D
dzheremi
Guest
I’m beginning to see the problem here…More denial. Whatever. I didn’t read past the Nestorians. LMAO.
Unsubscribing from this thread now. Peace.
I’m beginning to see the problem here…More denial. Whatever. I didn’t read past the Nestorians. LMAO.
Okay, ha ha ha. (But I don’t really get it because I know nothing if the Anglican Church)It was meant less as a serious answer to your question than a light-hearted response to the idea that Catholics are disunited.![]()
The Catechism of the Catholic Church provide insight into this topic. ** I. THE CHURCH IS ONE **
** “The sacred mystery of the Church’s unity” (**Unitatis redintegratio 2)
813 The Church is one because of her source: "the highest exemplar and source of this mystery is the unity, in the Trinity of Persons, of one God, the Father and the Son in the Holy Spirit."259 The Church is one because of her founder: for "the Word made flesh, the prince of peace, reconciled all men to God by the cross, . . . restoring the unity of all in one people and one body."260 The Church is one because of her “soul”: "It is the Holy Spirit, dwelling in those who believe and pervading and ruling over the entire Church, who brings about that wonderful communion of the faithful and joins them together so intimately in Christ that he is the principle of the Church’s unity."261 Unity is of the essence of the Church:What an astonishing mystery! There is one Father of the universe, one Logos of the universe, and also one Holy Spirit, everywhere one and the same; there is also one virgin become mother, and I should like to call her "Church."262259 Unitatis redintegratio 2 § 5.
814 From the beginning, this one Church has been marked by a great *diversity *which comes from both the variety of God’s gifts and the diversity of those who receive them. Within the unity of the People of God, a multiplicity of peoples and cultures is gathered together. Among the Church’s members, there are different gifts, offices, conditions, and ways of life. "Holding a rightful place in the communion of the Church there are also particular Churches that retain their own traditions."263 The great richness of such diversity is not opposed to the Church’s unity. Yet sin and the burden of its consequences constantly threaten the gift of unity. And so the Apostle has to exhort Christians to "maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace."264
815 What are these bonds of unity? Above all, charity "binds everything together in perfect harmony."265 But the unity of the pilgrim Church is also assured by visible bonds of communion:
- profession of one faith received from the Apostles;
- common celebration of divine worship, especially of the sacraments;
- apostolic succession through the sacrament of Holy Orders, maintaining the fraternal concord of God’s family.266
816 "The sole Church of Christ [is that] which our Savior, after his Resurrection, entrusted to Peter’s pastoral care, commissioning him and the other apostles to extend and rule it. . . . This Church, constituted and organized as a society in the present world, subsists in (subsistit in) the Catholic Church, which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the bishops in communion with him."267 The Second Vatican Council’s Decree on Ecumenism explains: "For it is through Christ’s Catholic Church alone, which is the universal help toward salvation, that the fullness of the means of salvation can be obtained. It was to the apostolic college alone, of which Peter is the head, that we believe that our Lord entrusted all the blessings of the New Covenant, in order to establish on earth the one Body of Christ into which all those should be fully incorporated who belong in any way to the People of God."268
260 Gaudium et spes 78 § 3.
261 Unitatis redintegratio 2 § 2.
262 St. Clement Of Alexandria, Pæd. 1,6,42G 8,300.
263 Lumen gentium 13 § 2.
264 Eph 4:3.
265 Col 3:14.
266 Cf. Unitatis redintegratio 2; Lumen gentium 14; CIC, can. 205.
267 Lumen gentium 8 § 2.
268 Unitatis redintegratio 3 § 5.
More denial. Whatever. I didn’t read past the Nestorians. LMAO.
Look I know Orthodox are fond of their geographic and
ethnic ties. Your attempt to smear the priest is just silly.
A Carmelite trained in educated in Rome who happens
to be of the Syro Malabar rite is not going to be affected
by your claims of Nestoreans LMAO!!!
Wow. If you have to reach that far I can only say
hey I’m sorry you are trying to constantly undermine
something Christ put into practice.
Reality Chrust wanted His Gospel preached around the
world to everyone and evangelizing outside their own
limited spheres is just not what the Orthodox are famous
for.
Different liturgies are used in the various traditions, those Catholic churches deriving from Antioch, Alexandria, Constantinople, Rome, Cilicia, and Selucia-Ctesiphon. What is necessary to make present the Body and Blood of Our Lord is present each every Liturgy that has a consecration.Great answer. I have trouble with the bullet points in paragraph 815 (except the last). The Faith is different among some of the Catholic Churches. The Liturgy is also totally different as are the Sacraments in some of the different Catholic Churches.
Not addressed in these paragraphs is how even different the theology about God Himself in the Catholic Churches.
How does the Catholic Church see the Faith, Liturgy & Sacraments the same?
Denial of all things I see. Along with rudeness.
That’s a form of unity I have found with the orthodox. Kudos
to your unity of denial.
Agreed.Well, no, actually. The canons from the Council of Sardica were only confirmed explicitly at Trullo, and your Church does not recognize the authority of that council, as far as I know. The others you mention are all implicit rather than explicit.
.Also, canonical commentators interpreted the canons of Sardica as applying only to the West (though the truth is that they were likely forgeries, which is why there are very few occasions when they were appealed to successfully in the century coming immediately after the council of Sardica)
I think we discussed this before. We agree with the basic definition (regarding the election of the head bishop). But we don’t agree that this is ALL that “autocephaly” entails.How do you define autocephalous,
I didn’t say it was not a good principle of governance. The concept of patriarchy is a patristic concept and thus wholesome, good and orthodox. It is simply that I believe its excessive multiplication by the EOC is not conducive in the least to the unity of the Church as a whole.and why do you seem to believe it not to be a good principle of governance?
That is true also, but as St. Cyprian noted most powerfully, the preservation of the purity of Faith is to ensure the unity of the one flock of Christ.Isn’t the purpose of quashing heresy to ensure the unity of the Church?
The Council of Sardica acknowledged that the Bishop of Rome is the highest appellate court in the Church.In Catholic Canon law, the term “immediate” primarily means that the jurisdiction is of divine origin, and the term “ordinary” simply means “inherent.” Those terms have nothing to do with the regular exercise of that jurisdiction. So this is an invalid criticism. The appellate nature of the primacy is indicated clearly in our canon laws, since it is only to be exercised according to the needs of the Church. There are certain Catholics who believe that the Pope can unilaterally impose things on the Church, but they are wrong. I often debate with these Catholic “Absolutist Petrine” advocates about their errors regarding the papacy. Unfortunately, many non-Catholics believe that these Absolutist Petrine advocates are representing the actual Catholic teaching on the papacy, but they are not.Even if that is correct, under Roman dogmatic ecclesiology since Vatican I the Pope has much more than the highest appellate authority, he has “immediate and ordinary jurisdiction” over the whole Church. That is quite a different matter.
I believe the issue of nationalism has nothing to do with nationalistic spirit, but more to do with creating patriarchates along national lines. Since these patriarchates are “autocephalous,” it has a greater danger of disuniting the Church.It can seem that way, I admit. What "non-"Catholics often assume is that our adherence to the papacy is an end in and of itself. That is not true at all. Our adherence is to the Faith first and foremost. Catholics are not obligated to follow any Pope into heresy or immorality.That seems to mean that in your view unity must ultimately be maintained by a one office “at the top” who imposes that unity by virtue of its supreme authority. I don’t know that unity in the Church can ultimately be maintained that way
Blessings,
Marduk
P.S. Please take care to exclude your own comments from the “QUOTE” feature. Your comments will disappear if a poster replies to you through the “quote” button on the lower right hand corner, and it is tedious to cut and paste.![]()
A great explanation of my quip, you mean? Well, I will give you a really poor one.Okay, ha ha ha. (But I don’t really get it because I know nothing if the Anglican Church)
I really do what a real answer though. Perhaps I’ll be able to see it differently after a really great explanation?
It’s funny that this item is in here, as in seeing this entry, I was going to post a comment that would specifically relate to the Anglicans, rather than more directly to the Orthodox, but perhaps be worthy of consideration in any event.A great explanation of my quip, you mean? Well, I will give you a really poor one.Anglicans (especially those who are ex-RC) generally don’t look at the Roman Communion and say “Boy, they’re really disunited.” More like “Boy, that uniformity must be stifling!” (Anglican posters are welcome to say I’m wrong of course.
)
Well said, sister!!!I absolutely agree that the central final authority in the Catholic Church is a good thing.
But…
The Pope does not equal the Magesterium. The Magesterium of the Catholic Church consists of the Pope and the Bishops in Communion with him. They cannot be separated and the Pope turned into an autonomous ruler.
The Orthodox Churches have survived quite well for just as long as the Catholic Church has, while lacking our central authority. Certainly, they struggle with many issues that could be more easily resolved if they had a central authority, but their lack of such has certainly not caused permanent damage to their communion.
The Catholic position is not that the organizational/juridical unity is an end in and of itself. The Catholic position is that one cannot separate the Faith from that organizational/juridical unity. I admit that this is different from your own conception that dichotomizes the two.
- Fr. Casper and you see unity as oragnization/juridical unity. That is important, but that is not the essence of unity, in the context of the Church. The essence of unity is unity of faith; the sharing of the Apostolic Faith.
Someone can confirm or correct this, but I believe the Cardinal was speaking officially in his capacity as Prefect for the CDF. As such, he was speaking for the Pope (HH JP2 of thrice-blessed memory), not himself. I disagree with both you and Steveb that the Orthodox Churches are doing nothing to respond to it. I believe the various colloquies are evidence of that response. It may not be moving as quickly as we might like, however.
- I think you are referring to a statement by Cardinal Ratzinger before he became Pope Benedict. I thought it was a very hopeful statement at the time. However, I am not aware it was ever made a formal proposal to the Orthodox Church. I discussed this with fellow Romna Catholics at the time (I was RC then) and their take was that it was an off-hand statement which had no official status. They generally pooh-poohed it. So I don’t think you can blame Orthodox prelates for not taking it as a formal overture. If it is ever made a formal proposal, I would expect it to be taken very seriously.
I don’t believe Cardinal Kaspar was wrong on the point he was making. There is in fact no organizational/administrative unity within Orthodoxy. There is a unity of Faith, but no organizational/administrative unity. I don’t think any Orthodox can deny this. I do not understand how any Orthodox can object to what Cardinal Kaspar stated, given the focus by EO of “autocephalous Churches.” I don’t believe he was referring to “Church” in the sense of the mystical body, but “Church” in the sense of an administrative body. I think you would agree this is what he meant. On the other hand, I believe it would be an unjustified extrapolation to think that Cardinal Kaspar did not understand that the EO are indeed united in Faith, and in that particular sense, are indeed one Church (an unjustified extrapolation that I have heard both Orthodox AND Catholics claim).No, nothing has changed: Cardinal Kasper is still wrong.
A great explanation of my quip, you mean? Well, I will give you a really poor one.Anglicans (especially those who are ex-RC) generally don’t look at the Roman Communion and say “Boy, they’re really disunited.” More like “Boy, that uniformity must be stifling!” (Anglican posters are welcome to say I’m wrong of course.
)
We believe that is to our advantage. As stated, this concept of different distinct Traditions within one Church is perhaps harder for you to conceive as an EO, than, say, an OO. You need to live the experience as Catholics or Orientals in order to understand and appreciate that this fact you present is not an obstacle to unity.Catholic Church is made up of what 27 different churches & rites,
Here can be applied the principle mentioned above about trying to get at the Truth of what the expressions mean. If you ask what Latin Catholic mean when they use filioque in the Creed, they will say, “*We believe the Divine Essence flows from the Father through the Son; we do not mean or say that the Divine Essence or the Hypostasis originates from the Father and the Son.” What they believe and intend to teach by using filioque is wholly Orthodox.various creeds (at least 2 conflicting)
Again, this is coming from your own experience as an EO where there is one basic Liturgical Tradition. It is a different experience for OO (where there are at least three distinct basic Rites) and Catholics (more than three - don’t know the exact number).multiple liturgies,
I admit this leaves me puzzled, coming from an EO.multiple patriarchs
Actually, each sui juris Church has its own unique set of particular laws, just like in the Orthodox Churches. I’m not sure why this is an issue to you.at least 2 sets of Canon Law
There are no differing beliefs (i.e., dogmas) about the Truth in the Catholic Church. The differences are in the expressions of and approaches to the common Truth we all believe as Catholics. We have ONE Faith, but different expressions of that ONE Faith.differing beliefs
Answered above. We don’t impose our own theological presuppositions on other Churches (which is uniatism) to judge another’s theology. We approach unity by understanding what the other is really trying to say through that theology. Catholics judge according to what is believed about God’s Truth, not the ultimately inadequate human expression of God’s’ Truth.even about the Trinity (Filioque vs. no Filioque
.& Christ’s 2 Natures vs. 1 Nature)
in the Faith, which is explicitly evinced in the unity/communion of our bishops.Where is the unity?
That’s a caricature of the Catholic Church’s teaching. The unity is not in the person of the Pope, but in the person of St. Peter, as St. Cyprian taught, and as the all the Fathers testify. We remain united to the Pope not because he is the Pope per se, but because we believe he faithfully represents the Chair of Peter. This is why the Ecumenical Councils have proclaimed, “Peter has spoken through Pope…” It is to St. Peter and his Chair to whom we are aligned.If the unity is in the person of the Pope,
There is unity in the ideal. There is nothing wrong with the LIturgical standards of the Latin Catholic Church. As you know, abuses occur in Liturgy, but they are recognized as abuses precisely because there is a unified standard to which we can point. As far as “chaos” in other areas, I know of none that cannot be gauged by reference to a unified standard.what’s the point of having a Pope who allows complete chaos as long as you pledge allegience to him?
CONT’d
I admit this leaves me puzzled, coming from an EO.
Actually, each sui juris Church has its own unique set of particular laws, just like in the Orthodox Churches. I’m not sure why this is an issue to you.
There are no differing beliefs (i.e., dogmas) about the Truth in the Catholic Church. The differences are in the expressions of and approaches to the common Truth we all believe as Catholics. We have ONE Faith, but different expressions of that ONE Faith.
Answered above. We don’t impose our own theological presuppositions on other Churches (which is uniatism) to judge another’s theology. We approach unity by understanding what the other is really trying to say through that theology. Catholics judge according to what is believed about God’s Truth, not the ultimately inadequate human expression of God’s’ Truth.
.
Another example of the above principle. The common bond that unites us is the belief that Jesus Christ has a divine and human nature united, unmixed, unconfused, etc. “1 nature” and “2 natures” are different theological expressions that were used to express THIS SAME BASIC TRUTH that ALL Catholics believe.
As previously mentioned, the examples of the above principle can be multiplied. Please feel free to ask if you have questions about any other seeming “conflicts in belief.”
in the Faith, which is explicitly evinced in the unity/communion of our bishops.
That’s a caricature of the Catholic Church’s teaching. The unity is not in the person of the Pope, but in the person of St. Peter, as St. Cyprian taught, and as the all the Fathers testify. We remain united to the Pope not because he is the Pope per se, but because we believe he faithfully represents the Chair of Peter. This is why the Ecumenical Councils have proclaimed, “Peter has spoken through Pope…” It is to St. Peter and his Chair to whom we are aligned.
There is unity in the ideal. There is nothing wrong with the LIturgical standards of the Latin Catholic Church. As you know, abuses occur in Liturgy, but they are recognized as abuses precisely because there is a unified standard to which we can point. As far as “chaos” in other areas, I know of none that cannot be gauged by reference to a unified standard.
I hope the above points have helped. If you have any other questions, please ask.
Blessings,
Marduk