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Isa_Almisry
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When I’m not so tired, I’ll start yet another thread on this, but in NCF.No, you’ve ignored evidence against your mischaracterizations several times.
When I’m not so tired, I’ll start yet another thread on this, but in NCF.No, you’ve ignored evidence against your mischaracterizations several times.
This is the Vatican version of the story. We don’t see that in the Bible, nor early centuries. In particular, St. James presides over Jerusalem with no reference to St. Peter. Antioch, however does not act without reference to Jerusalem. We see Rome excercizing some authority over Corinth, and Antioch over the Churches of Asia, but the Churches of Asia seem to huddle around Ephesus, especially during the Paschal controversy. Alexandria had only one bishop, but the bishops of the Pentapolis had gravitated towards it, as it did in the secular world.I see. The references to Peter in the service are probably a reflection of the Synod I mentioned.
Going back to the beginning of Christianity, we had Peter and the Apostles, with Peter being their head and spokesman. This is what I refer to as the universal model.
The only place that resembles this model is Alexandria (even Rome doesn’t), but the ECF commented on how odd Alexandria was in this.The later rising of Patriarchates was a particular reflection of this early universal model, that is, what each Patriarch was to his Patriarchate was based on what Peter was to the Apostles. Peter being the Protos of the Apostles is the universal basis upon which the particular Patriarch becoming the Protos of his Patriarchate.
I maintain that the relationship between the Pope to all the Patriarchs (or Bishop of Rome to all the Bishops), is a succession of the universal model. I maintain that the relationship between each Patriarch to his Bishops (or Bishop to his priests) is a succession of the particular model. This latter particular model is based on the former universal model.
Of course, the last point is the point in question.You maintain that the universal Protos was modeled on the particular Protos. I maintain that the particular Protos was modeled on the universal Protos. Perhaps it is not an either/or, perhaps both can work. In any case, this is my perspective, that the reason that we have a Protos in each particular Church is because there already exists a Protos for the universal Church.
From another one of my posts on another thread on this site:This is the Vatican version of the story. We don’t see that in the Bible, nor early centuries. In particular, St. James presides over Jerusalem with no reference to St. Peter. Antioch, however does not act without reference to Jerusalem. We see Rome excercizing some authority over Corinth, and Antioch over the Churches of Asia, but the Churches of Asia seem to huddle around Ephesus, especially during the Paschal controversy. Alexandria had only one bishop, but the bishops of the Pentapolis had gravitated towards it, as it did in the secular world.
And it is to his city that they, including St. Peter, come. St. Peter, as Galatians shows us, was in Antioch. If Peter is what Ray is making out, why didn’t St. Paul stay there and ask St. Peter (Gal. 2:11 tells us).From another one of my posts on another thread on this site:
In the NAB text, Acts 15:19, “It is my judgment, therefore, that we ought to stop troubling the Gentiles who turn to God,”
From, “Upon This Rock,” By Stephen K. Ray, page 54, footnote 72: "Acts 15:1, 6-7, 12-15,28. Many have used this passage in an attempt to invalidate Peter’s primacy by drawing attention to James as having the “final word”, but this interpretation is sadly misguided. Hugh Pope writes, "Now what is there in this episode which runs counter to Peter’s primacy of jurisdiction? Is it not rather in fullest conformity with it? St. James is the bishop of the city,
Then why do they keep talking?yet not only does Peter speak first–he settles the question;
The text doesn’t say St. Peter decreed or decided anything. Read again.St… James endorses what he says and simply provides a practical way of meeting the difficulty which has arisen" (“The Papacy in teh New Testament”, in Lattey, Papacy, 23). "You’re right in saying that [James] went beyond Peter’s decision, but, he was not decreeing or deciding as Peter had done.
begging the question.He states, to begin with, that it is his judgement. Peter didn’t speak for himself; he spoke for the whole Church.
except the doctrinal decisionWhat James added had nothing to do with the doctrinal decision
begging the question again.which had [already] been settled [by Peter]"
(Daniel W. Martin, The Church of the Scriptures [St. Louis, Mo.: Confraternity Home Study Service, 1959], 83). Peter’s theological pronouncement was the watershed of the council; Paul gave testimony; and James concludes with pastoral, practical implementation. St. John Chrysostom writes, “See how Paul speaks after Peter, and no one restrains: James waits and starts not up, for he (Peter) is was to whom it had been entrusted the government (primacy)” (Acts of the Apostles, Homily 33 in Berington and Kirk, *Faith of Catholics, 2:34). *
We’ve brought this up many a time, maybe you can answer. Since St. John Chrysostom was not in communion most of his life with Rome, and probably when he wrote this, what is it’s value for the Vatican’s supremacy?
St. John also says:
This (James) was bishop, as they say, and therefore he speaks last, and herein is fulfilled that saying, “In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established.” [note: the “pope’s” word is not enough]. But observe the discretion shown by him also, in making his argument good from the prophets, both new and old. For he had no acts of his own to declare, as Peter had and Paul. And indeed it is wisely ordered that this (the active) part is assigned to those, as not intended to be locally fixed in Jerusalem, whereas (James) here, who performs the part of teacher, is no way responsible for what has been done, while however he is not divided from them in opinion…After Peter Paul speaks, and none silences him: James waits patiently, not starts up. (for the next word). Great the orderliness (of the proceedings). No word speaks John here, no word the other Apostles, but held their peace, for James was invested with the chief rule, and think it no hardship. So clean was their soul from love of glory. “And after that they had held their peace, James answered,” etc.Peter indeed spoke more strongly, but James here more mildly: for thus it behooves one in high authority, to leave what is unpleasant for others to say, while he himself appears in the milder part.
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf111.vi.xxxiii.html
, asserting that James goes to the Bible alone for his summary, it is interesting to note that James quotes two authorities as he summarizes the proceedings: Peter and the Old Testament–“Symeon has related” and “with this the words of the prophets agree” (Acts 15:14-15).Though papal opponents often cite this passage as a proof text for sola Scriptura
st. John has explained that.
Thank you for showing us how the Eastern Orthodox view this.And it is to his city that they, including St. Peter, come. St. Peter, as Galatians shows us, was in Antioch. If Peter is what Ray is making out, why didn’t St. Paul stay there and ask St. Peter (Gal. 2:11 tells us).
Then why do they keep talking?
The text doesn’t say St. Peter decreed or decided anything. Read again.
begging the question.
except the doctrinal decision
begging the question again.
We’ve brought this up many a time, maybe you can answer. Since St. John Chrysostom was not in communion most of his life with Rome, and probably when he wrote this, what is it’s value for the Vatican’s supremacy?
St. John also says:
This (James) was bishop, as they say, and therefore he speaks last, and herein is fulfilled that saying, “In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established.” [note: the “pope’s” word is not enough]. But observe the discretion shown by him also, in making his argument good from the prophets, both new and old. For he had no acts of his own to declare, as Peter had and Paul. And indeed it is wisely ordered that this (the active) part is assigned to those, as not intended to be locally fixed in Jerusalem, whereas (James) here, who performs the part of teacher, is no way responsible for what has been done, while however he is not divided from them in opinion…After Peter Paul speaks, and none silences him: James waits patiently, not starts up. (for the next word). Great the orderliness (of the proceedings). No word speaks John here, no word the other Apostles, but held their peace, for James was invested with the chief rule, and think it no hardship. So clean was their soul from love of glory. “And after that they had held their peace, James answered,” etc.Peter indeed spoke more strongly, but James here more mildly: for thus it behooves one in high authority, to leave what is unpleasant for others to say, while he himself appears in the milder part.
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf111.vi.xxxiii.html
st. John has explained that.
Allow me to repost something on related matters:Thank you for showing us how the Eastern Orthodox view this.Clearly I, personally, still hold to Peter speaks first at the Church council and settles the matter and St. James agrees with him, but, thank you for showing that it can be interpreted a different way for those who wish to view it. You are providing what some of us in the West do not see.
When he was Orthodox. We still would “follow” him, if he followed the Fathers. Let him confess the Orthodox Faith, and he shall be first.
St. Symeon of Thessalonica (15th cent., after the sack of Constantinople) writes:
One should not contradict the Latins when they say that the Bishop of Rome is the first. This primacy is not harmful to the Church. Let them only prove his faithfulness to the faith of Peter and to that of the successors of Peter. If it is so, let him enjoy all the privileges of pontiff … Let the Bishop of Rome be succesor of the orthodoxy of Sylvester and Agatho, of Leo, Liberius, Martin and Gregory, then we also will call him Apostolic and first among other bishops; then we also will obey him, not only as Peter, but as the Savior Himself
books.google.com/books?hl=en&…esult#PPA86,M1
p. 86
When the pope of Rome 4 centuries latter wrote a letter addressed to the Orthodox Faithful in an attempt to go over the Patriarchs heads, the Patriarchs responded:
In a measure the aggressions of the later Popes in their own persons had ceased, and were carried on only by means of missionaries. But lately, Pius IX., becoming Bishop of Rome and proclaimed Pope in 1847, published on the sixth of January, in this present year, an Encyclical Letter addressed to the Easterns, consisting of twelve pages in the Greek version, which his emissary has disseminated, like a plague coming from without, within our Orthodox Fold…Usurping as his own possession the Catholic Church of Christ, by occupancy, as he boasts, of the Episcopal Throne of St. Peter, he desires to deceive the more simple into apostasy from Orthodoxy, choosing for the basis of all theological instruction these paradoxical words (p. 10, 1.29): “nor is there any reason why ye refuse a return to the true Church and Communion with this my holy Throne”…As to the supremacy, since we are not setting forth a treatise, let the same great Basil present the matter in a f’ew words, “I preferred to address myself to Him who is Head over them.”…For all this we have esteemed it our paternal and brotherly need, and a sacred duty, by our present admonition to confirm you in the Orthodoxy you hold from your forefathers, and at the same time point out the emptiness of the syllogisms of the Bishop of Rome, of which he is manifestly himself aware. For not from his Apostolic Confession does he glorify his Throne, but from his Apostolic Throne seeks to establish his dignity, and from his dignity, his Confession. The truth is the other way…But, finally, his Holiness says (p. ix. l.12) that the fourth Ecumenical Council (which by mistake he quite transfers from Chalcedon to Carthage), when it read the epistle of Pope Leo I, cried out, “Peter has thus spoken by Leo.” It was so indeed. But his Holiness ought not to overlook how, and after what examination, our fathers cried out, as they did, in praise of Leo…Of more than six hundred fathers assembled in the Counci1 of Chalcedon, about two hundred of the wisest were appointed by the Council to examine both as to language and sense the said epistle of Leo; nor only so, but to give in writing and with their signatures their own judgment upon it, whether it were orthodox or not…And thus all in succession: “The epistle corresponds,” "the epistle is consonant,“the epistle agrees in sense,” and the like. After such great and very severe scrutiny in comparing it with former holy Councils, and a full conviction of the correctness of the meaning, and not merely because it was the epistle of the Pope, they cried aloud, ungrudgingly, the exclamation on which his Holiness now vaunts himself: But if his Holiness had sent us statements concordant and in unison with the seven holy Ecumenical Councils, instead of boasting of the piety of his predecessors lauded by our predecessors and fathers in an Ecumenical Council, he might justly have gloried in his own orthodoxy, declaring his own goodness instead of that of his fathers. Therefore let his Holiness be assured, that if, even now, he will write us such things as two hundred fathers on investigation and inquiry shall find consonant and agreeing with the said former Councils, then, we say, he shall hear from us sinners today, not only, “Peter has so spoken,” or anything of like honor, but this also, “Let the holy hand be kissed which has wiped away the tears of the Catholic Church.”
orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/encyc_1848.aspx
Isa,This is the Vatican version of the story. We don’t see that in the Bible, nor early centuries. In particular, St. James presides over Jerusalem with no reference to St. Peter. Antioch, however does not act without reference to Jerusalem. We see Rome excercizing some authority over Corinth, and Antioch over the Churches of Asia, but the Churches of Asia seem to huddle around Ephesus, especially during the Paschal controversy. Alexandria had only one bishop, but the bishops of the Pentapolis had gravitated towards it, as it did in the secular world.
Every bishop is the Protos of his eparchy, every Patriarch is the Protos of his Patriarchate, and the Pope of Rome is the Protos of all. This is taken from the model of Peter being the Protos or First of the Apostles. Jesus says that who ever is first among the Apostles must be the servant of all, and Peter is first on the recorded list of the Apostles.The only place that resembles this model is Alexandria (even Rome doesn’t), but the ECF commented on how odd Alexandria was in this.
I’ll just point to this article from the Assyrian Bishop Mar Bawai Soro, which has some useful information [the section before #3, from #2.e.(ii) to #3, relates specifically to this discussion]:Of course you are assuming the Petrine supremacy, and reading it back. Or do you have some documentation of this thesis from the sources?
Calling Peter the head and spokeman of the Apostles is not a Vatican tradition: since it is Biblical, it is universal, even in Orthodoxy today. I was refering to reading supremacy into it.Isa,
Peter being the head and spokesman of the Apostles is not merely a Vatican or Latin tradition. The Church of the East (us Mesopotamians) have always referred to Peter as the Resha daShleehe (Head of the Apostles). You yourself also mentioned that Peter was the Coryphaeus.
If you think about the head and body analogy, the head is the brains/eyes/ears/mouth/etc. of the body.
That is exactly the point: the model was neither original, universal or the model. It works fine with Acts 1-2, but not Acts 15. While Rome, the captial’s See, was recognized as the preeminent see, it was not a case of a universal jurisidication being replicated on the local level from that template that resulted in the patriarchates.When this original universal model began to be played out in history among the successors, it did not always play out in accordance with the original model, and so you had early disagreements and schisms and so forth. But in general, there was a common recognition among the various Christians that Rome was the First See, because Peter, the head of the Apostles, and Paul, the Apostle to the gentiles, were martyred there.
No, there is no evidence that Peter and the Aposles being the template for the local Churches. It played no role, for instance, in the make up of the make up of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem under St. James the Brother of God, to whom we are told St. Peter defered in the founding of the Patriarchate.Every bishop is the Protos of his eparchy, every Patriarch is the Protos of his Patriarchate, and the Pope of Rome is the Protos of all. This is taken from the model of Peter being the Protos or First of the Apostles. Jesus says that who ever is first among the Apostles must be the servant of all, and Peter is first on the recorded list of the Apostles.
It was the only Church that ONLY had a “protos.”Alexandria is not the only Church that had a Protos.
Yes, a bishop: he’s what makes a see, a see.Each See had a Protos
and a bigger metropolis. That was the primary factor.But some Sees had a stronger Protos, a stronger Patriarchate,
It is interesting that you mention Seleucia-Ctesiphon, as it substantiates my point. If the development of ecclesiasology was was bases on this “protos” model, she would have been under Antioch, as she is the Patriarchate “of All the East.”and Alexandria was one such See. Another such strong Patriarchical See was at Seleucia-Ctesiphon, for example, at the Synod of Mar Joseph of 554,
Yes, anything the Church does involves the Faithful.The Church condemned the interference of lay people in church affairs. If I’m not mistaken, this is unlike the Orthodox Church, where the lay people can participate in the deposing of a Patriarch (again, you can correct me on this if I’m mistaken).
I’ll just point to this article from the Assyrian Bishop Mar Bawai Soro, which has some useful information [the section before #3, from #2.e.(ii) to #3, relates specifically to this discussion]:
I’ll have to get some time to give it a look.
Isa,Calling Peter the head and spokeman of the Apostles is not a Vatican tradition: since it is Biblical, it is universal, even in Orthodoxy today. I was refering to reading supremacy into it.
In Acts 15, there was a debate, Peter spoke first and gave the correct position on the matter, then Paul and Barnabas contributed, and then James (as bishop of the city) makes a reference to Peter (Simeon), a reference to the Prophets, and gives a judgment that is in agreement with Peter’s and the Prophets’.That is exactly the point: the model was neither original, universal or the model. It works fine with Acts 1-2, but not Acts 15. While Rome, the captial’s See, was recognized as the preeminent see, it was not a case of a universal jurisidication being replicated on the local level from that template that resulted in the patriarchates.
Seleucia-Ctesiphon was in hierarchical communion with Antioch (which was considered the “West” from our traditional CotE perspective), but in different empires, and with different Apostolic successions. Then, the CotE declared its independence from the “West” at the Synod of Dadisho’ in 424. But, it was already a Patriarchate by the time of this Synod, because more than a century earlier, Seleucia-Ctesiphon became a Patriarchate under the Catholicos Mar Papa bar Gaggai.It is interesting that you mention Seleucia-Ctesiphon, as it substantiates my point. If the development of ecclesiasology was was bases on this “protos” model, she would have been under Antioch, as she is the Patriarchate “of All the East.”
That St. Peter spoke for the Church, and with the Church, but not to the Church as if he was above it.Isa,
Since you agree with me that Peter is the head and spokesman of the Apostles, how do you understand this title? What does this title mean to the Orthodox?
St. James is more than just the bishop of the city: Acts 15:2 makes it clear that the Apostles are still headquartered there, although St. Peter has already gone on to Antioch. And as Apostolic Tradition shows, there was a special position to Jerusalem,to which Tradition says the Lord personally appointed St. James.In Acts 15, there was a debate, Peter spoke first and gave the correct position on the matter, then Paul and Barnabas contributed, and then James (as bishop of the city) makes a reference to Peter (Simeon), a reference to the Prophets, and gives a judgment that is in agreement with Peter’s and the Prophets’.
this is where the protos template breaks down: St. James was not just a local bishop, and Jerusalem was not just any city. It is clear SS. Peter, Paul and Barnabas go up to Jerusalem for a reason, and the reason stated is the “Apostles and the elders” and their authority was there.You have everyone contributing in chapter 15, including both the Protos of the Apostles (Peter) and the Protos of the city of Jerusalem (James),
,and there is agreement amongst each other. This is Catholicism: Peter and all the Apostles. In current Orthodoxy, you guys are missing the successor of the Protos of the Apostles
This is the question we have: if St. Peter’s role must be passed down, what about the other Apostles? Who is Matthaias now? Where’s Matthew? It comes too close for my comfort to the Mormon polemic that it is the only “church” that has 12 Apostles and the 70.as well as, the successors of some of the Apostles (like the successor of St. Thomas for instance).
Actually it is more the conciliar Orthodox model, as St. Peter neither calls the Council, makes its decision, validates it or promulgates it. And James, not he, presides.Acts 15 works more with a Catholic model of the successor of Peter as being the Protos of the Bishops,
That’s just it: despite what Ravenna says, the EP is not the protos in the sense you are saying. Nor was St. Peter. Nor for that matter St. James. The Orthodox are NOT those who are in communion with the EP. The EP is but one member of the communion, not its source.than with the current Orthodox model of the successor of Andrew as being the Protos.
Yes, we would say there has been improvement in this area.As far as universal jurisdiction and supremacy, the Catholic Church is open to a reformulation of these, as we are told in JPII’s Encyclical Ut Unum Sint (#95).
In our ecclesiology, it would be more accurate to say the bishop is the servant of his dioceseThe way the role of the Pope to the all the Patriarchs and Bishops should be described to all non-Catholics as follows: The Pope is is the servant of all the Patriarchs and Bishops, a model, from which each Patriarch must be the servant of all his Bishops in his Patriarchate, and each Bishop must be the servant of all his priests in his Eparchy. The type of service is one of Christian love. This is how the Pope should be seen in his relationship to the Patriarchs and Bishops, and my favorite Papal title is: Servant of the Servants of God.
yes, the pentarchy had not formed. Ephesus was in a similar position, and got swallowed by Constantinople.Seleucia-Ctesiphon was in hierarchical communion with Antioch (which was considered the “West” from our traditional CotE perspective), but in different empires, and with different Apostolic successions. Then, the CotE declared its independence from the “West” at the Synod of Dadisho’ in 424. But, it was already a Patriarchate by the time of this Synod, because more than a century earlier, Seleucia-Ctesiphon became a Patriarchate under the Catholicos Mar Papa bar Gaggai.
Which Fathers exactly?By the way, the quote that I mentioned earlier as being written by Mar Papa on post #31, which refers to the role of Peter among the Apostles, was actually written by the “Western” Fathers in support and on behalf of Mar Papa (not written by Mar Papa himself as I mistakenly stated earlier). It was a reply letter of the “Western” Fathers to Mar Papa, after he made his appeal to them, in order to support and establish him as the first Catholicos-Patriarch of all the Church of the Persian empire (the East).
Or of Rome and her empire?And the model, on which the “Western” Fathers (including interestingly the Bishop of Edessa) based their reply letter, included these relationships: Mar Papa’s relationship to the Eastern Bishops was like that of teacher to students, father to children, master to servants, husband to a wive, and finally, the relation of Peter to the whole church (which has been my point all along). The “Western” Fathers argued in favor of a Patriarchate in the Persia empire precisely because they had in mind the model of Peter and the Apostles.
Since the CotE wasn’t in communion with Rome, this would be a rather odd thing to say.In later centuries, we see Mar Abdisho of the CotE explaining in his Nomocanons that “as the patriarch has authority to do all he wishes in a fitting manner in such things as are beneath his authority, so the patriarch of Rome has authority over all patriarchs, like the blessed Peter over all the community, for he who is in Rome also keeps the office of Peter in all the church”.
as I am not familiar with Mar Abdisho, I cannot speak much on his opinions or intentions. Since he writes after the Crusades, however, I would like to know how much CotE patrisitcs and liturgics he was able to draw on to substantiate his views.This is where we see a relationship between the individual Patriarch to his Patriarchate in connection to the relationship of the Patriarch of Rome to all the Patriarchs, again, drawing from the model of Peter and the Apostles. Mar Abdisho was not a Latin theologian so that one can blame him for taking the “Vatican” position, rather, He was the last great theologian and canonist of the Church of the East. He understood very well how the model of Peter and the Apostles was reflected both in a universal sense (Patriarch of Rome to all the Patriarchs), as well as, the particular sense (Each Patriarch to his Patriarchate).
I don’t see it as an either/or. I agree that St. Peter spoke for the Church and with the Church, but I also agree with Mar Abdisho that St. Peter was put “over all the community”.That St. Peter spoke for the Church, and with the Church, but not to the Church as if he was above it.
St. Peter spoke for the Apostles as a Body, but he was not the source of their unity.
Again, I don’t think there is necessarily an either/or here. I think there is a complementarity between the first sentence in your quote with the rest of the quote.to return to the top point: it is not that St. Peter was the protos of the Apostles, and this model was replicated in various patriarchates. Rather the assembly of the Apostles acted as we see in Acts 15. As the Church spread, each Apostles acted in the name of, and as the extension of, the whole assembly of Apostles in each Church they founded. Later their successors, the bishops would gather in their own assemblies, out of which arose their heads, the patriarchs.
Neither the EO Patriarch of Antioch nor the EO Pope of Alexandria is the universal Protos and Head (which is the function of the Successor of Peter at Rome, who is not only the particular Protos of Rome and the West, but also the universal Protos of all). They are Particular Protos and Heads of Antioch and Alexandria. Their Catholic counterpart is likewise not the universal Protos and Head, but rather the Particular Protos and Head.And Peter’s not missing: the Patriarch of Antioch and the Pope of Alexandria is in on everything we do.
I’m not sure who right now are the successors of Matthew, Mathaias, and few of the other Apostles, cause I haven’t done enough research. Perhaps I should have rephrased my paragraph in this way:This is the question we have: if St. Peter’s role must be passed down, what about the other Apostles? Who is Matthaias now? Where’s Matthew? It comes too close for my comfort to the Mormon polemic that it is the only “church” that has 12 Apostles and the 70.
I disagree with this either/or perspective, setting up Peter against James. Peter certainly does make a doctrinal decision: In verse 7, after there was much debate, Peter stands up and teaches them the faith, and they become silent as Paul & Barnabas share their thoughts, and James concludes by agreeing with Peter, and by giving the Gentiles further instructions in verse 20.Actually it is more the conciliar Orthodox model, as St. Peter neither calls the Council, makes its decision, validates it or promulgates it. And James, not he, presides.
In Orthodoxy, the EP is called the “First among Equals”. I disagree that the EP should have such a title. I see no reason based on the Deposit of Faith (Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition) for the successor of Andrew to have this title. I know the EP is not viewed by the Orthodox in the same way we view the Pope, but I also think that the EP should not have assumed this title, unless he wants to affirm it only within his Patriarchate, and not universally. I can accept the EP as “First among Equals” within his Patriarchate, but not in the universal Church.That’s just it: despite what Ravenna says, the EP is not the protos in the sense you are saying. Nor was St. Peter. Nor for that matter St. James. The Orthodox are NOT those who are in communion with the EP. The EP is but one member of the communion, not its source.
Yeah, that’s correct. The Bishop must be the servant of his diocese, that is, priests, deacons, and laity.In our ecclesiology, it would be more accurate to say the bishop is the servant of his diocese; priest, deacon and laity.
Mar Papa wrote especially to Saada, bishop of Edessa. The reply letter came from the bishops in the Roman empire. I haven’t yet done enough research on the names (and whether or not their names were actually listed), but, generally, when the Church of the East in the Persian empire used to speak of the “Western” Fathers, they were referring to Antioch of the Roman empire.Which Fathers exactly?
Yes.Or of Rome and her empire?
While at the time, the CotE was ecclesiastically independent of all the Churches in the “West”, nevertheless, Mar Abdisho saw in the universal Church, a West and an East, and considered the Pope of Rome to be over all the Patriarchs because of Peter having being set over all the community. I remember Fr. Michael J. Birnie (one of the ACotE priests of Bishop Mar Bawai Soro who came into full communion with the CC) wrote an online post about the understanding of Mar Abdisho on this, but I can’t at the moment remember the link.Since the CotE wasn’t in communion with Rome, this would be a rather odd thing to say.
as I am not familiar with Mar Abdisho, I cannot speak much on his opinions or intentions. Since he writes after the Crusades, however, I would like to know how much CotE patrisitcs and liturgics he was able to draw on to substantiate his views.
Of course, as I believed you also pointed out, we disagree.Isa,
Some comments:
I don’t see it as an either/or. I agree that St. Peter spoke for the Church and with the Church, but I also agree with Mar Abdisho that St. Peter was put “over all the community”.
I find the backbone a more apt analogy.I see St. Peter as the universal visible head of the universal body (Church) on Earth. As head, he is not there merely as an honorary figure as some EO claim (that he is only first in honor), rather, it is more than honor, he performs his functions the way the human head functions in a human body, by providing sight, speech, hearing, and thought, for/with/to the body, because the head is not just for and with the body, but that it is on, above, and over the body.
I came across this EO information. I would like to know if you agree with Fr. Schmemann on the top paragraph of page 151:
I’m more interested in this QuestionSpecifically, this sentence:
“If the Church is a universal organism, she must have at her head a universal bishop as the focus of her unity and the organ of supreme power.”
Again, I don’t think there is necessarily an either/or here. I think there is a complementarity between the first sentence in your quote with the rest of the quote.
Your last sentence says: “out of which arose their heads”. I think the reason why the heads arose is because there was a universal model of a universal head with a universal body, which lead to the arising of the particular heads with particular bodies.
Of course, that is what is at question: is there such a thing as a universal protos. As we see SS Peter, Paul and James each exercising a primacy in Acts, but without a universal protos among them, nor each imitating the other, I would say no.Neither the EO Patriarch of Antioch nor the EO Pope of Alexandria is the universal Protos and Head (which is the function of the Successor of Peter at Rome, who is not only the particular Protos of Rome and the West, but also the universal Protos of all). They are Particular Protos and Heads of Antioch and Alexandria. Their Catholic counterpart is likewise not the universal Protos and Head, but rather the Particular Protos and Head.
I’m not sure who right now are the successors of Matthew, Mathaias, and few of the other Apostles, cause I haven’t done enough research. Perhaps I should have rephrased my paragraph in this way:
Except for Thomas (and I’m not even sure of that) I don’t think the Vatican can summon more successors from a larger portion of the Apostles. And the large number is quite recent. Before Florence, they could only summon St. Peter, I believe, i.e. the Vatican itself (the Maronites and Italo-Albanians, whenever they joined, won’t change that). No one conected to St. Thomas submittted to the Vatican before 1599, and that was from a combination of isolation and Portuguese conquest.The Catholic Communion is much more a reflection of the Apostolic body of Acts 15 than the EO Communion due to not only the presence of the universal Protos (successor of Peter at Rome), but also the availability of successors descended from a larger portion of the Apostles.
Supremacy worries about either/or. Conciliarity does not.I disagree with this either/or perspective, setting up Peter against James.
He gives his testimony and his mind, but such do not a pronouncement nor decision make. There is no special mention of him when “they determined that Paul and Barnabas and certain others of them [as Galatians shows, St. Peter was in Antioch, and Acts shows he went up] should go up to Jerusalem,” nor when “the Apostles and elders came together to consider this matter,” nor when “it pleased the Apostles and the elders, with the whole Church to send chosen men.”Peter certainly does make a doctrinal decision:
no, gives his testimony and mind, just as the other bishops did, according to Ineffibilus Deus.In verse 7, after there was much debate, Peter stands up and teaches them the faith
if Rome had spoken, why was there more to say?and they become silent as Paul & Barnabas share their thoughts,
no, he stated the agreement between St. Peter’s testimony and mind with Scripture, again a la Ineffilibus Deus.and James concludes by agreeing with Peter,
No special mention of St. Peter in the “Apostolic Constitution” of Acts 15:23-9, sent in the name of "the Apostles, the elders and the brethren [cf. bishops, clergy and laity of Orthodox Councils], nor his testimony nor his mind. The only thing that stands out is is St. James’ "further instructions in verses 28-9. No indication that St. Peter sends Judas and Silas (v. 27).and by giving the Gentiles further instructions in verse 20.
That it seems that the Orthodox Catholic Church is missing the rest of the non-Constantinopolitan Churches is Constantinople’s fault, I admit, in her hand in supressing the rites of Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem, but those Churches are still Orthodox Apostolic Churches since the time of the Apostles.Synodality is found in the Catholic Communion, as well as, in Orthodoxy, but Holy Orthodoxy has decapitated the universal visible Protos and Head from their Communion. It is a semi-universal body without the legitimate universal Head, lacking both the universal Head, as well as, the rest of the non-Byzantine Apostolic Churches.
Wait, right there: I cannot overestimate the importance of this point: St. Andrew has NOTHING to do with the primacy of the EP(see page 69 of The Primacy of Peter, which you linked above). This lies at the root and core of the difference between the Vatican and us on the primacy.In Orthodoxy, the EP is called the “First among Equals”. I disagree that the EP should have such a title. I see no reason based on the Deposit of Faith (Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition) for the successor of Andrew to have this title.
That’s the Turk’s position, btw.I know the EP is not viewed by the Orthodox in the same way we view the Pope, but I also think that the EP should not have assumed this title, unless he wants to affirm it only within his Patriarchate, and not universally.
As every patriarch is first among equals in his patriarchate, this is meaningless.I can accept the EP as “First among Equals” within his Patriarchate, but not in the universal Church.
So the Vatican claims. The Early Church did quite well without one. As Barlaam showed (“The Primacy of Peter” pp. 83-4), we do not see the Pope of Rome acting over the bishops of the universal Church as we see the Vatican today.In the universal Church, there has to be a universal Protos, a universal First. St. Peter was the universal First, the Protos of the Apostles, and his successor at Rome is the First or Protos of the successors of the Apostles, the bishops.
Vatican I requires it. Scripture and Tradition do not.I know that we have disagreement on this issue, but I can not give up on the teaching that the successor of Peter at Rome is the universal Protos and Head of all the Patriarchs and Bishops. This is something that I can not give up. I must maintain that the Pope of Rome hold a universal Primacy, a universal Headship.
Yeah, that’s correct. The Bishop must be the servant of his diocese, that is, priests, deacons, and laity.
Given the language, that would make sense.Mar Papa wrote especially to Saada, bishop of Edessa. The reply letter came from the bishops in the Roman empire. I haven’t yet done enough research on the names (and whether or not their names were actually listed), but, generally, when the Church of the East in the Persian empire used to speak of the “Western” Fathers, they were referring to Antioch of the Roman empire.
Yes.
The is a great book, “From Empire to Commonwealth: the Consequences of Monotheism in Late Antiquity” Garth Fowden, which has a chapter “the world’s two eyes” which posits the Romans and the Sassanids as two parallel universes, which would in this case necissitate a universal primate (a role the catholocos of the East Syrians did assume).While at the time, the CotE was ecclesiastically independent of all the Churches in the “West”, nevertheless, Mar Abdisho saw in the universal Church, a West and an East, and considered the Pope of Rome to be over all the Patriarchs because of Peter having being set over all the community. I remember Fr. Michael J. Birnie (one of the ACotE priests of Bishop Mar Bawai Soro who came into full communion with the CC) wrote an online post about the understanding of Mar Abdisho on this, but I can’t at the moment remember the link.
I’m still in the process of studying the fathers, theology, liturgy, and synodical canons of my CotE, so I can’t at this time give you a whole lot of information, but the current Bishop Mar Bawai Soro states the following:
“The Church of the East attributes a prominent role to Saint Peter and a significant place for the Church of Rome in her liturgical, canonical and Patristic thoughts. There are more than 50 liturgical, canonical and Patristic citations that explicitly express such a conviction”.
nineveh.com/Mar%20Bawai%20Letter%20to%20the%20holy%20synod.html]
Here is a liturgical text, taken from the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, courtesy of brother Anthony Garia:
“Blessed are you, O Rome, renowned city of kings, handmaid of the heavenly Bridegroom! For the two true preachers are laid up in you as in a harboreter, the head of the apostles, upon whose truth our Savior built his faithful church, and Paul the elect, apostle and builder of the churches of Christ. By their prayers we find refuge, that mercies and compassion may be granted our souls.”
Yes, we have similar hymns etc.The Book of Khodra, “The Feast of Saints Peter and Paul: the Hymn of the Suba’a”, vol. 1
youth.maryosip.org/papers/pprs_anthony_01.html]
By the way Isa, your responses are quite deep theologically and historically,
Not at all. I always look forward to thoughtful and rich content of your posts.and which require lots of research on my behalf, so I’m sorry that I’m not giving you as much researched responses as I should.
I see the Papacy as originating in Christ’s service mission for Peter. While the Mystery of Holy Orders are three: Deaconite, Priesthood, and Episcopate, there are ranks within each of the Orders:In other words, the papacy is of ecclesiastical, not divine, origin.
I guess we’ll just have to disagree on this one. It is a certain teaching in the Church of the East that Peter was the First and Head of the Apostles. The universal Protos is merely the First and Head of the Apostles, a role that the Church of the East ascribes to Peter, calling him the Resha daShleehe.Of course, that is what is at question: is there such a thing as a universal protos. As we see SS Peter, Paul and James each exercising a primacy in Acts, but without a universal protos among them, nor each imitating the other, I would say no.
Supremacy, properly understood, must reflect a role of service to all. The Pope is not there as a tyrant. He is there to confirm his brother Bishops in the Apostolic Faith, not just the brethren in his Patriarchate, but the brethren in all the world (universally). He must have the prerogative of receiving appeals from whichever Bishop in the world that needs his assistance.Supremacy worries about either/or. Conciliarity does not.
I disagree. Again, it is not an either/or. His testimony/mind comes out as a doctrinal pronouncement/decision: Peter expresses the Apostolic Faith by stating in verse 11: “we believe that we shall be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, just as they will”.He gives his testimony and his mind, but such do not a pronouncement nor decision make.
The Apostles did not disagree with Peter. They all agreed with the statement: “we believe that we shall be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus”. They had much debate in verse 7, but no more debate after the correct teaching was proclaimed by Peter. Paul, Barnabas, and James make speeches in agreement with what Peter has just proclaimed.if Rome had spoken, why was there more to say?
James’ decision seems to include both doctrinal and disciplinary things. Again, there is no disagreement with Peter. He agrees with the Head of the Apostles by making a decision/pronouncement in agreement with the decision/pronouncement of Peter.He concludes by making the dogmatic decision.
I would say that it is more about the other Apostolic Churches recognizing the First and Head Church among them. When the Apostolic Churches are isolated and separated from the First and Head Church, though they remain as true and apostolic Churches, they loose the model of the hierarchy intended by Christ that includes both Peter and the Apostles.The Vatican having other Apostolic Churches is of very recent vintage:
Latinization was a problem for a while. Unity and Uniformity went hand in hand in the olden days, but now, pluriformity is officially protected in the Catholic Communion. Latinized Eastern/Oriental Churches are called to restore their respective traditions.Were it not for isolation in the East, and the shortness of time, I have no doubt that Latinization would have assimilated all the Easterners out of existence (as it did with the Italo-Greeks: the Italo-Albanians are not a continuation but an appropriation), as effectively as Constantinople did the other “sui juris” (to borrow a term) nature of the other patriarchates.
The historical Apostolic Churches that fell out of full canonical communion with Rome were not heretical and were not lacking in Apostolic Succession. All Apostolic Churches are true Churches, built upon orthodox Faith and Apostolic Succession, before and after the schisms. When schisms occurred between the Head Church and the other Churches, some of the Churches recognized that they were isolated from the Head Church and desired to restore the original oneness intended by Jesus for all His disciples.Judging Vatican claims (even when voiced by those who accept them in the East) on the construction of a Church nearly two millenia old on the basis of only less than a half a millenium experience makes no sense to me.
By the way, just so you know, Mar Abdisho of the Church of the East had a different way of listing the Sees. His “Pentarchy” was different from the common one of the Roman Empire. This is his list:And the title was given (Alexandria was given the title pope, which Rome later took. Rome was only given the pagan title “pontiff.”) when it actually was meaningful, when Constantinople (not Rome, which was village again by then) was at the center of the Christian world, and of universal importance, shown by the fact to this day that ALL Ecumenical Councils took place in her Patriarchate, three (including the one which wrote the Universal Creed) in the city itself. None took place in Rome.
Every Catholicos is the Catholicos of his Catholicosate, his Patriarchate. He Heads his particular Body, the Patriarchate, which makes up all his members, both near, and scattered all over the world. His service is to all, or the whole, of his Patriarchate. He does not have a universal Headship of all the Patriarchs like the Pope of Rome does.Given your thoughts on this, how do you feel about the title “Catholicos?”
So the Vatican claims. The Early Church did quite well without one. As Barlaam showed (“The Primacy of Peter” pp. 83-4), we do not see the Pope of Rome acting over the bishops of the universal Church as we see the Vatican today.
My Church of the East tradition, as I showed on this thread via Mar Abdisho of Soba, already speaks of Rome as the First See and Head of the Patriarchs, and that the Patriarch of Rome has “authority over all patriarchs, like the blessed Peter over all the community, for he who is in Rome also keeps the office of Peter in all the church”. He continues in the Nomocanon to say that he “who transgresses against these things the ecumenical synod places under anathema” (see link for source). As an Assyro-Chaldean, I can not take a position in contradiction to this position.Vatican I requires it. Scripture and Tradition do not.
Thanks for the book recommendationThe is a great book, “From Empire to Commonwealth: the Consequences of Monotheism in Late Antiquity” Garth Fowden, which has a chapter “the world’s two eyes” which posits the Romans and the Sassanids as two parallel universes, which would in this case necissitate a universal primate (a role the catholocos of the East Syrians did assume).
CoolYes, we have similar hymns etc.
Thanks. As I said earlier, you have been one of the most knowledgeable posters I’ve ever had to argue against. Thanks for frying my brainsNot at all. I always look forward to thoughtful and rich content of your posts.
This is false, check out what St. Fancis de Sales (1567-1622) says to the first generation of Protestants he was preaching to:I have heard it claimed that this parallel has no roots even in Latin tradition and was invented by modern Latin apologists in recent decades.