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Seraphim73
Guest
And he returned the relics of St Gregory and St John Chrysostom, which was wonderful. But the point of still discussing it I think is the historical realities of what the sack of Constantinople did. When the crusaders pillaged the city and the pope put a Latin bishop on the throne, in the minds of the Greeks, it transformed the Latins from fellow Christians into adversaries who would use any means to destroy Orthodoxy. That has had extremely far reaching consequences. And the subsequent history of the unia simply confirmed that sentiment over and over.I think John Paul II officially apologized for atrocities against the Eastern Churches. Didn’t he also give back a precious Holy Icon that belonged to the Orthodox?
When the Greeks were willing to say “better a Turkish turban that a Latin mitre” you know there is a problem. At least the Turks were just repressive. But the Catholic Church was seen as actively trying to destroy and consume Orthodoxy. I mean unia as a method of reconciliation really didn’t start to slow down until the early 20th century. So this stuff isn’t as distant as you think. These problems still effect many people in a very direct way. If you don’t believe me look at the relations between the Orthodox and Eastern Catholics here in the US, where families were torn apart, spouses buried in different cemeteries, the lawsuits over church properties and so on. To use a more understandable example of Americans slavery here in the US ended 150 years ago and there are still far reaching consequences and still a very deep seated historical mistrust. As wonderful and loving as apologies may be it simply takes time to rebuild trust after so many centuries of distrust.