G
Ghosty
Guest
ChrisB: I’m impressed, you’ve really done your homework on this matter!
I’m glad you brought up St. Symeon’s work. I wanted to cite his statements on Original Sin earlier, but I couldn’t remember where exactly I had read them. I own a collection of his monastic Discourses in which he makes many similar statements, such as this one:
(From the Discourse on Repentance, section 10)
My biggest issue with many modern Eastern Orthodox theologians (such as Meyendorff) is not that they’re completely erroneous, because in fact much of what they say is true. My biggest problem is the one ChrisB mentions, namely that an artificial barrier has been erected between Byzantine Orthodox and Catholic (specifically Latin), and that the modern Eastern Orthodox theological approach simply isn’t found in history. That in itself wouldn’t be a major problem for me, since I do believe in the development of theological perspectives, but it becomes a problem when the claim is made that modern Eastern Orthodox theology is simply the non-developed Apostolic theology, unbroken and unchanged for millenia, and that modern Eastern Orthodox theology is simply that of the Fathers and Saints. This simply isn’t the case, though modern Eastern Orthodox theology isn’t necessarily opposed to them either, and I wouldn’t claim that it is. It’s simply a development, based on a particular time and perceived need for creating artificial distance between Latin and Byzantine thought, IMO.
If it were merely resourcement, it wouldn’t be much of a concern, but it is a very narrow and selective resourcement with an agenda that goes beyond simply teaching what was taught before.
Peace and God bless!
I’m glad you brought up St. Symeon’s work. I wanted to cite his statements on Original Sin earlier, but I couldn’t remember where exactly I had read them. I own a collection of his monastic Discourses in which he makes many similar statements, such as this one:
(From the Discourse on Repentance, section 10)
For those who don’t know St. Symeon the New Theologian, he was a prominent Byzantine monk and abbot at the turn of the first millenium.Because of him who had committed sin, we were sinners, because of the transgressor, we too were transgressors, because of the slave of sin, we ourselves became slaves of sin.
My biggest issue with many modern Eastern Orthodox theologians (such as Meyendorff) is not that they’re completely erroneous, because in fact much of what they say is true. My biggest problem is the one ChrisB mentions, namely that an artificial barrier has been erected between Byzantine Orthodox and Catholic (specifically Latin), and that the modern Eastern Orthodox theological approach simply isn’t found in history. That in itself wouldn’t be a major problem for me, since I do believe in the development of theological perspectives, but it becomes a problem when the claim is made that modern Eastern Orthodox theology is simply the non-developed Apostolic theology, unbroken and unchanged for millenia, and that modern Eastern Orthodox theology is simply that of the Fathers and Saints. This simply isn’t the case, though modern Eastern Orthodox theology isn’t necessarily opposed to them either, and I wouldn’t claim that it is. It’s simply a development, based on a particular time and perceived need for creating artificial distance between Latin and Byzantine thought, IMO.
If it were merely resourcement, it wouldn’t be much of a concern, but it is a very narrow and selective resourcement with an agenda that goes beyond simply teaching what was taught before.
Peace and God bless!