M
mardukm
Guest
Agreed.Mardukm, I don’t know if you quote that way for a reason, but I find it really confusing.
Blessings,
Marduk
Agreed.Mardukm, I don’t know if you quote that way for a reason, but I find it really confusing.
The will of ur Father is that none shall be lost, the Prayer of the Son is that we Shall be one., Saint Saraphim says the Spirit is plain (simple). The discussion has elements of perfection and qualia of discord. Can we discern the Spirit?not just EO or OO, or any O. Wether we know it or not we are1 in the Spirit!!.
peace
I respect and understand your position. I just don’t share it. I’m not saying you are doing this, but I think Traditionalists who condemn those who are content with the Novus Ordo are guilty of judging others, pretending they have the power or the right to look into the hearts of people. What hubris to think they can do something that only God can do.With all due respect, Marduk, it seems the opposite to me? The Church has caved into the pressures of modernity in the liturgical life of the Church.
The priest STILL orients himself towards the altar of Christ with reverence. Have you seen the priest face anywhere else besides TOWARDS the altar during the Eucharistic Liturgy?Where the priest used to orient himself toward the altar of Christ with reverence, he now faces the people.
With all due respect, so what? Do you know for certain the person strumming the guitar (or anyone participating in any of the other items you mentioned) is in his heart thinking, “I’m doing this to disrespect God?” If any Traditionalist can prove that, I will agree with their position. Until then, I say they have no business judging what is in the hearts and minds of other people.Where incense abounded, it is largely absent. Where reverent liturgical language thrived, now a watered-down verbage supplants it. Where there was Gregorian Chant we have Gather Us In and Bread of Life with guitar-strumming accompaniment, liturgical dancers.
I do recall reading about that somewhere, but IIRC, it was from some ultra-Traditionalist site – frankly, I don’t trust ultra-Traditionalists. Can you provide a source for that - pictures, videos?I even remember a naked woman as a lector on some native island in front of John Paul II.
I don’t have a problem with that if the local bishop and Episocpal Conference allows it. May I ask how exactly this diminishes the Mass - I mean, objectively speaking.There is hand-holding
A use of oikonomia. The rubrics of the Latin Church state that if there is no need for Eucharistic ministers, they should not be used. I agree that it can and is abused, but the official rubric itself is completely orthodox. It boggles my mind what a double standard people hold when it comes to criticizing the Latin Catholic Church (not saying you are doing this, brother Gurney). (Some) Orthodox can so very easily justify any departure from Tradition with the principle of oikonomia, but when the Latin Church does it, God forbid!Eucharistic ministers doling out the Eucharist,
Altar girls are not priests, and perform not the least sacerdotal function. I don’t care for them either, but if the local bishop allows them, I don’t see what that has to do with big “T” Tradition. Can you please explain exactly how this shakes the very foundations of the Faith?altar girls, you name it.
I’ll believe this the day that the Latin Catholic Church stops celebrating the Eucharist, or teaches that you can receive the Body and Blood without an examination of conscience and confession of your mortal sins, or that the Eucharist can be celebrated with crackers and grape juice, or that a person other than the priest can consecrate the bread and wine, or that a true and real change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ no longer exists. Nothing you’ve provided shows me that the Latin Catholic Church does not have a valid Eucharist at which I, as a Coptic Catholic, can receive with full benefit to my soul.Just in a Eucharistic liturgical context alone, to appease the populace and modernity, things have gone awry terribly.
I find the idea of the unique infallibility of the Church of Rome since the time of St. Ignatius of Antioch. The use of Holy images was not proclaimed de fide until the 8th century. Neither the Catholic nor the Orthodox Churches made any de fide proclamations against the peculiar doctrines of the Protestants until the 16th-17th centuries. Are we to believe that the use of Holy Images was unknown in the Church before the 8th century? Are we to believe that the doctrines which the Churches affirmed in opposition to Protestantism were unknown in the Church prior to that time?The doctrine of Infallibility wasn’t proclaimed de fide until the 19th Century.
The EOC has the most liberal standards for divorce and remarriage among all the apostolic Churches, justifications for divorce and remarriage wholly unknown in the early Church. The Low Petrine standard espoused by a lot of EO are a submission to modernist principles as far as I’m concerned. The rampant idea in Orthodoxy that artificial contraception is no longer a sin, or no longer misses the mark has modernism written all over it. IMO, these departures are 100 times worse than the use of guitar in a Mass.You talk about how the traditions and teachings of the Church have survived the liberal lunacy of the ages and how this is a great testament to the papacy but anybody could walk into a time machine and look at a 18th Century Tridentine Mass and a modern Novus Ordo and know full well that modernity has left a nasty mark!
That God can have mercy on those who have never heard the Gospel? What an audacious thought!Or take the catechism with its overtures to Islam and the Muslims “first of whom” are in line for God’s mercy. I cannot fathom a 15th Century pope or council of bishops even considering something so audacious?
Yes, the EO used to be much more strict, as well. Now, they have this “I don’t know” principle, which was introduced into their Church only about 100 years ago. At least the principle of invincible ignorance can be traced all the way back to Scripture.Or look at extra ecclesium non sallus at Trent and then look at the catechism today with its outreach to non-Christian and non-Catholic religions and invincible ignorance and the possibility of salvation?
Apparently, EVERYONE thought that way back then. So if you were living in that time, you could have said with absolute certainty that child molesters could NOT be rehabilitated, even when organized, extensive socio-psychiatric studies of the matter barely even existed?And look at how the Church succumbed to the psychiatric community of the 1960’s and their philosophy that child molestors can be “rehabilitated” and brought back into society. they bought into that thinking and look where it has gotten them? I’ve heard more Catholics and priests make that observation than I can count.
Hardly (see comments above). Besides, the Orthodox are human too.I think the Orthodox are the opposite. Despite communism and Islam, you see none of these disturbing trends. Sure, as you pointed out, there are old vs. new calendarists and small points of contention, but overall things have changed far less than in Catholicism.
I wonder if a time traveler went back to the time of St. Maximos, would he wonder why filioque did not separate the Churches then, but it does so now? If a time traveler went back to the days of the Fathers, would he wonder why the hierarchy of the Orthodox Churches now officially permits the use of artificial contraception?I wonder if a time traveler went back to the 1500’s and 1600’s to, let’s say the era of Trent to 2011 from one Mass to another then he went back to the 1600’s to an Orthodox Divine Liturgy then to one in 2011, which one would appear more altered and innovated?
So God is not a mighty fortress? Really?Open your missal hymnal in your church and you’ll see one of the first hymns in there is “A Mighty Fortress is Our God…”Martin Luther is cracking up in his grave!
![]()
I personally believe that this is not true. The CC is not just an organization, it is a living organism as you put it. We speak of the “Life of the Church”, not just the institution. You’re splitting very thin hairs here.Catholics are so interested in the church as organization that it is hard for them! We think of church as more organism than organization. !
I thought we were talking about the ruler. Now, you’re talking about whole countries? It seems you are establishing some very arbitrary boundaries to our discussion (perhaps unwittingly).That’s an odd definition of “secular”. By that definition, nearly every country on the face of the earth is “secular”.
I believe the Holy Spirit can use ANY situation to help the Church preserve its Faith. The relative smallness of the Church helps a lot, especially if it has a head bishop.I’m not so sure that this is the case.
I never said that.You are the one who is asserting this or that particular system of government fitting a particular style of religion.
Because it HAS worked for the Catholic Church (all things being equal - i.e., there are instances of modernism and schism in the Orthodox Churches as well).Why?
Understood. But Catholics have a different understanding of the Catholic Church. Speaking only for myself, I am not willing to judge the hearts of others if they are content with the Novus Ordo Liturgy. If those people somehow are able to have a more full experience of God in the Mass that way, more power to them. Naturally, I oppose the abuses to the Novus Ordo rubrics, as well, but I have no sympathy for the holier than thou attitudes of many Traditionalist Catholics or non-Catholics who despise the Novus Ordo and Vatican 2.This is the most debatable statement I’ve ever walked away from a debate about…
The labels are not sweeping generalizations. From what I’ve seen, only Absolutist and Low Petrine advocates dislike the labels, because it exposes the errors of their respective positions.I won’t pretend to know the inner workings of every church on the face of the planet, but I will say that such sweeping generalizations and fairly useless labels aren’t very helpful.
The High Petrine view does not dictate the acceptance of the papacy. It is simply a principle that describes the relationship between a head bishop and his brother bishops. However, I do believe that the High Petrine view supports a visible universal headship in the Church.If the Orthodox Churches have always held such views as you say they do, then obviously they must not lead them to the conclusion that you have embraced by coming into union under Rome.
I didn’t know I bowed to the Papacy by being a Catholic. If you feel that is the only way to be in communion with the Church of Rome, then I can see why you are no longer Catholic. But IMO, it only means you are invincibly ignorant of what the Catholic Church actually teaches about the Pope. Only God can judge if there is any malice in your heart towards the Catholic Church.So that’s really neither here nor there, since obviously it doesn’t demand that they bow to the modern Roman Papacy as you do.
Actually, I don´t think it is the essence of this discussion. I think this thread is ostensibly about Eastern Orthodoxy. But I do appreciate your desire to engender unity.The will of ur Father is that none shall be lost, the Prayer of the Son is that we Shall be one., Saint Saraphim says the Spirit is plain (simple). The discussion has elements of perfection and qualia of discord. Can we discern the Spirit?
isn’t this the essence of the discussion?
peace
Noted. However, these “Petrine divisions” have helped a good number of Latin Catholics here on CAF overcome their Absolutist Petrine inclinations. That’s a good thing, right?Uh-oh. Marduk is still marketing his artificial thesis on the various “Petrine divisions.”
…because your church is ran like a loose cannon? Theres no order in managment of the EO.
Actually, in essence, all the EOC’s are very much alike – if one understands the essence of any Church to be its dogmatic Faith.Every EOC in essense has nothing to do with the other.
Really?However, these “Petrine divisions” have helped a good number of Latin Catholics here on CAF
Faith and Administrative managment are totally diifferent concepts. The Faiths may remain the same in all EO Churchs. What does Administrative policy in the USA have to do with Russia? They could care less about each other. Internal tensions have been a constant in the EO.Dear brother Gary,
I agree with everything you say, but I think the following is a bit over the top:
Actually, in essence, all the EOC’s are very much alike – if one understands the essence of any Church to be its dogmatic Faith.
It’s the same with all the Catholic Churches. Our essence (our dogmatic Faith) is all the same, though there are distinctions and even differences on other things.
The same with the Oriental Orthodox Churches.
Blessings,
Marduk
Well one fact is certain. There are simply those who don’t know what the pre-V-II church was. They can’t relate to it, and when suggested its immediatly rejected by them?Really?
Dear brother Gurney,
Nobody is looking into the HEARTS of people? I’m not sure why you say that? When I criticize outward gestures, EME’s trying to “bless” my kids at communion, bad music, and a bunch of other abuses, I never mentioned anyone’s hearts? I am saying that these things matter and do affect the piety of the Mass.
I respect and understand your position. I just don’t share it. I’m not saying you are doing this, but I think Traditionalists who condemn those who are content with the Novus Ordo are guilty of judging others, pretending they have the power or the right to look into the hearts of people. What hubris to think they can do something that only God can do.
I’ve never been in a Catholic Church in my life where the priest faces the altar during ANY part of the Mass? He faces the people.
The priest STILL orients himself towards the altar of Christ with reverence. Have you seen the priest face anywhere else besides TOWARDS the altar during the Eucharistic Liturgy?
Respectfully back atcha, Marduk, I DO care about the dignity of liturgical music and don’t want to sing like a Baptist. If that’s ok with you, God bless. It isn’t for me. I don’t want to sing kumbabya or songs that reflect Calvinist TULIP themes.
With all due respect, so what? Do you know for certain the person strumming the guitar (or anyone participating in any of the other items you mentioned) is in his heart thinking, “I’m doing this to disrespect God?” If any Traditionalist can prove that, I will agree with their position. Until then, I say they have no business judging what is in the hearts and minds of other people.
Not right now here at work. I cannot access it. I can at home. I have actually posted the link on CAF before in another thread about a year ago. I’ll have to get back to you. Filters at work.
I do recall reading about that somewhere, but IIRC, it was from some ultra-Traditionalist site – frankly, I don’t trust ultra-Traditionalists. Can you provide a source for that - pictures, videos?
I do. It goes against historical precedence. This is a Baptisty style of worship. Our unity is in the Eucharist and the Sacramental life. We have no need to hold hands.
I don’t have a problem with that if the local bishop and Episocpal Conference allows it. May I ask how exactly this diminishes the Mass - I mean, objectively speaking.
I would say it is a poor use of oikonomia frankly. I don’t believe men and women should be touching the Host and doling it out. And we have seen the results of the impiety…one thing leads to another…now they play priest and try to bless people. Dangerous. Slippery slope. It’s impious IMO.
A use of oikonomia. The rubrics of the Latin Church state that if there is no need for Eucharistic ministers, they should not be used. I agree that it can and is abused, but the official rubric itself is completely orthodox. It boggles my mind what a double standard people hold when it comes to criticizing the Latin Catholic Church (not saying you are doing this, brother Gurney). (Some) Orthodox can so very easily justify any departure from Tradition with the principle of oikonomia, but when the Latin Church does it, God forbid!
Strawman. I never said altar girls shakes the very foundations of faith. It just helps chip away traditions and piety. This is not my hill to die on actually but I can see why Orthodox cringe at the thought…
Altar girls are not priests, and perform not the least sacerdotal function. I don’t care for them either, but if the local bishop allows them, I don’t see what that has to do with big “T” Tradition. Can you please explain exactly how this shakes the very foundations of the Faith?
I never sought to somehow persuade you into thinking the Catholic Church didn’t have a valid Eucharist?If I felt that way, brother Marduk, why would I have hung in there so long as a Catholic?
But I do believe the lovely and ancient rites of Rome have been polluted with all sorts of modern appeasements and Protestant innovations. It’s pretty hard to deny that, isn’t it?
I’ll believe this the day that the Latin Catholic Church stops celebrating the Eucharist, or teaches that you can receive the Body and Blood without an examination of conscience and confession of your mortal sins, or that the Eucharist can be celebrated with crackers and grape juice, or that a person other than the priest can consecrate the bread and wine, or that a true and real change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ no longer exists. Nothing you’ve provided shows me that the Latin Catholic Church does not have a valid Eucharist at which I, as a Coptic Catholic, can receive with full benefit to my soul.
Not sure why you’re appealing to the age of St. Ignatius of Antioch to prove infallibility nor why you’re referencing sacred images as a proof?
I find the idea of the unique infallibility of the Church of Rome since the time of St. Ignatius of Antioch. The use of Holy images was not proclaimed de fide until the 8th century. Neither the Catholic nor the Orthodox Churches made any de fide proclamations against the peculiar doctrines of the Protestants until the 16th-17th centuries. Are we to believe that the use of Holy Images was unknown in the Church before the 8th century? Are we to believe that the doctrines which the Churches affirmed in opposition to Protestantism were unknown in the Church prior to that time?
CONTINUED
CONTINUED
** That is your a priori observation. From what I’ve read and the Orthodox I know, I have never heard of such liberal attitudes. And just because the EO’s have a slightly different view of divorce or contraception doesn’t prove to me that they’ve departed in a huge way from the catholic faith? **
The EOC has the most liberal standards for divorce and remarriage among all the apostolic Churches, justifications for divorce and remarriage wholly unknown in the early Church. The Low Petrine standard espoused by a lot of EO are a submission to modernist principles as far as I’m concerned. The rampant idea in Orthodoxy that artificial contraception is no longer a sin, or no longer misses the mark has modernism written all over it. IMO, these departures are 100 times worse than the use of guitar in a Mass.
** You’re right, it is audacious. I’m glad we finally agree.**
That God can have mercy on those who have never heard the Gospel? What an audacious thought!
hardly.
Yes, the EO used to be much more strict, as well. Now, they have this “I don’t know” principle, which was introduced into their Church only about 100 years ago. At least the principle of invincible ignorance can be traced all the way back to Scripture.
Thanks for your admission, then, that the CC succumbed to modernity and liberal, lax attitudes about such things, precisely my point.
Apparently, EVERYONE thought that way back then. So if you were living in that time, you could have said with absolute certainty that child molesters could NOT be rehabilitated, even when organized, extensive socio-psychiatric studies of the matter barely even existed?
Nobody suggested they were more than human.
Hardly (see comments above). Besides, the Orthodox are human too.
You have a one-trick pony argument today with contraception. I have a laundry list for the CC of innovations, you have contraception. I’m happy with my position!
I wonder if a time traveler went back to the time of St. Maximos, would he wonder why filioque did not separate the Churches then, but it does so now? If a time traveler went back to the days of the Fathers, would he wonder why the hierarchy of the Orthodox Churches now officially permits the use of artificial contraception?
LOL!!! Two sides of the same coin argument is affirmed today by MardukWhat’s next? Amazing Grace and it’s “wretch” TULIP language? Oh wait, that’s already in there!
So God is not a mighty fortress? Really?The early Fathers did not shrink from adopting into the Church anything that was good from outside of the Church. Why should the Church now contradict that principle?
And to you as well, Marduk
Blessings,
Marduk
We are talking about the governance of various countries in light of your contention that “As societies become more democratic, the concept and need of central Church leadership will become more obvious to our Orthodox brethren.” The portion of my reply that you are saying is “arbitrary” was in the context of your further assertion that a country is secular if its leader is not also a leader of the state/majority Church. I have problems with both of these ideas. Your definition of “secular” applies to non-secular countries like Sudan, too (a country with an elected president as its head of state, where the judicial code is nonetheless based on Islamic law).Dear brother Dzheremi,
I thought we were talking about the ruler. Now, you’re talking about whole countries? It seems you are establishing some very arbitrary boundaries to our discussion (perhaps unwittingly).
Then please forgive me, because that’s exactly how I’ve interpreted you when you wrote this: “As societies become more democratic, the concept and need of central Church leadership will become more obvious to our Orthodox brethren.” It really does sound to me as though you are saying “political structure X fits ecclesiastical structure Y”. I disagree with this, but if you meant something else perhaps I don’t actually disagree with you…I never said that.![]()
You believe that the political situation in a given country in which Orthodoxy is the majority form of Christianity is the largest conductive factor to maintaining the hallmark conservatism of said churches? Rather than something inherent in the form of Christianity they’ve embraced? I believe the latter.All I have stated is that Orthodox Churches have found themselves in situations in their particular homelands that have been conducive to maintaining their conservatism. Hence, it is disingenouos to argue that the lack of universal papal solicitude is a positive factor in the maintenance of their conservatism.
I don’t believe it has. To each their own, I suppose.Because it HAS worked for the Catholic Church (all things being equal - i.e., there are instances of modernism and schism in the Orthodox Churches as well).
Fair enough. I think you’ll find most Orthodox insisting, as I too insist, that the problems of the Roman Catholic Church run much deeper than any given example, and are in fact epistemological problems inherent in the RC model of Christianity, which is not conductive to maintaining the Apostolic faith. Rome will have to go back a lot further than 1950 or whenever “traditionalist Catholic” groups romanticize in order to demonstrate its commitment to true unity with the Orthodox. I don’t think it will happen, but at the same time I am open to the workings of the Holy Spirit in the hearts of all Christians.Understood. But Catholics have a different understanding of the Catholic Church. Speaking only for myself, I am not willing to judge the hearts of others if they are content with the Novus Ordo Liturgy. If those people somehow are able to have a more full experience of God in the Mass that way, more power to them. Naturally, I oppose the abuses to the Novus Ordo rubrics, as well, but I have no sympathy for the holier than thou attitudes of many Traditionalist Catholics or non-Catholics who despise the Novus Ordo and Vatican 2.
I think they are because if, as you say below, they do not dictate acceptance of the Papacy, and there is more than one way to be in communion with Rome, then there must be some nuances them that are ignored when you use them as you do (to say that “the EO take X Petrine view”, for instance). Not that they’re all that helpful either way, because if you’re right about all the things that don’t follow from them, then they don’t really explain all that much.The labels are not sweeping generalizations. From what I’ve seen, only Absolutist and Low Petrine advocates dislike the labels, because it exposes the errors of their respective positions.
Okay.The High Petrine view does not dictate the acceptance of the papacy. It is simply a principle that describes the relationship between a head bishop and his brother bishops. However, I do believe that the High Petrine view supports a visible universal headship in the Church.
Let me put it this way: What do you call those people who DO NOT take the directives of the Roman Pope as binding? You most likely would not refer to them as fellow Catholics. It is your assent to Papal doctrines and Papal prerogatives that are unique to Rome that make you a Catholic. So, yes, you bow to the Papacy. Why deny it? Are you ashamed? Don’t be ashamed. You’ve made your decision after a long period of study. I’ve had a considerable period of study and it seems to be leading me in the other direction. There’s no harm meant in either of these things. We just have very different perspectives.I didn’t know I bowed to the Papacy by being a Catholic. If you feel that is the only way to be in communion with the Church of Rome, then I can see why you are no longer Catholic.
Oh. Hmm. Nevermind. I’m “ignorant” I guess. Nice.But IMO, it only means you are invincibly ignorant of what the Catholic Church actually teaches about the Pope. Only God can judge if there is any malice in your heart towards the Catholic Church.
Me too!I’ve had a considerable period of study and it seems to be leading me in the other direction.
Correction. He said “invincibly ignorant”. This means that you are not really aware of your ignorance and therefore not responsible.Oh. Hmm. Nevermind. I’m “ignorant” I guess.
Y’see, this is where I begin to have real problems… (Gurney, you might want to look away now, if you’re reading this, since you thought I was mad the other day…)Correction. He said “invincibly ignorant”. This means that you are not really aware of your ignorance and therefore not responsible.