J
josie_L
Guest
Let me requote what was said in the article:This was Gregory’s argument to Eulogius of Alexandria, against the concept of a “universal bishop” or ecumenical patriarch. (Earlier I referenced an Orthodox essay which argued that Canon 28 has been used by proponents of a form of Eastern papalism)
The import of Pope St. Gregory’s letters is totally distorted by our polemicist.
You are not applying the appropriate historical context (which was pretty much delineated for you in my earlier post) to his letter and therefore you assume that he is denying his own primacy (apostolic see was code for the see of Rome).He is correct in observing that the title ‘Ecumenical Patriarch’ really meant nothing more than “the Imperial Patriarch” (since the bishop of the city of Constantinople had become in effect the “right-hand man” of the Emperor). When the title was translated into Latin as “Universal Patriarch”, it caused Pope St. Gregory the Great to denounce the title as “a name of blasphemy, of diabolic pride, and a forerunner of Antichrist”. But what our Eastern Orthodox writer utterly fails to note is that the Pope rejected the title because he understood it as involving a claim to be the one sole bishop in the Church (“solus conetur appellari episcopos”) - thereby un-churching all other bishops including their Primate, the Bishop of Rome! Such a claim was also suspected to represent an assault by the Imperial power on the entire episcopacy as well as on the divine Primacy of the Roman See over all the Patriarchs and Bishops of the Church. The mischievous title “Universal Patriarch” granted by the Emperor similarly implied the assumption that the spiritual jurisdiction exercised by members of the hierarchy derived from determination by the Emperor rather than from Jesus Christ.