Easterners, what do YOU believe about the Papacy?

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The Absolutist Petrine view is a misinterpretation of the intentions and doctrine promulgated by the Vatican 1 Fathers.😃

Blessings,
Marduk
Sorry brother, but I disagree with you here. Rome teaches the Absolutist Petrine view and has dogmatized it with Vatican I. If we claim to believe otherwise, then we are not in communion with the Pope. If we claim we are in communion with the Pope then we have to examine ourselves and ask, why are we in communion with him but not agree with him in a dogma he has deemed essential in the Catholic faith.
 
Can a pope who falls into heresy ever be deposed by his fellow bishops?

(If you’re able to give a detailed response, I ask that you start a new thread in the Apologetics forum, so this discussion doesn’t wander off-topic.)
No earthly authority can depose a validly elected pope (otherwise, that would defeat the point of the Petrine ministry - a final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy)…however, it is often argued, even by the most traditionalist absolute petrine supporters than a pope who openly fell into heresy would excommunicate himself by his very actions and thus cease to be the pope. I suppose at this point the cardinals could elect a new pope - not by deposing the previous pope, but simply by recognizing that he had removed himself from office by virtue of his crimes against the faith. There is a subtle but very important distinction.
 
Many Orthodox have become Catholic since Pastor Aeternus was promulgated, so I don’t think that is true.
Both on CAF and in the real world, the number of Orthodox converts to Catholicism that I can name offhand may be counted on one hand: MardukM, Vladimir Soloviev, and James Likoudis.
The teaching of “papal infallibility,” in layman’s terms, is this:
  1. Christ established in the person of Peter (not the person of Simon) a special charism (through a special prayer by Christ himself, according to the Gospel of Luke) to be able to confirm his brethren in times of need.
  1. According to the principles of Apostolic Succession, this special charism was inherited by those who inherited the headship of St. Peter among the Apostles.
It seems to me the only way to deny this Truth is by doing one or both of the following:
(a) Deny that Peter was head of the Apostles and given this special role among the Apostles.
(b) Deny Apostolic Succession.
Well, one could also say:

(c) The Early Church believed in the charism of infallibility for neither the bishops in union with the pope nor the pope in union with the bishops.
 
No earthly authority can depose a validly elected pope (otherwise, that would defeat the point of the Petrine ministry - a final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy)…however, it is often argued, even by the most traditionalist absolute petrine supporters than a pope who openly fell into heresy would excommunicate himself by his very actions and thus cease to be the pope. I suppose at this point the cardinals could elect a new pope - not by deposing the previous pope, but simply by recognizing that he had removed himself from office by virtue of his crimes against the faith. There is a subtle but very important distinction.
And how could they say a Pope has deposed himself if they don’t put him to trial first, which they can’t. Its a paradox.
 
No earthly authority can depose a validly elected pope (otherwise, that would defeat the point of the Petrine ministry - a final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy)…however, it is often argued, even by the most traditionalist absolute petrine supporters than a pope who openly fell into heresy would excommunicate himself by his very actions and thus cease to be the pope. I suppose at this point the cardinals could elect a new pope - not by deposing the previous pope, but simply by recognizing that he had removed himself from office by virtue of his crimes against the faith. There is a subtle but very important distinction.
All of this makes the pope into an absolute dictator. If no one can demand his resignation, the clergy and laity have no practical options at their disposal for removing a pope who could very well be spreading error. I shudder to contemplate a secretly pro-abortion cardinal being elected to fill the role of the vicar of Christ (in some worst-case scenario).

Eastern Orthodoxy holds the bishops to constitute the “final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy”, and yet they can still be deposed without the whole edifice crumbling like a sandcastle in a hurricane.
 
All of this makes the pope into an absolute dictator. If no one can demand his resignation, the clergy and laity have no practical options at their disposal for removing a pope who could very well be spreading error. I shudder to contemplate a secretly pro-abortion cardinal being elected to fill the role of the vicar of Christ (in some worst-case scenario).

Eastern Orthodoxy holds the bishops to constitute the “final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy”, and yet they can still be deposed without the whole edifice crumbling like a sandcastle in a hurricane.
What happens when the episcopate is divided? I, for one, if I were to reject the papacy, could never decide between Eastern and Oriental Orthodoxy (to use the most obvious example - there are other divides/schisms in the “Orthodox” world)…Chalcedon, for me, is an ecumenical council because it was accepted by Rome and the bishops in union with him. The Orthodox say it is ecumenical because it was accepted by “the Church”…to me that argument does not work because at least two major sees (Antioch and Alexandria) and numerous other local churches rejected it.

Regardless, the Pope is not an absolute dictator. He is NOT above Tradition…he is the custodian of Tradition. A secretly pro-choice pope could never promulgate pro-choice doctrine nor bind the Church to it - that is part of our Catholic faith - the Spirit would not allow it. We must have faith that this fictional pro-choice cardinal would either be convicted to recant his heretical beliefs or would, by Divine Providence, be prevented from binding the Church to error… the Church is sustained by her Divine Spouse, not by the papacy nor the episcopate.
 
Eastern Orthodoxy holds the bishops to constitute the “final safeguard of ensuring Church unity and orthodoxy”, and yet they can still be deposed without the whole edifice crumbling like a sandcastle in a hurricane.
The same is true of the OO, Trebor, even though we (well, the Copts anyway) have had bishops operating under the title “Pope” for centuries before Roman bishops began using it to refer uniquely to themselves. And, yes, Popes can be (and have been) deposed from the See of St. Mark. It’s quite rare, understandably, but most recently this happened in 1950s (can’t remember the exact year) to HH Pope Kyrillos IV’s predecessor, Yusab II.

All this stuff that exaggerates the power of the/a Pope is a result of particularly Western developments not reflected in the universal (or “Catholic” :p) tradition of the Church.
 
The same is true of the OO, Trebor, even though we (well, the Copts anyway) have had bishops operating under the title “Pope” for centuries before Roman bishops began using it to refer uniquely to themselves. And, yes, Popes can be (and have been) deposed from the See of St. Mark. It’s quite rare, understandably, but most recently this happened in 1950s (can’t remember the exact year) to HH Pope Kyrillos IV’s predecessor, Yusab II.
Your back-up on this front is appreciated. 👍
All this stuff that exaggerates the power of the/a Pope is a result of particularly Western developments not reflected in the universal (or “Catholic” :p) tradition of the Church.
How ironic… but not amusingly so.
 
The Absolutist Petrine view is a misinterpretation of the intentions and doctrine promulgated by the Vatican 1 Fathers.😃
It may have not been their intention, and it may have not been their wish, but what they ultimately voted for was Ultramontanism, and that was what was installed as the dogmatic basis for Papal power.
 
Sorry brother, but I disagree with you here. Rome teaches the Absolutist Petrine view and has dogmatized it with Vatican I. If we claim to believe otherwise, then we are not in communion with the Pope. If we claim we are in communion with the Pope then we have to examine ourselves and ask, why are we in communion with him but not agree with him in a dogma he has deemed essential in the Catholic faith.
Pope Paul VI, Pope JP2 the Great of thrice-blessed memory and Pope Benedict XVI expressed/espresses a very collegial view of Catholic ecclesiology. There are also some juicy quotes from Pope Pius IX himself who expressed HIgh Petrine, not Absolutist Petrine, viewpoints after Vatican 1 (Pius IX had some personal Absolutist Petrine views DURING the Council, but even he adhered to the HIgh Petrine teaching of Vatican 1 AFTER the Council).

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Regardless, the Pope is not an absolute dictator. He is NOT above Tradition…he is the custodian of Tradition. A secretly pro-choice pope could never promulgate pro-choice doctrine nor bind the Church to it - that is part of our Catholic faith - the Spirit would not allow it. We must have faith that this fictional pro-choice cardinal would either be convicted to recant his heretical beliefs or would, by Divine Providence, be prevented from binding the Church to error… the Church is sustained by her Divine Spouse, not by the papacy nor the episcopate.
From this perspective (with which I agree), it makes me think that detractors of the papacy put more stock in man rather than in God. Our beliefs about the papacy are based on CHRIST’S promises. Simon cannot overcome the Peterness which Christ bestowed on him - that’s the way I see it. It’s not about what an individual Pope can do, or has done, but about CHRIST’S promise to his Church. Just call me naive - it’s just a simple faith.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
It may have not been their intention, and it may have not been their wish, but what they ultimately voted for was Ultramontanism, and that was what was installed as the dogmatic basis for Papal power.
Well, I’ve noticed that people often confuse ultramontanism with NEO-ultramontanism.

NEO-ultramontanism was a movement that only started in the early 19th century. It’s tenets included:
  1. The pope having the right to depose secular rulers;
  2. The Pope having no practical limits in doctrinal teaching.
  3. The Pope having no canonical limits in ecclesiological prerogatives.
The Pope was the answer to everything in the eyes of this group, specially guided by God as if by magic so that anything he does should automatically be regarded as coming from God.

Sorry, that is not what Vatican 1 taught, even though it is what most non-Catholics (and even some Catholics) think.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
But many Orthodox (not in communion with Rome) are also guilty of taking “out of context” snippets from Cyprian and pretending they are clever. I’m afraid your quotations above reflect some of that “out of context” misinterpretation.
I don’t believe I cited any quotations in this thread. If I have please point them out to me.

Here’s one for you …

**“Cyprian’s view of Peter’s ‘chair’ (cathedri Petri) was that it belonged not only to the bishop of Rome but to every bishop within each community. Thus Cyprian used not the argument of Roman primacy but that of his own authority as ‘successor of Peter’ in Carthage…For Cyprian, the ‘chair of Peter’, was a sacramental concept, necessarily present in each local church: Peter was the example and model of each local bishop, who, within his community, presides over the Eucharist and possesses ‘the power of the keys’ to remit sins. And since the model is unique, unique also is the episcopate (episcopatus unus est) shared, in equal fullness (in solidum) by all bishops” **
John Meyendorff, *Imperial Unity and Christian Divisions *(Crestwood: St. Vladimir’s, 1989), pp. 61, 152

This pretty well describes the most common Orthodox Catholic understanding of both Saint Cyprian’s views and the Petrine ministry itself.
 
From this perspective (with which I agree), it makes me think that detractors of the papacy put more stock in man rather than in God. Our beliefs about the papacy are based on CHRIST’S promises. Simon cannot overcome the Peterness which Christ bestowed on him - that’s the way I see it. It’s not about what an individual Pope can do, or has done, but about CHRIST’S promise to his Church. Just call me naive - it’s just a simple faith.

Blessings,
Marduk
Exactly… it comes down to faith. For the same reason, I never question that I am receiving the Lord Jesus at holy mass regardless of how little I know of the personal faith or holiness of the priest…I trust the Lord’s promise that He will work through His Church despite human weakness. When the priest says “I baptize you…” it is the Lord who says “I baptize you…”, when the priest says “This is my body…” it is the Lord who says “This is my body…”, when the priest says “I absolve you…” it is the Lord who says “I absolve you”. Likewise, when the pope and bishops say “this is what I teach…” it is the Lord who says “this is what I teach…”
 
Dear brother Trebor,
Both on CAF and in the real world, the number of Orthodox converts to Catholicism that I can name offhand may be counted on one hand: MardukM, Vladimir Soloviev, and James Likoudis.
We did a poll here a long time ago of “converts” from Orthodoxy to Catholicism. I believe there are at least 12 members of CAF who are “converts.” They don’t advertise it, though.
Well, one could also say:
(c) The Early Church believed in the charism of infallibility for neither the bishops in union with the pope nor the pope in union with the bishops.
First of all, Isn’t that begging the question? The issue is what infallibility is. Can you name even one early Church Father who denied that St. Peter was given the unique responsibility of confirming the brethren in their faith?

Can you name even one Orthodox Catholic Church Father who denied that one should appeal to Rome as the court of final appeal (keeping in mind that the Canons of Sardica were confirmed by several Ecumenical Councils).

Secondly, are you saying that the early Church did not believe that the Holy Spirit guided the Ecumenical Councils (i.e., the bishops in union with the Pope)? That is, after all, what “infallibility” is - the guidance of the Holy Spirit according to Christ’s promise in the Scriptures.

Perhaps you are not understanding exactly what infallibility is?

Do you think the Orthodox deny the indefectibility of the Church? Indefectibility is the guidance of the Holy Spirit for the Church on a permanent, long-term basis. Infallibility is simply the guidance of the Holy Spirit for the Church in particular instances. Are you saying the Orthodox claim that the early Church denied this infallibility? I can give you solid proof that the Ecumenical Councils (particular instances of the bishops in union with the head bishop) were guided by the Holy Spirit because they claimed to be guided by the Holy Spirit. Even outside the occasion of an Ecumenical Council, do not the Canons of the Council of Sardica - and its subsequent re-affirmations by several Ecum Councils - demonstrate the principle of the Holy Spirit acting with the bishops in union with their head bishop?

Where is your proof for your (third) proposition?

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Now, about the 22 rites.
They’re self-governing churches, not rites. There are only around six or so eastern and oriental rites.
Saint Cyprian believed all bishops were Peter, and it was in this context that he stated what he did because of a local schism in his synod of north Africa. He wanted them to return to communion with himself. When Roman Catholic apologists make the claim that this quote supports the Petrine ministry of Rome to the exclusion of any other orthodox bishop, they are at the very least misinformed.

Usually, people who do not know much of anything about Saint Cyprian take this ‘out-of-context’ snippet directly from a quote mine and pretend that they are clever.
I understand Orthodox ecclesiology (every bishop is Saint Peter; thus, every bishop possesses Petrine seniority), but doesn’t Saint Cyprian somewhere refer to the Church of Rome specifically as “the principal Church, in which sacerdotal unity has its source, whose faith was praised by the preaching Apostle, and among whom it is not possible for perfidy to have entrance”?

Statements about the headship of Saint Peter do not prove the Catholic position for the reasons you’ve pointed out, Hesychios. But what about when fathers like Saint Cyprian or Saint Irenaeus speak of the See of Rome specifically?
Cyprian and his synod in North Africa ruled that those baptized by heretics ought to be rebaptized. Stephen, bishop of Rome, decided that they should not be rebaptized, and he attempted to force this custom upon the churches in Africa. Cyprian and the African bishops refused to give into Stephen’s demands. Joining Cyprian in his resistance to Stephen’s notion that heretics ought not be rebaptized was Firmilian of Cappadocia, who wrote an epistle to Cyprian in support of the rebaptism of heretics, decrying Stephen’s belief as not being passed down from the Apostles. St. Basil the great would later call Cyprian and Firmilian the ‘ancient authorities’ in his epistle 188, where he himself endorsed the rebaptism of heretics
Didn’t the Church - long before the schism that now divides us - come to agree with St. Stephen on this matter rather than St. Cyprian?

Even your church’s practice until relatively recently (nineteenth century? I think) was to receive converts from Roman Catholic churches, etc. by Chrismation rather than by (re)baptism…

(Actually, I only know that for sure about the Russian Orthodox Church, but even so…)
I don’t think anyone questions the primacy of the Pope even in the early Church. But what this shows that universal jurisdiction and supreme authority obviously did not exist back then.
Actually, I don’t think it shows that. It’s very hard to “show” or to prove a universal negative. The lack of exercise of such jurisdiction does not prove it did not exist. St. Leo I, just to take one example, did occasionally take acts that seem to indicate a belief in at least some kind of universal jurisdiction.

I’m not saying this disproves the Orthodox position; far from it. They’d be perfectly logical to say that it would be irrational to expect to find explicit denials of “universal papal jurisdiction” and “papal supremacy” when no one was claiming them in the first place (according to them).

But honestly, I don’t buy gotcha-style polemicism from either side.
Even St. Peter was taken to task by St. Paul as shown in the Epistles.
Over St. Peter’s personal conduct. Not over what his authority was.

Also, I don’t see the relevance here of that incident: the Orthodox don’t deny Saint Peter’s supreme headship. They just say that every bishop (rather than his Roman successor alone) inherits it.
But there is no indication that all the other Apostles were to bow down and obey St. Peter no matter what.
Nor is that the case in the Catholic Church today… the pope’s rights, responsibilities, jurisdiction, etc. are very clearly defined. I do not believe that by Catholic standards other bishops must “bow down and obey [the pope] no matter what.” There are things he can’t do.
The problem is what most Eastern Catholics believe is not really what the Catholic Church teaches.
Are you sure about that? My impression is that they tend to have a better understanding of it; they more often are familiar with the nuances of the teaching
What about the Maronites? They have no mother church outside of the Catholic communion. What about the Syro-Malabar? One could argue that the Assyrian Church is in some way their “mother church”, but an argument could also be made that they are a distinct tradition that has been influenced by the “imperialism” of both the ancient Assyrian Church and in more recent centuries, the Latins… not to mention that they constitute the vast majority of East Syriac Christians in the world… What about the Melkites? The legitimate canonical patriarch of the Melkites reconciled with Rome in the 18th century…Constantinople then appointed their own “Orthodox patriarch” in his place…how is the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch the “mother” of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church?
Good points. We have to discern the ecclesiastical situation of various churches on a case-by-case basis.

Generally speaking, it is true that eastern Catholic churches have mother Orthodox churches, though. That exceptions exist - the solitary Maronite Church, the Melkite Greek Catholic Church which may actually be the mother church to its Orthodox counterpart, etc. - do not change what the general situation is.
I don’t know, ask the Melkites why they want to be reabsorbed to the Antiochian Church is union is established.
They’re very pro-reunion. These are the folks who gave us the Zoghby Initiative, after all. So that policy of theirs exists for ecumenical reasons. It would be ridiculous to read into it an endorsement of the position that they did not inherit the canonically legitimate Patriarch of Antioch.
Actually, no, you are wrong. Because episopacy is not reduced to one bishp of Antioch, st Meletius. But, all espisopacy deriving its authority from Rome, according to rc ecclesiology, if you dont know who the Pope is, and do not have true succession, then the whole church crumbles.
But the Church didn’t crumble. Everyone the whole time understood that there was only one legitimate Supreme Pontiff, even if it was unclear who that might be. So we fixed that problem, and the papacy endured.

So I’m not sure what your point is.
 
By the way, the fact that they didnt know who the Pope was, and needed many councils to settle the issue, proves that the Council is above the Pope, and not the other way around.
If you really understood Catholic teaching, you would know that our official belief is that neither pope nor ecumenical council is above the other. Both are capable of exercising the supreme authority of the Catholic Church, including Magisterial (i.e. teaching) authority.
And the western schism simply disprove Vatican I and the claim that the Pope(as Vatican I understands his position) is needed to end the disputes and for peace within the Church.
Oh, how silly of the Council Fathers of Vatican I. I guess they all completely forgot about the Western Schism?

What goofy triumphalism you’re spouting here, Dollinger.
That’s not what he said. He clearly said that the bishop of Rome to APPEAL to.

It is not the “unilateral, the Pope can do as he pleases” caricature that non-Catholics think the papacy is.

Blessings,
Marduk
Well said, Marduk. May God bless you for never tiring of explaining this again, and again, and again. 🙂
But if you’re Catholic you have to take the Absolutist Petrine view according to Vatican I. No ifs. No buts.
That’s not true at all.

Well, except for this part: “No ifs. No buts.” No ifs, no buts, indeed: the Absolutist Petrine view is just plain wrong. I’m with Marduk 100%.
All of this makes the pope into an absolute dictator. If no one can demand his resignation, the clergy and laity have no practical options at their disposal for removing a pope who could very well be spreading error. I shudder to contemplate a secretly pro-abortion cardinal being elected to fill the role of the vicar of Christ (in some worst-case scenario).
I think you put too much of an emphasis on the papacy with this scenario. No bishop - even the Catholic Church’s head bishop - can change Catholic teaching, force the Church to accept heterodox teachings, etc. The pope, like all bishops, is the guardian, preserver, and interpreter of Scripture and Tradition. He cannot change them or conjure up new publicly binding truths.

Yes, we do believe that the pope can personally (though never unilaterally) exercise the supreme authority of the Church, something that other bishops cannot do.

But he can’t do something that the supreme authority of the Church itself can’t do.

Honestly, quote-flinging, gotcha-style apologetics takes on many forms. I feel that between Catholics and Protestants, it happens with Scripture. Between Catholics and Orthodox, it happens with Tradition. But both churches’ ecclesiologies (Catholic and Orthodox) can be interpreted in a way that conforms to what has been handed on to us (Sacred Tradition).

I do indeed believe that it comes down, therefore, to which makes the most sense, which allows the Church to operate as it has always operated (here comparisons to the first millennium are very useful).

And these concerns about heretical popes, to me, reflect flaws in the Absolutist Petrine, neo-Ultramontanist distortion. The actual Catholic teaching on the papacy is quite nuanced and careful, and I believe it strikes a balance between both episcopal collegiality - the fact that the head cannot force its will on the body - and the need for some kind of final authority. I do not find it to be a coincidence that the Orthodox haven’t even universally claimed to hold an ecumenical council since the east-west schism.
Pope Paul VI, Pope JP2 the Great of thrice-blessed memory and Pope Benedict XVI expressed/espresses a very collegial view of Catholic ecclesiology. There are also some juicy quotes from Pope Pius IX himself who expressed HIgh Petrine, not Absolutist Petrine, viewpoints after Vatican 1 (Pius IX had some personal Absolutist Petrine views DURING the Council, but even he adhered to the HIgh Petrine teaching of Vatican 1 AFTER the Council).

Blessings,
Marduk
Yes, the evolution of Pope Pius IX’s views constitutes pretty undeniable evidence that Vatican I taught what you’re calling the High Petrine view. Otherwise, why would its influence have swayed Pope Pius IX away from his former absolutist leanings?
Well, I’ve noticed that people often confuse ultramontanism with NEO-ultramontanism.

NEO-ultramontanism was a movement that only started in the early 19th century. It’s tenets included:
  1. The pope having the right to depose secular rulers;
  2. The Pope having no practical limits in doctrinal teaching.
  3. The Pope having no canonical limits in ecclesiological prerogatives.
The Pope was the answer to everything in the eyes of this group, specially guided by God as if by magic so that anything he does should automatically be regarded as coming from God.

Sorry, that is not what Vatican 1 taught, even though it is what most non-Catholics (and even some Catholics) think.

Blessings,
Marduk
Thank you for the distinction, Marduk. I agree very much that this “the pope can do literally anything and is the absolute authority on every level” attitude is not Catholic teaching.
 
It may have not been their intention, and it may have not been their wish, but what they ultimately voted for was Ultramontanism, and that was what was installed as the dogmatic basis for Papal power.
Says who? Is there an authoritative interpretation of “what they ultimately voted for” that backs up this interpretation?

This is really odd: we have the very life of the church, the very words and actions of the Popes cited by Mardukm, and even an admission about possible intentions and wishes, but still an insistence on the idea that we are somehow rigorously bound to an absolutist, ultramontane interpretation of VI.

Reminds me of an old story - I read this first about a sharecropper in the South, but found a Turkish version on the net:
One day a friend wants to borrow Hoca’s donkey. Hoca does not want to lend it and tells him that his donkey is not there.
In the meantime the donkey starts to bray. The man says: “But Hoca, I can hear the donkey! It’s in the stable.” Hoca stays cool and answers with dignity: “Who are you going to believe, me or the donkey?”
Unauthorized, interpretations really don’t have much weight against actual facts.
 
I think you put too much of an emphasis on the papacy with this scenario. No bishop - even the Catholic Church’s head bishop - can change Catholic teaching, force the Church to accept heterodox teachings, etc. The pope, like all bishops, is the guardian, preserver, and interpreter of Scripture and Tradition. He cannot change them or conjure up new publicly binding truths.
When you say the pope can and cannot do certain things, do you mean that he is limited in his physical abilities–so that, in the best-case scenario, he would be struck mute (cf. the case of Zachariah in Luke chapter one) and go paralyzed if he attempted to teach the morality of abortion in his official capacity? Or, do you mean that he is limited in his divinely-bestowed and ecclesiastically-regulated authority–so that, also in the best-case scenario, he would ponder the weight of his duties as the vicar of Christ, to follow Sacred Scripture, uphold Sacred Tradition, and look out for the welfare of the faithful, before he abandoned his idea to teach the morality of abortion in his official capacity?
Yes, we do believe that the pope can personally (though never unilaterally) exercise the supreme authority of the Church, something that other bishops cannot do.
But he can’t do something that the supreme authority of the Church itself can’t do.
You make a distinction between the personal and official aspects of the pope’s teaching authority which was not widely, let alone universally, taught in the time of Sts. Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Athenasius, and Vincent of Lerins. If contrary evidence exists, we can certainly examine it together.
 
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