J
johnnykins
Guest
Actually there is no single standard applied by the Orthodox in determinig which councils are or are not ecumenical - it’s, in reality, a form of voluntarism. If the acceptance by the “whole church” is the touchstone - Chalcedon is certainly problematic, n’est-ce pas?Depends on who you talk to; Im presuming that the Orthodox would not view it as such, but Catholics such as myself, in fact, would. I believe this was talked about quite a bit earlier in this thread. As my understanding goes, the EO believe that the whole church, which the laity is certainly apart of, must accept the council for it to be Ecumenical. A belief that can not be backed by historical reality in the church of the first millenium.
God bless,
JJR
If the first millennium is the touchstone, one must wonder why and how the post-millennial Church lost the pre-millennial power and authority to define beliefs.