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Alexander_Roman
Guest
In actual fact, the Orthodox and the Eastern Fathers refer to the person of St Peter as the “Corphaeus” or “Rock.”So do the Orthodox say that Jesus was talking about Peter’s faith when he said “on this rock I will build my Church”? If so, I must say I find that reading quite counterintuitive.
There is no disagreement there, but on how the Petrine Ministry exists in the Church.
The Orthodox East tends toward a conciliar approach with a First among Equals among the patriarchs/bishops of the world. Prior to the breakup, it was the Pope of Old Rome. Now it is the Patriarch of New Rome. The Petrine Office is also held by the Episcopate and the authority of the local Bishop is, and always must be, absolute.
Each Patriarch/Primate governs his own jurisdiction but if a problem arose or Canons were broken, then the universal Primate not only could, but had an obligationi to get involved in the Local Church.
The model of unity on the basis of the Eastern Catholic Churches of today resembles very closely the model of the Roman jurisdiction where Rome decides much for the local Eastern Catholic Church.
That is an aberration and has no historic precedent prior to the unions. Rome itself has recognized this and has affirmed that this model is outdated and will never be followed again.
The problem is that this leaves us EC’s “out in the cold” with no real place to go but home.
With RC and Orthodox ecumenism expanding, but faltering because of the EC Churches (seen by the Orthodox as Rome’s unwillingness to undo its historic mistake), the EC Churches will have no recourse but to slowly return to their Orthodox points of origin.
This is also what might explain the tremendous “Easternization” of EC Churches in recent years (and not only Rome’s encouragement that EC Churches return to their Eastern heritage).
Alex