Did the Orthodox Churches ever submit to the Pope's Authority?

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You were suggesting that, because you recite the Creed, it automatically means you are the true Church. The point was made, so do Protestants
Yes. And we know that the Orthodox Church which is 2000 years old with apostolic succession recites the creed…and she is orthodox…and she is catholic.

Now if you want to talk about some protestantization analogies…I have tons of them relating to my long time in the Roman Catholic Church…but I don’t think you want to talk about that. 😉
 
That’s in response to my admission I didn’t know the author of something I posted. I also said the post speaks for itself, which it does.
No it doesn’t. You posted something without citation…and I am fairly certain it does not have patristioc origin. 😉
 
Yes. And we know that the Orthodox Church which is 2000 years old with apostolic succession recites the creed…and she is orthodox…and she is catholic.

Now if you want to talk about some protestantization analogies…I have tons of them relating to my long time in the Roman Catholic Church…but I don’t think you want to talk about that. 😉
Agreed. Same with the Catholic Church - right?
 
Here is a better question. Why did it take more than 1800 years for Rome to define this “infallibility?”
I’m not getting into this fray, but I have to say that exact question recurs to me constantly. No, I’m not going to elucidate on that for a variety of reasons, but I will make a reference to something [post=10183508] I posted[/post] recently in another thread. 😉
 
Here is a better question. Why did it take more than 1800 years for Rome to define this “infallibility?”
Dooesn’t the church to which you belong believe the same thing, minus the papacy; just the ecumenical councils?

Infallibility is not the absence of sin. Nor is it a charism that belongs only to the pope. Indeed, infallibility also belongs to the body of bishops as a whole, when, in doctrinal unity with the pope, they solemnly teach a doctrine as true. We have this from Jesus himself, who promised the apostles and their successors the bishops, the magisterium of the Church: “He who hears you hears me” (Luke 10:16), and “Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven” (Matt. 18:18).
 
Which is why quotes from Saints etc is a futile path.
Indeed. And I said that about 100 posts ago. But your compadres insisted on attempting to prove that somehow the supreme infallible papacy of the ultramontanists was taught by the ECF’s. 🤷
 
Dooesn’t the church to which you belong believe the same thing
Sorry. My Church does not teach that the bishop of Rome is supreme…nor infallible (ex-cathedra). This was an innovation that was championed by the ultramontanists and promulgated by Pius IX in1870. And so this brings us back to the original question. Did the Orthodox Church ever submit to the Pope?

No.
 
I’m not getting into this fray, but I have to say that exact question recurs to me constantly. No, I’m not going to elucidate on that for a variety of reasons, but I will make a reference to something [post=10183508] I posted[/post] recently in another thread. 😉
I agree with you malphono. It is very disturbing. It was disturbing to me while in communion with Rome…and it is still disturbing to me.

And I am very close to getting out of this fray myself. I have been in this fray too many times. 😃

It start to get very snarky. 😦
 
Exactly…

Does a Prime Minister (Papa with Primacy) function alone ?
And, is he not elected for a term …and holds court with other ministers ?
And, do they not have a King & Queen ?

I’m not saying England’s got it all right. But, at least they are attempting to imitate what they read in scripture, and what’s ingrained in their earliest roots.

Let East & West reunify at last…and prepare the way for our KING’s return.
I think that the Church is more akin to a parliamentary federation such as Canada. I illustrated from the Catechism in earlier posts in this thread that while the Pope is Vicar of Christ throughout the Church Universal, each bishop is also a true vicar of Christ as head of his particular church, and not a mere vicar of the pope. In Canada, the Prime Minister, as head of the federal government, presides over the Queen’s Canadian ministry and exercises executive power throughout Canada. In each province, the Premier is not a deputy of the federal Prime Minister, but also a First Minister of the Queen in his or her own right, and exercises executive power throughout his or her province. The federal prime minister has a greater scope of authority that the provincial premiers, but both receive their mandate and authority directly from the same monarch… for the good of the nation, the Prime Minister can institute certain federal polices, but he won’t interfere in the day-to-day policies of the provincial Premiers in matters of health care, education, or other areas of provincial responsibility…the same goes for the Pope and bishops.
 
I agree with you malphono. It is very disturbing. It was disturbing to me while in communion with Rome…and it is still disturbing to me.

And I am very close to getting out of this fray myself. I have been in this fray too many times. 😃

It start to get very snarky. 😦
To be fair you have been a little snarky at times, as well. LOL…🙂
 
Sorry. My Church does not teach that the bishop of Rome is supreme…nor infallible (ex-cathedra)…
No.
Agreed. As you know I never said that.🤷 Let’s try it again; I will rephrase it:

Doesn’t the church to which you belong believe the same thing, minus the papacy; just the ecumenical councils, i.e. infallibility belongs to the body of bishops as a whole?
 
Here is a better question. Why did it take more than 1800 years for Rome to define this “infallibility?”
Why did it take 300 years for the Church to define the Trinity? 300 years is a long time to “put off” defining such a fundamental mystery of the Christian faith. I don’t think this is a valid argument. The Church moves very slowly and has only gradually defined and articulated the deposit of faith entrusted to the saints. For a Catholic, Our Lord already alluded to infallibility when He promised St. Peter that He, the Divine Savior, had prayed that Peter’s faith would not fail. A number of Fathers, East and West, speak of the indefectibility of the faith of Peter for the prayer of the Savior cannot be without fruit. St. Irenaeus alerady tells us in the second century that Rome is the Church with which all of the churches must agree. Papal infallibility is not a central tenant of the faith - it is rarely, rarely, rarely, rarely, rarely exercised… there were other far more important dogmas to sort out in previous centuries. Only two dogmas have been infallibly defined by a pope (arguably a couple of others - but I think every other case people point to as an exercise of papal infallibility was simply a reiteration of dogmas defined by councils)…the vast majority of the Church’s dozens of “infallibly” defined dogmas were promulgated by ecumencial councils - the bishops and pope acting in concert - which is the normative means through which the Church exercises her infallibility.
 
Why did it take 300 years for the Church to define the Trinity?
The Trinity is plainly stated in Scripture…especially in Christ’s Baptism and Transfiguration.

Supreme/infallible pontiff in Rome is stated no where and took 1800 years.
 
This thread at times has been entertaining, enlightening and exasperating. I have to say the Orthodox posters have exhibited the patience of saints here, I wish I could say the same for all of the Catholic posters.

Just reading the thread though has given me much clarity as to where I am and where I should be.
 
The Trinity is plainly stated in Scripture…especially in Christ’s Baptism and Transfiguration.

Supreme/infallible pontiff in Rome is stated no where and took 1800 years.
OK. If you don’t mind me asking, why, in your opinion, did it take so long to officially define?🙂
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mickey
Here is a better question. Why did it take more than 1800 years for Rome to define this “infallibility?”

Ehow is pretty cool; the following sums it up fairly well:

ehow.com/info_8079708_inf…ings-pope.html

That didn’t really help me. Certainly there was “precedent” in the western church for papal sumpremacy and infallibility, in the sense it had been asserted before (usually by the papacy). But how could such a central principle of authority have taken 1800 years to be defined? As late as the 1400s “conciliarism”, the theory that a council was superior to the Pope in teaching authority, was alive and well in the west.
 
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