You are confusing the universal Church with the particular Church. The fullness of the universal Church subsists in each particular Church. If war or natural disaster were to isolate a single bishop with his flock up in the mountains somewhere for the rest of the world, it wouldn’t matter to them whether the rest of the Church continued to exist or not, or whether they would ever access them.
I’m sorry but this simply isnt true, you can see this from the conduct of St Athanasius who when isolated due to the heresy of Apostasy of many other bishops rather than considering that it did not matter whether the rest of the church existed made streneous attempts to contact the western Church and ensure that they too were Orthodox and in communion with himThe Catholic Church would still exist in that one see. Like a typical Westerner, you forget that the Church is a Mystery - not something you can rationalize about. The Church is divine and the Church is human; the Church is local and the Church is universal.**I’m sorry, this simpy isnt the theology of the church. It may be Orthodox Theology but it isnt the theology of the church, you wil struggle to find a single Ecumenical Council, Catechism or Papal Enyclical that supports that position. **
My Church is one, holy, Catholic, and Apostolic. If you deny this then you are a heretic.
Until you find an authority to back that statement up then that remains opinion and sadly you dont have the authority to declare me a herectic.
I say we ARE the one, holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. You say that we are “part” of it. But whichever terminology you use - either is correct - goes for the Church of Rome as well. We are not part of the Roman Catholic Church, and in theory we are canonically completely independent (
sui juris). To say that the Roman Rite IS the Catholic Church whereas the Eastern Churches are just
parts of it is the sort of ritual triumphalism that the Orthodox have rightly rejected.
The church in Rome IS The One Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church as much can be seen by even a cursory glance at either the Council of Florence, Council of Trent, Vatican I or Vatican II. We are all part of that Roman Church because of our obeidence to the pope and his teachings
There have always been Eastern Churches, and always been Eastern Churches in communion with Rome (the Italo-Greeks and the Maronites, for example), and throughout most of history it has been unclear whether many churches (in Russia, Serbia, and the so-called “Nestorian” Church of the East) were in communion with Rome or not. Even today the schism is not complete as intercommunion and dual communion are frequently practiced in some parts of the world.
Whether its practiced or not is really irrellevant, one cannot be in communion with the church unless one accepts its doctrines. To do otherwise is a grave delict and has always been condemned by the Church, Canon Law and the Church Fathers
Schism between the Orthodox Churches and Rome, insofar as the schism was real, did not mean that they were no longer part of the Catholic Church, only that their communion with her was imperfect.
I think you’ll find that the meaning of schism is to cease being in communion with and the obstinate refusal of multiple ‘Ecmenical Patriarchs’ goes well beyond Material Schism into Formal Schism
The Melkite bishops may have been present, but refused to sign the documents without appending statements clarifying their rights and dignity, which Rome recognized.
I really don’t care whether the Melkite bishops did or didn’t sign the documents, happily for us the church doesnt need their signatures merely a majority of the Council Fathers votes and the approval of the Pope Rome does not define doctrine for us; we are perfectly capable of doing that for ourselves, thank you very much.
This statement is so blatantly anathema to the Churches teaching that I have no need to say anything more about it.
You quoted two statements which clearly are discussing different meanings of “church”. Rome as a PARTICULAR Church is “mistress and mother of the Churches” insofar as as she is Queen of the Churches by virtue of her primacy. That the Roman Church could be mistress of the other Churches implies that their are other Churches. ** churches with a small c and seeing as the council mainly deals with papal infallibility and uses the terms Roman and ‘The Church’ and ‘Holy Mother Church’ interchangeably it can hardly be said that it is referring to a particular church******
Historically in the early Church bishops were elected by their flock, not appointed by the Pope. **Thats an interesting historical fact but its just that a historical fact. The First Vatican Council states 'So, then,
Code:
if anyone says that
the Roman pontiff has merely an office of supervision and guidance, and
not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole church, and this
not only in matters of
faith and morals, but also in those which concern the
discipline and government of the church dispersed throughout the whole world; or that
he has only the principal part, but not the absolute fullness, of this supreme power; or that
this power of his is not ordinary and immediate both over all and each of the churches and over all and each of the pastors and faithful:
let him be anathema. ' I'm pretty sure that gives the pope the right to appoint bishops. **
I never disagreed with the inerrancy of the Bible.
I’m Glad
If they have no errors of faith, and are an expression of Tradition, then yes they are a written record of the deposit of Faith.
Not according to the council of Trent