S
SteveVH
Guest
Immaculate reception.Is that a Hail Mary?
I don’t usually get sports references, so…
Immaculate reception.Is that a Hail Mary?
I don’t usually get sports references, so…
Hahaha!Immaculate reception.![]()
And he can’t touch the Church on Earth. Christ said so.Hey brother hope you are doing well. :thumbsup:I’m doing OK.The only thing that confuses me is the idea that the gates of hell could prevail against the church triumphant, if in fact the church triumphant** is heaven**? The devil can’t touch anyone in heaven, I guess is my point. Is the church triumphant comprised of saints in heaven? That’s my typical take on it; I could be wrong?
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Those who returned did so on their own free will and knew WHY they returned.Definitely. But it was not, and is not necessary to force them to give up what they received from their Apostles, their culture, theological approaches, language, and liturgy,
didn’t you read the link from Bp John the Melkite bishop that I gave you?Apparently you believe there are no problems and difficulties among those who have given the pledge to the successor of Peter.
Here’s something for your data base, so that you do NOT bring up that incident again like you did. Teach your friends the whole story. Don’t just put this information in your data base for later reading. Read it NOW and teach your non Catholic friends the rest of the storyAnd as far as thing having happened a long time ago, it is true. The East is still smarting from the Roman Crusades sacking Constantinople.
Those who returned did so on their own free will and knew WHY they returned.
didn’t you read the link from Bp John the Melkite bishop that I gave you?
Here’s something for your data base, so that you do NOT bring up that incident again like you did. Teach your friends the whole story. Don’t just put this information in your data base for later reading. Read it NOW and teach your non Catholic friends the rest of the story
btw, when news of that 1204 episode reached the pope, pope Innocent excommunicated all the crusaders.
- JPII asked forgiveness for the sacking of Constantinople. He didn’t really have to do that. The issue was already settled. But he did in good gesture wwrn.org/articles/14825/?&place=greece-cyp-malta & the apology was accepted by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople catholicculture.org/news/features/index.cfm?recnum=28935 And since the pope can speak for ALL Catholics, that’s a powerful apology.
- Now for some context. What about the slaughter of 50,000 Catholics in 1182, which was only 22 years earlier in Constantinople by the Orthodox archive.is/81CV Read that link.
- Re: 1204, The Crusaders didn’t just sack Constantinople for no reason. Alexius requested them, promising to pay them, to restore him to power as emperor. After all, why waste a good army at your doorstep when you can use them. And the crusaders restored him to power. But Alexius didn’t pay them.
sheesh! So the army took their payment by sacking Constantinople. 2000 people were killed in that episode vs 22 years earlier in Constantinople, where 50,000 Latins were slaughtered and their children sold into slavery to the muslims by the Orthodox. You didn’t know this. I know you didn’t know this or you wouldn’t have brought up the incident of 1204 the way you did. .
- So WHERE is the apology from the ORTHODOX for 1182? The patriarch was standing right there with JPII. Where is Christodoulos apology to correspond with JPII’s apology? If you have a link showing his apology please quote it. Just as JPII made the apology so could Christodoulos or Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople could make the same gesture in return.
Looking at this objectively,Orthodox Theologian David Bentley Hart “the myth of schism”
- that intrigue in Constantinople 1204, happened because Alexius struck a quid pro quo deal with the crusaders. The Crusaders restore him to emperor, and he pays them an agreed sum of money. The crusaders did their job and Alexius didn’t pay them. So the crusaders took their pay out on the city.
- One could surmise, without Alexius, the Crusaders would have bypassed the city and gone on to Jerusalem.
makes interesting points about these events
“As regards my own communion, I must reluctantly report that there are some Eastern Christians who have become incapable of defining what it is to be Orthodox except in contradistinction to Roman Catholicism; … For such as these,there can never be any limit set to the number of grievances that need to be cited against Rome, nor any act of contrition on the part of Rome sufficient for absolution. There was something inherently strange in the spectacle of John Paul asking pardon for the 1204 sack of Constantinople and its sequel; but there is something inherently unseemly in the refusal of certain Eastern polemicists to allow the episode to sink back to the level of utter irrelevancy to which it belongs. (In any event, I eagerly await the day when the Patriarch of Constantinople, in a gesture of unqualified Christian contrition, makes public penance for the brutal mass slaughter of the metic Latin Christians of Byzantium - men, women and children - at the rise of Andronicus I Comnenus in 1182, and the sale of thousands of them into slavery to the Turks. Frankly, when all is said and done, the sack of 1204 was a rather mild recompense for that particular abomination, I would think).”
For full context clarion-journal.com/clarion_journal_of_spirit/2014/06/the-myth-of-schism-david-bentley-hart.html
Now that you know the rest of the story, feel free to pass this on to all your non Catholic friends.
Or the journalists really need better catechism!One says it is consistent with Catholic teaching, the other says it’s inconsistent with Catholic teaching.
Perhaps the infallible interpreter needs an infallible interpreter?
You know, this does answer a lot of questions about HH having such a distorted view of the faith. Perhaps he is getting his ideas from the newspaper!You need to offer the document from the magisterium first, HH.
Then we can chat.
Yes, a choice between bad and worse is still a choice.Those who returned did so on their own free will and knew WHY they returned.
*]JPII asked forgiveness for the sacking of Constantinople. He didn’t really have to do that. The issue was already settled. But he did in good gesture
Yes. Our shepherds are going above and beyond to foster reconciliation. It does go a long way to heal the wounds to unity.
steve b;12420344:
I was wondering if you would mention this, since your approach seems to be that the status of the Ecumenical Patriarch does not, inactuality exist, or has no validity. I disagree, of course, with that point of view, and I think his participation in this outstanding reconciliatory act of JPII has great power in it’s effects. That being said, there are some EO who are not so accepting/forgiving. I have met them here on CAF.& the apology was accepted by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople
Nothing could be better.Code:And since the pope can speak for ALL Catholics, that’s a powerful apology.
Yes, let us pray that the EO will follow the lead of the Vicar of Christ on this issue, as well as all the others that separate us.Code:Just as JPII made the apology so could Christodoulos or Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople could make the same gesture in return.
I am delighted you are studying this, Steve. I am satisfied that I can now stop yanking your chain about it.Orthodox Theologian David Bentley Hart “the myth of schism”
makes interesting points about these events![]()
Outstanding, really.Hi Steve B: Vey well said!
What kind of remark is that? You’re saying the Orthodox who reunited with the CC made a bad vs worse decision?Yes, a choice between bad and worse is still a choice.![]()
Enough with the accusations.I was wondering if you would mention this, since your approach seems to be that the status of the Ecumenical Patriarch does not, inactuality exist, or has no validity.
finally we can agreeYes, let us pray that the EO will follow the lead of the Vicar of Christ on this issue, as well as all the others that separate us.
Some of them did, yes. It was more tolerable to be overrun by Rome than by the Muslims. They had less to lose, but lose they did.Code:What kind of remark is that? You're saying the Orthodox who reunited with the CC made a bad vs worse decision?
I think it will actually improve the re-unification process. The conditions are also much better for the EO, because the West can now better understand and appreciate the cultural, linguistic, and liturgical differences.“We are increasingly conscious of the fact that an Orthodox Church does not really exist,” he contends. “At the present stage, it does not seem that Constantinople is yet capable of integrating the different autocephalous Orthodox Churches; there are doubts about its primacy of honor, especially in Moscow.”Code:Card Kasper in 2002 was then the head of ecumenical dialogue for the CC and the EO. He said then
http://www.zenit.org/article-3885?l=english
That says alot.
Good work Steve b! It was a lovely spar.Code:finally we can agree
And he can’t touch the Church on Earth. Christ said so.
Jon
Who did Rome overrun? Name themSome of them did, yes. It was more tolerable to be overrun by Rome than by the Muslims. They had less to lose, but lose they did.
Once a majority of the East was conquored by Islam, education was very difficult for easterners to acquire, even about their own faith… #131 you need to read that internal link I posted intratext.com/x/eng0804.htmI think it will actually improve the re-unification process. The conditions are also much better for the EO, because the West can now better understand and appreciate the cultural, linguistic, and liturgical differences.![]()
Personally, I prefer to converse not spar..
Good work Steve b! It was a lovely spar.
Those who returned did so on their own free will and knew WHY they returned.
didn’t you read the link from Bp John the Melkite bishop that I gave you?
Here’s something for your data base, so that you do NOT bring up that incident again like you did. Teach your friends the whole story. Don’t just put this information in your data base for later reading. Read it NOW and teach your non Catholic friends the rest of the story
btw, when news of that 1204 episode reached the pope, pope Innocent excommunicated all the crusaders.
- JPII asked forgiveness for the sacking of Constantinople. He didn’t really have to do that. The issue was already settled. But he did in good gesture wwrn.org/articles/14825/?&place=greece-cyp-malta & the apology was accepted by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople catholicculture.org/news/features/index.cfm?recnum=28935 And since the pope can speak for ALL Catholics, that’s a powerful apology.
- Now for some context. What about the slaughter of 50,000 Catholics in 1182, which was only 22 years earlier in Constantinople by the Orthodox archive.is/81CV Read that link.
- Re: 1204, The Crusaders didn’t just sack Constantinople for no reason. Alexius requested them, promising to pay them, to restore him to power as emperor. After all, why waste a good army at your doorstep when you can use them. And the crusaders restored him to power. But Alexius didn’t pay them.
sheesh! So the army took their payment by sacking Constantinople. 2000 people were killed in that episode vs 22 years earlier in Constantinople, where 50,000 Latins were slaughtered and their children sold into slavery to the muslims by the Orthodox. You didn’t know this. I know you didn’t know this or you wouldn’t have brought up the incident of 1204 the way you did. .
- So WHERE is the apology from the ORTHODOX for 1182? The patriarch was standing right there with JPII. Where is Christodoulos apology to correspond with JPII’s apology? If you have a link showing his apology please quote it. Just as JPII made the apology so could Christodoulos or Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople could make the same gesture in return.
Looking at this objectively,Orthodox Theologian David Bentley Hart “the myth of schism”
- that intrigue in Constantinople 1204, happened because Alexius struck a quid pro quo deal with the crusaders. The Crusaders restore him to emperor, and he pays them an agreed sum of money. The crusaders did their job and Alexius didn’t pay them. So the crusaders took their pay out on the city.
- One could surmise, without Alexius, the Crusaders would have bypassed the city and gone on to Jerusalem.
makes interesting points about these events
“As regards my own communion, I must reluctantly report that there are some Eastern Christians who have become incapable of defining what it is to be Orthodox except in contradistinction to Roman Catholicism; … For such as these,there can never be any limit set to the number of grievances that need to be cited against Rome, nor any act of contrition on the part of Rome sufficient for absolution. There was something inherently strange in the spectacle of John Paul asking pardon for the 1204 sack of Constantinople and its sequel; but there is something inherently unseemly in the refusal of certain Eastern polemicists to allow the episode to sink back to the level of utter irrelevancy to which it belongs. (In any event, I eagerly await the day when the Patriarch of Constantinople, in a gesture of unqualified Christian contrition, makes public penance for the brutal mass slaughter of the metic Latin Christians of Byzantium - men, women and children - at the rise of Andronicus I Comnenus in 1182, and the sale of thousands of them into slavery to the Turks. Frankly, when all is said and done, the sack of 1204 was a rather mild recompense for that particular abomination, I would think).”
For full context clarion-journal.com/clarion_journal_of_spirit/2014/06/the-myth-of-schism-david-bentley-hart.html
Now that you know the rest of the story, feel free to pass this on to all your non Catholic friends.
Hi Gaunophore: I have to agree with you, just the facts, just the facts as Joe the cop used to say on Dragnet.Outstanding, really.
And, I must note, not any of that triumphalism - just the facts.