You feign that I must be fair and accept that some Orthodox just do not see it the way Catholics do.
I’d like that, yeah, although that wasn’t really my point in the post you were responding to.
But you don’t offer the same benefit of the doubt to Catholics and say that the Orthodox must be fair and accept that Catholics just do not see it the way Orthodox do.
Of course I do. What do you think the point of affirming others’ unique experiences as their own and equally valid as my own (or any Orthodox persons’) is, if not to say “Catholics have their own way of viewing things”? And all that stuff about the different mindsets, etc.? But again, this wasn’t really what I was getting at in my reply, which was to say “this thread is not to discuss how Orthodox should understand ____ according to Catholics, but just whether or not Orthodox want reunion with Rome” (regardless of what Catholics think of the underpinnings of EO/OO positions).
Please help me understand your logic which on the face is full of inconsistencies and hypocrisy.
Please help me understand when you’ve stopped beating your wife…
The fact is, one side has a different position/premises than the other. THAT’S A GIVEN.
I accept that difference in perspectives, and seek to convince certain Orthodox that there is a way to unity through understanding. Inherent in this Catholic paradigm is the hope and belief that the differences are reconcilable.
I understand that this is your view, and share it to a great degree (everything before the “differences are reconcilable” part; some probably are, but I don’t know if that means all are).
Some Orthodox here also accept that difference in perspectives, and seek to convince Catholics that the only way to unity is through conversion. Inherent in this particular Orthodox paradigm (which is not shared by all Orthodox) is that there is no hope for reconciling the differences.
I used to worry about that whole “conversion or destruction” idea inherent in union with the Orthodox when I was Catholic (you could probably find it in some of my earliest posts here on CAF, I would think), but now I don’t really see it that way. It only seems like conversion to something new because it’s been so long since the RCC communion lived as the Orthodox do. But, in reality, you did once do that (well, and YOU specifically definitely did, as an ex-OO), so it is not really threatening you with a foreign idea. But if you do not see your roots in the pre-Schism church, then that is for you to work out by yourself (or, likewise, if you see the modern RCC as identical in all relevant aspects to that same church, that is certainly for you to work out, since I can’t imagine many Orthodox giving you the time of day if that’s what you’re thinking).
So why don’t we focus on discussing the particular doctrines that divide or seemingly divide us. Put your money where your mouth is. Instead of constantly whining about which phronema is correct, let’s get to the real meat of the matter - the doctrines themselves.
Frankly, because this never goes anywhere due to your unshakable a priori position that the doctrines are reconcilable with Orthodoxy even though the Orthodox themselves say no way. This is mirrored, I suppose, in an equally steadfast Orthodox position that the doctrines of the RCC really aren’t Orthodox, but since this is the situation as we experience it, we must decide who we will trust –
Orthodox talking about
Orthodox positions vis-a-vis Catholicism (which they may get wrong when describing the Catholic position) or
Catholics talking about
Orthodox positions vis-a-vis Catholicism (which they may get wrong when describing the Orthodox position)? I know which one I trust and which one I don’t, and I don’t think it’s the result of any particular malice on either side. You really do see the Catholic positions as reconcilable with Orthodoxy. That’s fine. I just don’t agree with you, and it’s not because I haven’t read your explanations of the Catholic doctrines a thousand times over by now.
Let us discuss those doctrines civilly. Let’s see whose position is correct.
One more round is just more wasted bandwith. No.
Are these doctrines truly IRreconcilable? Prove it.
Are these doctrines reconcilable? Prove it.
My proof is that Orthodox clergy and laity have told me that they are not reconcilable. You don’t agree with my proof and show me many documents of agreed statements between the OO and the RCC, and when I tell you that the OO don’t give those documents the same weight that you do, you generally present more documents as though the superiority of your Googling skills or whatever should be reason enough alone for me to discard what actual Orthodox tell me about their own churches. Let’s not do this again, please.
These are the only things that should concern us. Going on and on and on as you do just about the mere CONCEPT of reconcilability or irreconcilability does absolutely nothing to advance the dialogue.
You just asked me to prove reconcilability or irreconcilability!
Mardukm, I love you as a brother in Christ, but it’s the kind of love that exists regardless of being able to talk to you about anything in a way that advances much of
anything… I think that might be expecting too much from our exchanges. Would that it were some other way, but I think prayer would do us both better than endless arguments.