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RomanCatholic66
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I watched EWTN a few weeks ago when a priest said from the Maronite Rite that they are allowed to use the Filioque or not as an option for Eastern Liturgies. WHA ?? Has this been settled, then? 


In many, but not all, Eastern Churches, the use of the filioque was a self-imposed latinization. I am 43 years old, and my Ruthenian parish has not used it in my memory. Our old service books had it in parentheses, but crossed out with pencil. The new books don’t have it at all. We’ve never used it when singing the creed.I watched EWTN a few weeks ago when a priest said from the Maronite Rite that they are allowed to use the Filioque or not as an option for Eastern Liturgies. WHA ?? Has this been settled, then?![]()
The filioque was settled in the first term of union between the Ukrainian Church and Rome. ewtn.com/library/COUNCILS/TREATBR.HTMI watched EWTN a few weeks ago when a priest said from the Maronite Rite that they are allowed to use the Filioque or not as an option for Eastern Liturgies. WHA ?? Has this been settled, then?![]()
The Maronites were not party to this quarrel.1.—Since there is a quarrel between the Romans and Greeks about the procession of the Holy Spirit, which greatly impede unity really for no other reason than that we do not wish to understand one another—we ask that we should not be compelled to any other creed but that we should remain with that which was handed down to us in the Holy Scriptures, in the Gospel, and in the writings of the holy Greek Doctors, that is, that the Holy Spirit proceeds, not from two sources and not by a double procession, but from one origin, from the Father through the Son.
No, the Maronites had the “filioque” shoved down our throat. Whereas most latinizations were self-assumed, this was one of the few that was imposed by Rome. I believe the same is true for the Chaldeans.The filioque was settled in the first term of union between the Ukrainian Church and Rome. ewtn.com/library/COUNCILS/TREATBR.HTM
The Maronites were not party to this quarrel.
I’m almost ashamed to say it, but yes. Very unfortunately. And I doubt that it’s going to change.I think that all Maronite and Syriac Catholic parishes still say the filioque unfortunately.
I can see it in the Western Church because it’s very existence came about because of a Western controversy. That controversy, of course, had nothing to do with the Oriental or Eastern Churches, but we still had it rammed down our throats.To be honest, I think it shouldn’t be an option, it should be mandatory to remove it from the Creed, that goes for the Western church too![]()
It’s always been an option, in a sense, but happily the number of ECs using that option has been gradually declining.I watched EWTN a few weeks ago when a priest said from the Maronite Rite that they are allowed to use the Filioque or not as an option for Eastern Liturgies. WHA ?? Has this been settled, then?![]()
Not among the Maronites, it hasn’t.RomanCatholic66;10568418:
It’s always been an option, in a sense, but happily the number of ECs using that option has been gradually declining.I watched EWTN a few weeks ago when a priest said from the Maronite Rite that they are allowed to use the Filioque or not as an option for Eastern Liturgies. WHA ?? Has this been settled, then?![]()
Indeed. I’m afraid I’ve never heard of any Maronites parish using the original version of the Creed.Not among the Maronites, it hasn’t.
And you won’t. That was one of the first impositions, which means it dates back to at least 1594, if not longer. There is no printed edition of the Missal or the Office that has the unexpurgated version of the Creed.Indeed. I’m afraid I’ve never heard of any Maronites parish using the original version of the Creed.![]()
But I heard it from the lips of Fr. Pacwa’s Guest. Surely Fr. Pacwa would have corrected us viewers… These guests are well vetted… This was an Eastern Rite Catholic Priest on EWTN saying his Church was granted the option to use the Filioque. I am asking if so, then what’s holding back The Orthodox? The Papacy only? This is confusing. I have an apologetics forum and people are arguing (debating about whether this is TRUE or NOT… Well, does anyone here know?I think that all Maronite and Syriac Catholic parishes still say the filioque unfortunately. Chaldean parishes that use the Reformed translation do not say it, but my diocese still does. Very few Melkite parishes that are still heavily latinized such as those in Venezuela and some parts of Lebanon still say it.
To be honest, I think it shouldn’t be an option, it should be mandatory to remove it from the Creed, that goes for the Western church too
God Bless
WHY should the Western Church accept something for herself she has never used when She seems to allow it for the Eastern Rites?I think that all Maronite and Syriac Catholic parishes still say the filioque unfortunately. Chaldean parishes that use the Reformed translation do not say it, but my diocese still does. Very few Melkite parishes that are still heavily latinized such as those in Venezuela and some parts of Lebanon still say it.
To be honest, I think it shouldn’t be an option, it should be mandatory to remove it from the Creed, that goes for the Western church too
God Bless
Well you seem to know your “ONIONS” better…It’s always been an option, in a sense, but happily the number of ECs using that option has been gradually declining.
Where such an “option” exists, the subject phrase would appear in parentheses in the printed text. This does not exist in any Maronite liturgical book, irrespective of language. To the contrary, all Maronite liturgical books invariably contain the latinized form of the Creed, exactly as it appears in Latin books (again, irrespective of language).But I heard it from the lips of Fr. Pacwa’s Guest. Surely Fr. Pacwa would have corrected us viewers… These guests are well vetted… This was an Eastern Rite Catholic Priest on EWTN saying his Church was granted the option to use the Filioque. I am asking if so, then what’s holding back The Orthodox? The Papacy only? This is confusing. I have an apologetics forum and people are arguing (debating about whether this is TRUE or NOT… Well, does anyone here know?![]()
While its Biblical, its also analogically used to relate to origin in nature and time so we may understand through human means such as measurement with math, lines, numbers etc. [There is but one nature with God,] In other words whatever is posterior to another in nature must depend according to its own nature, on the nature of another.Doesn’t even mention proceeds
Presumably, “held back” as in “held back from becoming Catholic (i.e. in-communion-with-Rome)”I don’t understand your train of thought, RC66: Because the Maronites may use (or have been granted the option to use, or whatever) the filioque clause in their recitation of the Creed, that means the Orthodox are now only “held back” by the Roman Papacy?I don’t see the connection between the two, or understand what you mean by “held back”.
Well, there are many many things about Catholics that Orthodox are unhappy about (and I’m definitely not going to try to list them). The one that’s relevant to this thread is just what you mentioned at the beginning: some Eastern Catholics (in addition to all virtually all Latin Catholics (excepting those who have mass in Greek)) say that “filioque” in the Creed.But I heard it from the lips of Fr. Pacwa’s Guest. Surely Fr. Pacwa would have corrected us viewers… These guests are well vetted… This was an Eastern Rite Catholic Priest on EWTN saying his Church was granted the option to use the Filioque. I am asking if so, then what’s holding back The Orthodox? The Papacy only? This is confusing. I have an apologetics forum and people are arguing (debating about whether this is TRUE or NOT… Well, does anyone here know?![]()
Hmmm … I hadn’t been thinking of it that way; but you’re quite right. We shouldn’t call it an “option” if you guys don’t also have the option of not inserting it.Where such an “option” exists, the subject phrase would appear in parentheses in the printed text. This does not exist in any Maronite liturgical book, irrespective of language. To the contrary, all Maronite liturgical books invariably contain the latinized form of the Creed, exactly as it appears in Latin books (again, irrespective of language).