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Fone_Bone_2001
Guest
To be fair, you should distinguish between liturgical abuses and things you just don’t like, gurneyhalleck. I personally don’t hold hands during the Lord’s Prayer, and I prefer to receive Holy Communion on the tongue, but that said, communion in the hand is not an abuse in the Latin Church; it’s lawful. And the rubrics for Mass do not prescribe a posture for the laity/congregation during the Lord’s Prayer, so if people want to hold hands, there’s no rule prohibiting it.I’m 36 years old, also Vatican II Catholic. Bummer eh? LOL…I grew up with the strumming kumbaya guitars and people coming inside in flip-flops and singing “Amazing Grace.” Every time to this day when I see all the holding hands during the Our Father, the communion in the hand, the strummy guitars, the extraordinary ministers trying “bless” my kids, all the abuse, sheesh, I want to go nuts! My old Anglican parish was more catholic than the Catholic ones in my area!!?
I’d like to know this too. Thus far I’ve basically been told that the East (including eastern Catholics) generally has no problem with the idea that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father through the Son. I suppose they’re willing to be in union with a church that uses the filioque - the Latin Church - because they trust us Latins that what we mean by “filioque” really indicates more of a “per filium” idea.I always thought that the recitation or omission of the filioque was a matter of tradition. The Roman rite recites the filioque in keeping with its Western tradition while the Eastern rites omit the filioque in keeping with its Eastern traditions, without either traditions necessary being heretical. My question, though, is what do eastern Catholics actually believe concerning the Filioque, as latin Catholics understand it? Do they consider it to be heretical or an acceptable expression of the faith?
Am I correct? I await the response of eastern Catholics to confirm or correct this impression of mine.
Question-begging, smad. He doesn’t need a “dispensation” if the number of ecumenical councils is not an authoritative, infallible teaching. He claims it’s not. If you disagree, you’d better find a binding, dogmatic pronouncement that definitively sets the number at 21.Nobody could have dispensed you from believing in all of the Ecumenical Councils brother Marduk.
Why not? As a Latin Catholic, my view is that the Creed is fully orthodox with or without it. So what difference does it really make from our side of the fence? The Catholic Church encompasses both unity and diversity.While I really have no problem whatsoever with the filioque, I agree with the point you make. If the Catholic Church is going to be in union with these Orthodox, they should be expected to recite the filioque in the Creed to be consistent. If it was worth putting in there in the first place and having a theological war with the East to begin with, why now are they so easily letting Byzantine Catholics, etc. recite it without the filioque?Either drop it in East and West within Catholicism or force it upon both, but not have a half and half?
I don’t see the differences on salvation, atonement, original sin, small-t traditions, or even the filioque as dogmatically incompatible. But the notion that they are dogmatically incompatible is essentially the eastern Orthodox view, I admit. It seems, though, that eastern Catholics agree with the Latin Church that their different understandings are valid expressions of the same faith we all profess. Otherwise we wouldn’t be in union.I find the whole Orthodox in communion with Rome phenomenon tough to ponder. The vast divide I see in the way East and West views salvation, atonement, original sin, traditions, filioque, just about everything…makes me wonder how this union of two worlds that seem so divergent even works? I’m afraid if I had those Orthodox beliefs (which I sure don’t) I would head for the Orthodox Church, not Eastern Catholicism…
That makes sense and answers my previous question. Thanks!The Melkite Priest from Saint Elias Church in San Jose had this to say about the Filioque.
Quote:
The Church in the West, starting in Spain in the 8th century, added “and the Son” to the Creed to combat heresy. The Western Church did this because the word for “proceeds” has a different meaning in Latin from in Greek. In Latin it emphasizes communion, but in Greek it emphasizes origin. Both the Byzantine East and the Latin West agree that the only origin of the Spirit is the Father, and that the Spirit is in communion with the Father and the Son. So we do not need to add anything to the Creed, and we now omit what was added under the influence of the Latins.
Thank you too; this makes sense to me.The Filioque understood as the sending of the Spirit into the world by BOTH the Father and the Son is accepted by both sides as dogma, period.
The West has understood the “temporal procession” of the Spirit into the world after the Ascension of Christ as evidence/proof that there is a similar procession of the Spirit in terms of the inner Life of the Trinity. The East has always disagreed with this however.
IF by the Filioque it is meant that there are two Sources of the Spirit in the Trinity - then both the RC and Orthodox Churches condemn this as HERESY. The Roman Catholic Church teaches that the Spirit proceeds ACTIVELY from the Father but PASSIVELY from the Son. To say otherwise is heresy from the RC POV, let alone the Orthodox POV.