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steve_b
Guest
not to derail things, maybe possible reasons for your problems with the russiansseems to stem primarily from a lack of separation of Church and state.
Past Patriarch Alexi, was a KGB agent code name, “Drosdov”
http://www.keston.org.uk/kns/miscnew/KNS RUSSIA The Patriarch and the KGB.html
PR:
If they weren’t Orthodox, and they weren’t in union with Rome, then they technically aren’t Catholic either.The same held for Polish Catholics. Eastern Catholics in Ukraine, since they are neither Roman Catholic nor “Orthodox” (in the sense of not being in communion with Rome) were particularly persecuted because it seemed nobody really fully understood where their loyalties were in regards to the state.
PR:
did you knowSadly the “explanation” is nothing more than “ecumenical sensitivity”. Rome simply doesn’t want to create any further waves between it and Moscow.
- Alexi prevented popes, most recently JPII from even visiting the Ukraine and other spots where Catholics reside.
- As far as ecumenical sensitivity, when Cardinal Kasper was in charge of the ecumenical efforts for the Vatican, he said in 2002
zenit.org/article-3885?l=english
Is it possible, just thinking out loud, that the efforts by the Vatican with the RO is deffinitely with you in mind also, so that you aren’t persecuted by the RO in particular, and the Russian govt in general?. He’s there in solidarity for you as a Catholic and he brings world attention to your grievances and persecution
PR:
They have given no reason?Sadly we have Eastern and Oriental Catholic Patriarchates whose numbers could fit into a small room, but when it comes to the largest Eastern Catholic body in the world Rome refuses to recognize it as a Patriarchate.
PR:
You and I know that “scholars” is a very loose term. Do you have any specific names you’re refering to?Scholars, even Roman Catholic scholars, don’t seem to agree on what makes a council ecumenical
PR:
actually, Catholics and EO at least agree on 7. The orientals otoh don’t.It is also widely accepted that universal reception is not necessarily necessary to make a council ecumenical. In fact, there are only three (or four?) councils that are universally recognized as being ecumenical by Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, and Oriental Orthodoxy.
PR:
That’s squishy at best. If it is sooooo difficult for the EO to agree what is ecumenical, then how are those same people to agree what is orthodox and agree universally?I am more and more coming to agree with a certain forum member that the question should not be whether or not a council is ecumenical, but whether or not it is orthodox. Remember, just because an Eastern Catholic may not accept such councils as Trent, Florence, Vatican I - II, etc. as ecumenical, doesn’t mean that we don’t believe they are not orthodox.
Look at Cardinal Kasper’s comments above.
PR:
In the CC there are 21 ecumenical councilsPersonally (and I am speaking for myself), I only believe that the first 7 of the councils are truly ecumenical, but I don’t believe that any of the “general synods of the West” (so called by Pope John XXIII or Paul VI) are heterodox, heretical or whatever when understood within their proper Latin context. They …[snip]
The problem here is that no one really knows what primacy means, not even the Pope. …[snip].
Of course primacy is understood. Just look in the CA library.