the time of her ensoulment, not at her physical conception. But the Church now unanimously believes that ensoulment occurs AT THE SAME TIME AS physical conception. In fact, the doctrine of the IC has nothing to do with the physical conception, but rather the spiritual conception (i.e. ,the ensoulment). So the basis of the early opposition was a mere technicality. The essence of the doctrine - that Mary was conceived SPIRITUALLY PURE (i…e, referring to her ensoulment) - has remained inviolably CONSTANT.Be honest, you very well know that there is plenty of opposition to the IC which dates back to the late middle ages when the doctrine first started to be taught.
The doctrinal basis for the modern Eastern Orthodox opposition (i.e., differences in the understanding of original sin) is artificial. There are no differences. The doctrine of the IC does not touch upon the physical consequences of original sin, but only the spiritual consequences. For EO to keep insisting that Mary had original sin because she died is a non-sequitur, because that is not the point of the doctrine of the IC. The doctrine of the IC only teaches that Mary was SPIRITUALLY pure at her conception. It does not claim to make any statement about her natural physical state.The Orthodox reacted so late because the IC frankly was none of their business, so they real had no reason to speak of it outside of dialogue with the Vatican.
I was not comparing Orthodox generally to the JW’s and SDA’s. I was comparing the argument of those SPECIFIC EO apologists to the standard argument of the JW’s and SDA’s. Forgive me if it appeared otherwise.Comparing the Orthodox to the Jehova’s Witnesses or Seventh Day Adventists is just preposterous. The same could be said of Vatican II, which largely based its liturgical overhaul on the appeal to recovering something which had been lost in antiquity. Perhaps you should consider fortifying your glass house before throwing stones and taking pot shots at the Eastern Orthodox which you know are untrue by the teachings of your own Church which has the decency not to try and lump us together with JW’s and SDA’s.
AFAIK, the only matter at V2 that was claimed to be something that needed to be recovered was Liturgical PRAXIS. That’s something wholly different from claiming that a HERETICAL TEACHING has existed in the Church for over a thousand years, and now claim that the original TEACHING must be recovered.Comparing the Orthodox to the Jehova’s Witnesses or Seventh Day Adventists is just preposterous. The same could be said of Vatican II, which largely based its liturgical overhaul on the appeal to recovering something which had been lost in antiquity. Perhaps you should consider fortifying your glass house before throwing stones and taking pot shots at the Eastern Orthodox which you know are untrue by the teachings of your own Church which has the decency not to try and lump us together with JW’s and SDA’s.
Naturally, as a Catholic, I would say “No.” To me, the dogma of papal infallibility is the natural doctrinal outcome (development, according to some) of Jesus’ UNIQUE promise to St. Peter in Matthew 16, combined with his UNIQUE prayer for the same in Luke 22.Was papal infallibility (ex cathedra) a new doctrine?
According to Catholic belief, the infallibility of the Church exists even outside the setting of the Ecumenical Council. Do you believe the same thing? If so, I fail to see the objection to an exercise of papal infallibility.The bolded is exactly what I mean. How can the pope make this kind of statement without a general council?
As a Lutheran, I honestly have no real problem with the IC except for the papal dogma and what we would consider its (IC) adiaphora nature.
I did not intend to make a general comparison. I was only criticizing the arguments put forth by those SPECIFIC EO apologists.I will check out the thread and get back to you. I am discouraged by the comparison or the EO to JW’s and SDA’s, though I don’t think you meant it as it came off sounding.
Well, not even a Petrine office, just a recognition of the connection of Rome to Peter. I’m not so sure that the Fathers really conceived of it that way.Hey Cavaradossi…
I think I understand. So saying that Peter had spoken through Leo was about the Petrine office but it was not an example of universal Papal jurisdiction + Ecumenical council?
Well, this is going to be somewhat lengthy, so here goes (be preparedIf just pure conciliarism then that council simply focused on Leo in the same capacity that Ephesus focused on the teachings of Cyril against Nestorius, and Nicaea focused on the objections of Athanasius against Arius? OK…
Yes, but it was a conciliar action which finally anathematized Nestorius.Nestorius"s dispute was directly with Cyril and Cyril sought validation from Pope Celestine I, who authorized Cyril to request that Nestorius recant his position or face excommunication - correct?
It’s only heretical if Cyprian was wrong. The two are not necessarily opposed (if I recall, John Zizioulas gets into this a little bit in being as communion). I don’t mean to be argumentative, but if you’re going to assert that the Eastern Orthodox are promoting an innovative Eucharistic Ecclesiology which is directly opposed the model of Universal Ecclesiology which was held for the past millennium—a high and serious charge to make—then I would expect that you have some sources in the form of official documents (either statements promulgated by synods or patriarchal encyclicals) to back up your claims that a) the Orthodox Church has consistently held to a model of Universal Ecclesiology in the past millennium and that b) within the last century, the innovation of Eucharistic Ecclesiology has become the official teaching of the Church. Furthermore, I would expect that you would be able to prove that the two are necessarily diametrically opposed (i.e., one must be heretical and the other must be correct). If you cannot do these things, then your claim is just speculation.Oh, I forgot to respond to this specific (underlined) portion of your post:
AFAIK, the only matter at V2 that was claimed to be something that needed to be recovered was Liturgical PRAXIS. That’s something wholly different from claiming that a HERETICAL TEACHING has existed in the Church for over a thousand years, and now claim that the original TEACHING must be recovered.
Blessings,
Marduk
I’ve not made any claims. I am repeating what I read from one of your apologists in that thread to which I made a link. The EO apologist is the one claiming that the early Church since Cyprian held to a “universal ecclesiology.” The EO apologist is the one claiming that “Eucharistic ecclesiology” is being recovered by the EOC. The EO apologist is the one that is saying that “universal ecclesiology” and “Eucharistic ecclesiology” are diametrically opposed.It’s only heretical if Cyprian was wrong. The two are not necessarily opposed (if I recall, John Zizioulas gets into this a little bit in being as communion). I don’t mean to be argumentative, but if you’re going to assert that the Eastern Orthodox are promoting an innovative Eucharistic Ecclesiology which is directly opposed the model of Universal Ecclesiology which was held for the past millennium—a high and serious charge to make—then I would expect that you have some sources in the form of official documents (either statements promulgated by synods or patriarchal encyclicals) to back up your claims that a) the Orthodox Church has consistently held to a model of Universal Ecclesiology in the past millennium and that b) within the last century, the innovation of Eucharistic Ecclesiology has become the official teaching of the Church. Furthermore, I would expect that you would be able to prove that the two are necessarily diametrically opposed (i.e., one must be heretical and the other must be correct). If you cannot do these things, then your claim is just speculation.
Yes. His opinion is his own. It would be best if we left what is official teaching to actual documents released by the Churches rather than apologists who may be of varying knowledge when it comes to discerning between actual church teaching and convenient opinions for converting people. It is my experience that apologists are only good at one thing, saying whatever is convenient in order to win.Dear brother Cavaradossi,
I’ve not made any claims. I am repeating what I read from one of your apologists in that thread to which I made a link. The EO apologist is the one claiming that the early Church since Cyprian held to a “universal ecclesiology.” The EO apologist is the one claiming that “Eucharistic ecclesiology” is being recovered by the EOC. The EO apologist is the one that is saying that “universal ecclesiology” and “Eucharistic ecclesiology” are diametrically opposed.
If you read the link, I have affirmed that the actual Catholic teaching is a COMBINATION of “universal and Eucharistic ecclesiology,” so I am certainly not the one claiming they are “diametrically opposed.” And if you’ve read any of my debates with Absolutist Petrine advocates, I have always pointed out that there are many EO who have a High Petrine conception of ecclesiology (i.e., a COMBINATION of “universal and Eucharistic ecclesiology”). To repeat, it is one of your own EO apologists that is making the false dichotomy between “universal ecclesiology” and “Eucharistic ecclesiology.” Would it be correct to say that you disagree with him?
Blessings,
Marduk
Yes. His opinion is his own. It would be best if we left what is official teaching to actual documents released by the Churches rather than apologists who may be of varying knowledge when it comes to discerning between actual church teaching and convenient opinions for converting people. It is my experience that apologists are only good at one thing, saying whatever is convenient in order to win.
IGNATIUS [A.D. 30–107.]Do you really think that jurisdictional boundaries had been laid out by 95 AD? …and that the office of an archbishop had been instituted at that time?
But hasn’t it been said that it’s only some EO? How can it then be proved that it’s official church teaching?b) within the last century, the innovation of Eucharistic Ecclesiology has become the official teaching of the Church.
Like I said, this was a civilization that called the librarian of the Library of Alexandria the ‘Universal Librarian’ and called the Patriarch of Alexandria ‘The Thirteenth Apostle’ and ‘The Judge of the Universe’. I think we have to take passages like that with a grain of salt, and look at the context of what’s happening around it.But hasn’t it been said that it’s only some EO? How can it then be proved that it’s official church teaching?
And also Cavaradossi, obviously I’m no expert about these early documents etc- But it appears to me that “X has spoken thus through Y” is plain in its implications that when Y speaks, it’s X that speaks, otherwise why say that all? Just say that Y has spoken!Saying that someone “speaks through someone else” or “has spoken through someone else” looks like the clearest description of a representative or an ambassador for someone else- Why do you say it does not mean this?
Peace!
Quick question: why say that Peter has spoken through Leo? Peter had been gone for some time so what’s the significance of them using his name?Well, not even a Petrine office, just a recognition of the connection of Rome to Peter. I’m not so sure that the Fathers really conceived of it that way.
Why the need for Cyril to even seek validation from Pope Celestine I, who then of course authorized Cyril to request that Nestorius recant his position or face excommunication? Why not just take matters into his own hands or better yet, refer the matter to an ecumenical council?Yes, but it was a conciliar action which finally anathematized Nestorius.