M
mardukm
Guest
That’s a worthy point. However, neither did the Latins ever claimed ecumenical authority for the addition of Filioque in the Latin Creed (i.e., it was always a local thing) - though indeed they have insisted on the THEOLOGY (substance of Faith) behind the use of Filioque with the Latin procedit (but not with the Greek ekporeusai). So why can’t the Latins be left alone on the matter?My guess would be because the Apostles’ Creed is not and has never claimed to be the Nicene Creed of the ecumenical councils.
If the issue is truly the TEXTUAL difference between the ecumenical Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed and the NON-ecumenical Latin Creed, then surely the TEXTUAL difference between the ecumenical Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed and the NON-ecumenical Apostles’ Creed should cause the same condemnations to fall upon the Apostles’ Creed. After all, anyone who professes the Apostles’ Creed has made a textual SUBTRACTION from the ecumenical Nicene-Constatinopolitan Creed just as much as one who professes the the Latin Creed with Filioque has made a textual ADDITION to the same ecumenical Creed. In both cases, there is a DIFFERENT CREED that is being professed.
The only way to save the orthodoxy of the Apostles’ Creed is to admit that the intention of the Fathers of Ephesus (and Chalcedon) was to interpret pistin eperan as a reference to the substance of Faith, and not merely to the text.
Blessings,
Marduk