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Fone_Bone_2001
Guest
If the orthodoxy of the clause itself is no longer the issue, then shouldn’t the whole thing no longer be an issue, in light of the fact that Catholic Christianity today does indeed consider the filioque-including version to be the creed of the Latin Church specifically, whereas the ecumenically binding version is the one from A.D. 381?I think as I have stated, the orthodoxy of the Filioque isn’t the question in most of the minds who oppose it. I’ve come across many writings that have reconciled the Eastern and Western view. The problem generally is that Rome changed the Creed that was agreed upon by Ecumenical Council. Only an Ecumenical Council may change the Creed which is intended for all Christian Churches that carry the orthodox faith.
Thus, Rome doesn’t want the eastern Catholic churches to use the filioque…
Indeed. I honestly don’t think the SSPX’s dissent from a council - one fully accepted and promulgated by a pope - has any leg to stand on in light of their views on the papacy (which, if I’m not mistaken, are Absolutist/neo-Ultramontanist).True. And the biggest thing going against the SSPX is that they are not questioning Vatican I. Which means they have no excuse for going against the Pope’s authority.
The concern if valid. But as noted above, he went against a Catholic dogma. By defying the Pope he has went against the Pope’s authority. Thus justifying his excommunication.
Excommunication is a pretty serious thing. Imprudence or negligence alone is probably not enough to incur such a penalty. What actions taken by “spirit of Vatican II” bishops justify excommunication?Well, a traditionalist would say how come Lefebvre was excommunicated, and the multitude of “spirit of Vatican II” bishops were not?
Episcopal consecration against the express wishes of the Supreme Pontiff, on the other hand, is very clearly an excommunicable offense. No grey area or wiggle room there.
Well, that was my point exactly: no one had any idea that this ecclesiastical diplomatic spat in 1054 would be the symbolic beginning of a deep and enduring schism.Why not? The Nestorians and non-Chalcedonians have been out of communion for a long time at this point. It’s not like this one is unprecedented.
I don’t know, but if they were, it’s self-evidently wrong to say that someone is a heretic for denying something left open by the Magisterium of the Church.Weren’t the Orthodox eventually considered heretics for denying Papal Supremacy even before it was a dogma?
And by the time it was defined by Vatican I, at the end of the nineteenth century and leading into the twentieth, they were definitely not considered heretics but rather “schismatics,” as this old Catholic Encylopedia article from the early twentieth century, which obviously has a very pre-Vatican II perspective, itself attests.
See, to me, that doesn’t do justice to substantive exercise of papal authority outside the metropolia of central Italy before the 8th century. St. Leo the Great, for instance, acted as though he had some kind of universal authority. As did St. Victor I, St. Clement I, etc.Well, unless that idea has been there from the beginning, which has always been the Orthodox contention. Some point to the 8th century as the time when Rome started thinking of Supremacy this way.
If there is a difference - and I acknowledge there is - I’d say the first millennium popes (with the possible exception of St. Leo the Great) were really good at exercising their supremacy in a way that fully honored the divinely collegial nature of the episcopate.
Ooh, I should read that. I’m hopeful that Meyendorff would be able to explain, in the most persuasive possible terms, this matter from the Orthodox perspective.The Primacy of Peter: Essays in Ecclesiology and the Early Church
by John Meyendorff
According to definitive Catholic teaching, the supreme authority of the Catholic Church can be exercised by the Supreme Pontiff personally or by the bishops as a whole, most likely in an Ecumenical Council.An Ecumenical Council is not the final authority. The See of Rome is. This can be seen in the Church’s history.
So I do think an Ecumenical Council can be a final authority on a given matter.