A
arabic_catholic
Guest
Hi ,
I went to a byzantine divine liturgy a while ago , and I asked the priest for confession . So when I confessed he told me that what I am confessing is not a mortal sin. Then when I asked a monk about it , he said to me that the Eastern Church follows John Chrysostom theology , while the West follows Augustinian theology on sin, and that therefore the priest reasoning on what is a mortal sin is different . His answer made a total sense to me. However , I still have doubts. for what I hear from priest and people sometimes is different than what I read in this site. is the Eastern Theology , within the Catholic Church, allowed to operate in its own way ? I mean since the East does not define a lot of things like the west , is it therefore follows that the Eastern (catholic not orthodox) rites follows a different theology of approaching scripture , sin , afterlife… etc. than that of the Latin Church ?
I went to a byzantine divine liturgy a while ago , and I asked the priest for confession . So when I confessed he told me that what I am confessing is not a mortal sin. Then when I asked a monk about it , he said to me that the Eastern Church follows John Chrysostom theology , while the West follows Augustinian theology on sin, and that therefore the priest reasoning on what is a mortal sin is different . His answer made a total sense to me. However , I still have doubts. for what I hear from priest and people sometimes is different than what I read in this site. is the Eastern Theology , within the Catholic Church, allowed to operate in its own way ? I mean since the East does not define a lot of things like the west , is it therefore follows that the Eastern (catholic not orthodox) rites follows a different theology of approaching scripture , sin , afterlife… etc. than that of the Latin Church ?
