mardukm said:
Dear brother ConstantineTG,
Are you learning about the East itself ONLY, or are your sources also inclined to give you a rather inaccurate understanding of Latin Catholicism in the process of their attempts to make the distinction? I have to tell you right now that upon reading your posts in the past several months insisting on the “worlds apart” view, you have shown very little understanding of Latin Catholic doctrines. I don’t know if it’s because you forgot what was taught you as a Latin Catholic, or because you are simply now more inclined to listen to non-Latins who know little or nothing about Latin Catholicism.
You really need to distinguish between the two (i.e., learning about the East for its own sake, on the one hand, and learning about the differences with the West through the eyes of Easterns who know little or nothing about the Latins, on the other), or you end up doing the same thing to the Latins that you claim the Latins are doing to Easterns.
Blessings,
Marduk
This is an
excellent point, Marduk. It’s a trap we can all fall into: failing to ensure that we’re learning about the East from eastern sources (Orthodox, of course, being those who live that whole approach most fully) and the West from western sources.
I’ve lost count of the number of times when I’ve read Orthodox sources explain something, thought “Wow, that’s a great explanation!”, then scratched my head in puzzlement at their assertion that “Roman Catholics” believe otherwise. “But that’s what I was taught, and I’ve been a Latin Catholic all my life!” I find myself inevitably thinking.
lssanjose said:
When people typically see the word rite, they think physical expressions, of the same thing.
That can be true, though, depending on what that “same thing” is said to be. The different rites
are different expressions of the One True Faith…
That’s an entirely different claim from the dubious suggestion that the theology, beliefs, etc. are the same. Sometimes they are “worlds apart,” as Constantine has said… but is the
Faith they live worlds apart?
If so, then the full communion between Latin, Eastern, and Oriental Catholics is a lie, a falsehood. I don’t believe that to be the case.
lssanjose said:
This isn’t emphasized so much, if at all, in Western thought.
I agree, although sometimes you find it there, too. The Carmelites, for instance, have it.
Of course, they originated in the Middle East, so they probably picked it up from eastern Christianity to begin with…
ConstantineTG said:
Eastern Catholics too is a bit of a misnomer, one reason why many do not subscribe to the “two lung” theory. Does it mean a Ukrainian Catholic is the same as an Ethiopian Catholic? Or a Maronite? Or a Chaldean?
“Eastern Catholic” can be an ambiguous term, it’s true.
But no, of course the examples you cite are very differnent. Ukrainian Catholics are Byzantines; they should be like the Eastern Orthodox as much as they can. Ethiopian Catholics are Oriental Catholics, probably Miaphysites like the Oriental Orthodox, for instance. Maronites, of course, are their own unique entity, and Chaldeans don’t have Orthodox roots at all.
If we are to worship Christ wherever his presence is, why not in other places where He says He is? Also, don’t we believe that God is everywhere and in everything? So why stop at the Eucharist?
Because, as you well know, He is present as the Holy Eucharist in a manner and to a degree not found elsewhere in this world.
To adore a consecrated host
as God is to worship Jesus Christ, our Lord, God, and Savior.
To worship a human being in the same sense as one might adore a consecrated host would be idolatry.
There’s a deeper Mystery, I think, to the Eucharist. I actually think the Latins have come to express that deeper Mystery better than the Easterns or Orientals in Eucharistic Adoration (of course, I think there are some things that I think the Easterns express better than the Latins, and some things I think Orientals express better than Easterns or Latins

). I’m just glad to be in a Church that can appreciate all the varied expressions of the one, true Faith.
Blessings,
Marduk
Yeah, me too.
The problem is when we explain our side, people think its a jab at their side. How can we be honest with our position then? And the discussion takes a futher dive when after we first explain our side in charity, then the other side becomes overtly defensive of their side.
As you have repeatedly and justly emphasized, Constantine, the Latin practice of “Eucharistic Adoration” is not
at all a part of “your side.”
So in statements from you about Eucharistic Adoration, you’re going beyond merely explaining your side.
Well, like I said, it hardly starts that way. The problem is it devolves into that. Here is a sample:
A: Do you do Eucharistic adoration?
B: No
A: Why not?
B: Well, it is because of this…
A: Well, we do it because of this.
B: Yeah, but we just don’t subscribe to that
A: Why not? It’s not good enough for you guys?
Then it goes downhill from there.
Fair enough. I, for one, am
not saying you should do Eucharistic Adoration.
You shouldn’t, obviously.
What I
do object to, Constantine, is the claim that Eucharistic Adoration is wrong. That was your word - “wrong.” Did you mean “wrong” for an Eastern Christian? Okay, then. I agree. If you mean “wrong” across the board, then it is you who are incorrect. The adored consecrated host as the icon of the West has a beautiful and proper place in Latin spirituality, and it’s inconceivable that a thousand years of Latin saints and mystics have somehow missed what you see so clearly…