H
HailMary
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It appears that way.The Maronite bishops were present at Trent and gave their consent to this canon. Are you suggesting they anathemized themselves?
It appears that way.The Maronite bishops were present at Trent and gave their consent to this canon. Are you suggesting they anathemized themselves?
In light of recent developements in this forum I do not want to begin a thread engaging Catholics with Catholic Dogma.Joab, I would gladly discuss this with you exactly as you have spoken. Hopefully if it comes up that we can not resolve them then we can simply accept eachother as St. Ephrem accepted the two points of his paradoxes. If we are going to discuss this we should probably start it on a new thread about Original Sin specifically. This thread has been wide and varied, it would be good to have a focused discussion on the matter. I defer to you to start the discussion from the CCC.
404 How did the sin of Adam become the sin of all his descendants? The whole human race is in Adam âas one body of one manâ.By this âunity of the human raceâ all men are implicated in Adamâs sin, as all are implicated in Christâs justice. [redemption].
Still, the transmission of original sin is a mystery that we cannot fully understand. But we do know by Revelation that Adam had received original holiness and justice not for himself alone, but for all human nature. By yielding to the tempter, Adam and Eve committed a personal sin, but this sin affected the human nature that they would then transmit in a fallen state. It is a sin which will be transmitted by propagation to all mankind, that is, by the transmission of a human nature deprived of original holiness and justice. And that is why original sin is called âsinâ *only in an analogical sense: it is a sin âcontractedâ and not âcommittedâ - a state and not an act. *
405 Although it is proper to each individual, original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adamâs descendants. It is a *deprivation of original holiness *and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted: it is wounded in the natural powers proper to it, subject to ignorance, suffering and the dominion of death, and *inclined to sin *- an inclination to evil that is called concupiscence".
Baptism, by imparting the life of Christâs grace, erases original sin and turns a man back towards God, but the consequences for nature, weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle.
406 ⌠The Church pronounced on the meaning of the data of Revelation on original sin especially at the second Council of Orange (529) and at the Council of Trent (1546).
408 The consequences of original sin and of all menâs personal sins put the world as a whole in the sinful condition aptly described in St. Johnâs expression, âthe sin of the worldââŚ
418 As a result of original sin, human nature is weakened in its powers, subject to ignorance, suffering and the domination of death, and inclined to sin (this inclination is called âconcupiscenceâ).
1018 As a consequence of original sin, man must suffer âbodily death, from which man would have been immune had he not sinnedâ (GS § 18).
1250 Born with a fallen human nature and tainted by original sin, children also have need of the new birth in Baptism to be freed from the power of darkness and brought into the realm of the freedom of the children of God, to which all men are called. The sheer gratuitousness of the grace of salvation is particularly manifest in infant BaptismâŚ
I am hoping that Joab is going to start a thread on this subject. But to start off, you could read Meyendorfâs book Byzantine Theology. Remember that Meyendorff was a very ecumenically minded theologian and for this reason many EO do not like him. He basically says that death is the result of OS. Sin is the result of death. He uses St. Maximus the Confessor as one of his main sources for this.The Maronite bishops were present at Trent and gave their consent to this canon. Are you suggesting they anathemized themselves?
Somehow you have become convinced that for Easterners, the only consequence of Adamâs sin is death. I have quoted from an EO bishop who sees more consequences than this. You have been invited to consult the catechismâs description of original sin by another Easterner. Perhaps you could offer us Eastern sources of your own that state that death is indeed the only consequence of Adamâs sin.
Irenicist
Original Sin #3: Can you explain the difference in the way the East views Original Sin?
Iâll try to briefly summarize the issue, but I canât do it justice in so little space.
In the East: The primary consequence of Original Sin is death. The reality of death causes people to desire that which can distract them from the reality of their impending death. Hence, people turn to sex, money, and power as a way to forget about death. In this way, death leads to sin.
In the West: The primary consequence of Original Sin is a âstainâ of guilt. People are born with a guilt that needs to be washed away as soon as possible.
Both the East and the West agree that original sin causes an ABSENCE of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Through baptism, the Holy Spirit can again dwell within man.
That in mind, it becomes readily clear why the teaching of Immaculate Conception is a necessity.It should be noted that the Catholic Church has adopted a much more Eastern understanding in recent years. In fact, the Catechism of the Catholic Church is very Eastern in its approach to original sin.
That really doesnât solve much regarding Maronite tradition. Maronites are the most latinized of any of the eastern churches. They donât preach their own tradition very well. For example, check out the regulations for fasting. The tradition for fasting is everyday in lent from meat and dairy. But what they tell the people to do is to abstain from meat on all fridays of Lent and on Ash Monday. In other words they have simply assumed the Latin form.In an effort to resolve this issue of just what is the Maronite perspective on the IC and OS quickly, I would invite jimmy and others to visit the following Maronite website :
stmaron.org/Immaculate%20conception.html
I donât think we need add anything further to this discussion. If a Maronite eparchy is publicly celebrating the IC and describing Mary as conceived free of OS, that would seem to settle matters.
Irenicist
The Maronites were actually quite resistant to Trent. So much so that the Pope sent Jesuit legates to physically enforce itâs mandates. Quite a tragic story, the lead Jesuit was known for personally editing the Syriac missals and ordering the mass burning of those texts that seemed to counter Trent.The Maronite bishops were present at Trent and gave their consent to this canon. Are you suggesting they anathemized themselves?
I would certainly not say so. I have had Bishops, who certainly predate Bishop Mansour, say that the IC is not a part of tradition. All of this is yet another example of the dichotomies existing amongst the Eastern and Oriental Catholic experiences.In an effort to resolve this issue of just what is the Maronite perspective on the IC and OS quickly, I would invite jimmy and others to visit the following Maronite website :
stmaron.org/Immaculate%20conception.html
I donât think we need add anything further to this discussion. If a Maronite eparchy is publicly celebrating the IC and describing Mary as conceived free of OS, that would seem to settle matters.
Irenicist
HM,Anyone have experience with this site?
www.east2west.com
Looks like a Byzantine Catholic is the author of it.
Under the Doctrine section, he says, regarding OS:
That in mind, it becomes readily clear why the teaching of Immaculate Conception is a necessity.
Peace,Anyone have experience with this site?
www.east2west.com
Looks like a Byzantine Catholic is the author of it.
I would like to note no Church Father discussed âFinal Theosis,â because, well, such a theological concept doesnât exist. I would ask that a discussion on Final Theosis be tabled indefinitely, as all normative posters of the Eastern Christianity posters know, this has been entirely refuted and the request has come from both Catholic and Orthodox to change this deceitful paragraph; obviously this has not happened.In the East, we tend to have a much more positive view of the transition from death to Heaven. Rather than âPurgatory,â we prefer to call it âthe Final Theosis.â This refers to the process of deification, in which the remnants of our humans nature are transformed, and we come to share in the divine life of the Trinity. Rather than seeing this as a place to âsit and suffer,â the Eastern Fathers of the Church described the Final Theosis as being a journey. While this journey can entail hardships, there are also powerful glimpses of joy.
Jimmy,And that is why many Eastern Christians, including bishops, say that the councils of the west were only general councils of the west. The recent document in Ravenna, which is supported by the pope, supports the eastern bishops. Trent is therefore a general council of the west, not ecumenical.
Joab/All,I hope you will understand that all I wish to do is simply post the results of a search in the CCC on original sin for you to consider, with your permission of course. As I see your open to that I will go ahead and make the pertinient quotes for you but also let you know its late here and I have to get up early so may not continue with it much futher this evening. I will italicize words that I personally find key.
Vatican I would be one of those which would be considered general councils of the west. Again, the Ravenna document supports this.Jimmy,
I think the following quote from the Third Session of the First Vatican Council, which Eastern Catholics certainly own as ecumenical, is sufficient to show the error in the above statement:
"Now this redemptive providence appears very clearly in unnumbered benefits, but most especially is it manifested in the advantages which have been secured for the christian world by ecumenical councils, among which the council of Trent requires special mention, celebrated though it was in evil days. "
So is it your opinion that all eastern Christians must submit to Latin theology?Joab/All,
Please be aware that the CCC is simply one attempt at putting into plain English an understanding of Catholic theology for the masses. It is by no means exact or exhaustive. Although it is âcorrect,â it is not full. In my experience, it glosses over the tough issues but certainly does not deny them. To get a clear view of the theology at issue, you must go to the sources, not summaries of them intended for common consumption. This would be a like the Supreme Court adjudicating a very complicated legal issue solely on the basis of an newspaper editorial explaining the relevant law. Go deeper, please, than the CCC.
Yes, the concept of âfinal theosisâ is not patristic. In fact, theosis is a never-ending process, a stretching (epektasis) of man into eternity, i.e., into the infinity of God, who is infinitely beyond the infinite.There certainly are problems with East2West.com, such as the erroneous âdoctrineâ of âFinal Theosis:â . . .
Do you know any books or patristic works that elaborate on theosis?Yes, the concept of âfinal theosisâ is not patristic. In fact, theosis is a never-ending process, a stretching (epektasis) of man into eternity, i.e., into the infinity of God, who is infinitely beyond the infinite.
Statements by the Fathers on theosis are dispersed throughout their writings, but I would recommend St. Gregory of Nyssaâs âThe Life of Moses,â and his homilies on âThe Lordâs Prayer,â and the âBeatitudes,â for some insight into the doctrine of divinization.Do you know any books or patristic works that elaborate on theosis?
Jimmy,So is it your opinion that all eastern Christians must submit to Latin theology?
JuanCarlos,
Thank you for pointing up something I have never understood. I have heard a ton of âwigglingâ on the part of Eastern Catholics in these areas and can never get a truly âstraight answer.â Basically, the wiggle here will be that the âEasternersâ never define whether or not this is the case but are free to believe it. So, phrasing these items as âobjective questionsâ may be walking yourself into more âwiggle.â In other words, they will never deny these things but will never come clean on whether they embrace them. Another âwiggleâ Iâve often seen is a denial that the teachings of any ecumenical council are not binding on them if Eastern Catholics werenât present during such council. So, letâs try this and put a finer point on your excellent question:
Rome has defined the following as dogmatic truths which must believed de fide by all Catholics of any stripe:
If Eastern Catholic Churches do not believe dogmas solemnly defined by the Church, then they are rejecting the Deposit of Faith and cannot be in communion with Rome.
- Mary truly was, by supernatural intervention, never at any point in her life subject to Original Sin.
- Purgatory exists for the purpose of its inhabitants rendering satisfaction for sins to God the Father by suffering the temporal punishments that were not suffered during the terrestrial lives of the purgatorial inhabitants.
Thank you, Dejongs; I, like you, have thought this ever since hearing of the ECCs.
Exactly. I have struggled with this for years, and no Eastern Catholic seems to be capable of giving me a real answer on this. They all seem to want to be in communion with the Pope but to avoid embracing the infallible teachings of the Universal Church. With this post, Iâd sure appreciate it if anyone at all can offer me a satisfactory explanation.