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Shiranui117
Guest
Dear brother Shiranui,
Rome was certainly the first See in rank of honor, and it is indeed true that Rome was a, no, the bastion of orthodox faith for the longest time. You’ve no argument from me here.Actually, it’s not just about the honorifics, but rather about the specific honors given to those Churches. St. Ignatius states of the Church in Rome that she "presides in
I see. Thank you for the information.Spain had its own primate, just as St. Cyprian was the primate of Carthage.
On re-reading Gabriel of 12’s response to my own, I seem to have misunderstood what he was saying, and I would like to retract my statement. My apologies, Gabriel.The Pope has never acted by himself in a canonical trial of a bishop. There’s nothing in the canons of the Catholic Church today which indicates such a thing either. I don’t know what justifies your comment. Can you point out your source? Is it possible you have taken a straw man caricature of the papacy from some non-Catholic source?
Thank you for the reminder of who St. Cyril was, and indeed, the case is unusual. However, I think it may be a bit of a stretch to state that the Pope of Rome had supremacy over Pope St. Cyril.I believe you are missing the point. Pope St. Cyril was a patriarch, not merely a local ordinary, and he was accepting instruction from the bishop of Rome. It is indeed common for a local bishop to exhort or accept exhortation from other local bishops - but for a patriarch to accept direction from another patriarch is a more rare and unique occurrence.
I must confess that I’ve yet more research, and thus on this matter I should probably clam up right about now.Were you aware that St. Photius in fact asked Pope St. Nicholas for the latter’s approval of his election? Does that not imply a right to reject it? Were you aware that the Canons of Sardica - affirmed by the Trullan Synod - recognized that the bishop of Rome could hear appeals from ANY bishop in Christendom East or West, and to thereafter hold synodal trials on the matter? If Patriarch Ignatius appealed to the bishop of Rome, and the bishop of Rome deemed it right to hold a Synodal trial over the matter, and the canons recognized that the bishop of Rome had that right, how could the trial Synod held by the bishop of Rome possibly be a “robber Synod?” Please explain.And no, I was not aware of that. I know your knowledge of church history is far more extensive of mine, so I will have to plead ignorance here.
Of course not; both sides were guilty of misunderstandings of each other. Many things were hyped up between the two, and it was tragic that the split happened the way it did. Cooler heads on both sides did not prevail, and look where we are now.Are you saying that the East had no fault whatsoever in the Schism?