C
Cavaradossi
Guest
No, I don’t think the existence of the Christian Ecumene as a socio-religious construct was necessarily vital to Christianity. My point was rather that the ecumenical councils take their name from this construct, such that the idea of an ecumenical council after the dissolution of the Ecumene should strike one as a bit of an absurdity. Councils after the destruction of the Ecumene may be called ecumenical, but this is merely by convention, like an abuse of notation in mathematics, where the word ecumenical serves as shorthand for ‘of highest authority’ rather than its original meaning relating its subject to the Christian Ecumene. Sometimes I wonder if the Christian East, because of its more vivid memory of the Ecumene has avoided naming any subsequent councils ‘Ecumenical’, despite having held several which might be considered to be ‘of highest authority’ for this very reason.“…happened outside the structure of the Christian Ecumene”.
Do you really consider this an important point from the point of Christian dogma? Was the Church unable to hold ecumenical councils prior to the marriage of Christianity and the Roman Empire (yes I know that She didn’t but that’s besides the point)? In the centuries following the Schism, Latin Christendom took on a life of its own and became something far larger, geographically and numerically, than the original Roman Christian Ecumene had ever been…if the Church once embraced the Roman Ecumene, why can’t She also embrace later social structures?
If you are thinking more along the lines of representation from all bishops, West and East, you will not find any councils that meet that criteria. Chalcedon was rejected by very important bishops.