P
Phillip_Rolfes
Guest
I mean no offense to His Grace, but Bishop John hardly speaks on behalf of the entire Melkite Church. In fact, he is one of only two bishops who refused to sign the famous Melkite declaration of Faith:Bishop John A. Elya, will answer your questions
They accept the filioque as all doctrines the pope teaches, because they are 100% in union with the pope.
melkite.org/eparchy/bishop-john/how-do-the-popes-encyclicals-and-teachings-impact-on-the-melkites
making them a hundred per cent Catholic
melkite.org/eparchy/bishop-john/are-we-orthodox-united-with-
What about indulgences, & legalism? or the concept of purification of the soul after death? Or development ?.
melkite.org/eparchy/bishop-john/why-is-it-that-we-pray-for-the-dead-what-is-the-eastern-view-of-indulgences
excerpt from this last link (all emphasis mine)
I am often astonished at remarks that the legal nature of indulgences seem to prove that they are applicable only to the Latin Church and are thus foreign to our Eastern theology. Many people do not realize that the legal aspects of church life, including canon law, began in the East. The Emperor Justinian and the Byzantine court developed canons that are still the basis for many principles of law used in the church today.
[snip]
The idea of temporal punishment due to sin is not entirely foreign to our Eastern theology. In some Eastern cultures, the surviving family members of dead offer candy to passersby at a Memorial Service, especially on the Saturday of the Dead, praying that the person would offer forgiveness to the deceased for any wrongs, imagined or real. In the prayers of absolution said over the deceased, the Church prays for the dissolution of any bonds that would keep the deceased tied, in a temporal way, to the corpse or to an intermediate state of purification.
[snip]
Our Eastern Catholic Churches in full communion with the Apostolic See of Rome have experienced theological developments and growth. We, as we walk with the successor of Peter, are not bound to the forms of the ancient East in a slavish manner, but rather interpret our liturgy and forms of prayer through the eyes and insights of a church that is both alive and evolving. It is a grave error to keep ourselves blindly confined to the theological ideas of the first 10 centuries. My family has been Melkite Catholic for many generations. Are we to discard our Catholic beliefs because they find their origins in Catholic thought of the 20th century? We appreciate and value our heritage, but we are open to the development of new theological insights as they develop under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. We are a living Church.
“I believe everything that Orthodoxy teaches. I am in union with the Bishop of Rome as First Among Equals according to the limits recognized in the East during the First Millennium before the separation.”
Now I know that this statement is deliberately somewhat vague, but the fact that Bishop John refused to sign it should be indicative of his attitude in re the difference between Eastern and Western approaches to the Faith.