In my quest to understand what divides Catholics and Orthodox, I came across an article written by Fr. Brian Harrison entitled “Why I Did Not Convert to Eastern Orthodox” in which Fr. Harrison attempts to define precisely the Orthodox understanding of the infallibility of the Church. That’s a western thing, I guess.
Fr. Harrison writes:
"I shall argue that Eastern Orthodoxy’s account of how the Church transmits revelation is vitiated by a circular argument, and so cannot be true.
"…In order to justify their continued separation from Rome, the Orthodox have had to nuance their position on the infallibility of ecumenical councils. They have had to maintain that the participation in a given council of bishops representing the whole Church and the confirmation of their decrees by the pope, while undoubtedly necessary, is still not sufficient to guarantee the true ecumenical status of that council. For over and above the fulfillment of those conditions, it is also necessary (so they have told us in recent centuries) for the faithful as a whole in both East and West—not just the pope and bishops or even the entire clergy—to accept that council’s decrees as expressing the true faith.
"…if we remember that the whole purpose of an infallible church authority is simply to enable Christians to distinguish revealed truth clearly and certainly from falsehood and heresy…we can formulate … the Eastern Orthodox proposition … so as to unpack the word infallible, spelling out its meaning and function:
Christians can come to know with certainty what is true doctrine by recognizing the solemn doctrinal decisions of those councils which are not only papally confirmed as ecumenical, but which are also subsequently accepted as such by the whole community of those Christians who adhere to true doctrine.
“The words italicized above lay bare the underlying circularity—the tautology—that vitiates the logical coherence of Eastern Orthodox Christianity. We want to know how to identify true Christian doctrine with certainty, but the proffered solution to our problem assumes we already know the very thing we are seeking to discover. We are being told, ‘To discover what is true Christian doctrine, you must pay heed the teaching of those who adhere to true Christian doctrine’”!
See full article here:
catholic.com/magazine/articles/why-i-didn%E2%80%99t-convert-to-eastern-orthodoxy
Note how closely Fr. Harrison’s explanation mirrors that of Nine_Two earlier in this thread.
Now, in the interest of being “fair and balanced”, Fr. Harrison’s article received a response from an Orthodox priest who went through Fr. Harrison’s article point by point in significant detail. Concerning the words bolded above, Rev. Pr. Laurent Cleenewerck wrote:
May[be] this would be a good time to express the Orthodox proposition in one paragraph. It cannot be so short as to be reduced to a slogan but needs to be workable. **True doctrine is revealed in Holy Scripture and this is discerned by the operation of the Holy Spirit in the life of the people of God, which is those who participate in the life of the Church. When a controversy occurs, the truth is discerned by a network or community, the wider and deeper (historically) the better. Once a Council takes place (e.g. Nicea in 325) it may take many years (or centuries) for the common union of Churches to function as a network of sensors that will harmonize and stabilize. ** [emphasis added] This is why the Orthodox often spoke of the five senses (five patriarchates) of Christendom as reflecting such a mechanism. One may ask then if it was wise for the Latin West to have dogmatic ‘ecumenical Councils’ without the sensus fidelium of the ancient Greek-speaking Churches.
See full article here:
orthodoxanswers.org/catholicorthodoxdebate2
Fr. Cleenewerck acknowledges that it may take centuries for the Orthodox to determine whether they are willing to accept a Council’s teaching.
Does this strike anyone else as being a completely unworkable approach to the guidance of the Church? We’re supposed to wait around for a century or two before we the people have decided whether to accept the teaching of a Church council?
I think Jesus made better provision for us than that.