dzheremi, I think some people like to make it part of the reason, but we see that it is not as dividing issue as some would like to think - Catholic or Orthodox…
Well, yeah. Isn’t that what I wrote? To some people, it is a Church-diving issue, while to some it is not.
A difference of creed is a difference of faith, but the Armenian Orthodox have a different creed but the same faith as you…
No, that’s not actually what I said. If you read the portion of my post that you have quoted carefully, you’ll see that what I said is that by
that particular change to the Creed, the Easterners see the faith as changed. The Latins, unlike the Armenians (as far as I know, from what Armenians have told me), had been using the standard version of the Creed together with the East for some time (as others have pointed it, it might not have been very common liturgically, but the actions of Pope Leo III show that at least by some point it was meant to be taken as the standard of belief), then what had been a local change gradually became a problem as it spread and was eventually heard by Easterners, who had a problem with it. Probably if it was kept in Toledo only, Toledo would be looked at as odd, but we wouldn’t be talking about it as we do now.
In the Armenians’ case, as far as I am aware the version of the Creed that they use was not some sort of change away from a common form, but is something unique to their Church. So the case is not really comparable, because with the Latins you have a Church that had been using the common form of the Creed together with the Byzantines, whereas with the Armenians you have a Church that didn’t use the common form in the first place. It likewise took the Armenians some time to formally condemn Chalcedon (at least relative to the more immediate negative reaction on the part of the Egyptians), and their reasoning apparently didn’t include all of the reasons Egypt didn’t like it (as far as I know, the Armenians still do not venerate our teacher St. Dioscorus), but we recognize that the faith is the same despite these differences. Again, this is the opposite in the case of the Latins, where there are also differences but the other churches do
not recognize the faith being the same. So the distinction I’m actually trying to draw is not one of sameness vs. difference (period), but of whether or not the faith is the same even if there is external difference. I know you guys will say that the faith is the same or compatible or whatever, but apparently others don’t see it that way, and arguments as to how it is have thus far proved unconvincing.
So you do agree with Pope Leo III?
In his banning of the filioque from being recited in the Creed, yes.
What I mean by an easternization is that the Latin Church professes the creed with the Filioque - and not just Catholics that profess the creed with the Filioque, Lutherans and Anglicans do as well - the creed being professed with the Filioque as been done for many centuries…this shows that it is part of the people in the West and to take it away would be wrong.
I don’t agree with that idea. If the filioque is wrong, it doesn’t matter how long it’s been used or where, right? The content of an idea must trump its antiquity, or else why did our Fathers go through such trouble to condemn and stamp out Arianism and Nestorianism?
Also what are your thoughts on Cyril of Alexandria “from the Father through the Son”?
I do not see a problem with it, understood properly. I do not think it says what the filioque says at all. Please see
this response from HG Bishop Youssef on the procession of the Holy Spirit. We recognize that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son in terms of temporal procession (read: originating from the Father
alone, and then being sent to the world through Christ [John 15:26]), but not
eternally as was defined by the Council of Florence. The Father is the only source of the Holy Spirit.
I hope I have not offended you dzheremi, I just want us to find common ground to work on and that was not my intention if I have offended you I am really sorry.
You haven’t offended me at all.
And one last thing, could you help me find some Coptic Icons? I’ve looked online but I haven’t been able to find that many, and do you know where I could find a Ethiopian bible? I can’t find one any where. Thanks for the help dzheremi
Coptic icons can be difficult to find. With respect to my brothers and sisters in the faith, it seems that there is very little being produced in terms of traditional Coptic iconography, with most of what is made being in the so-called “neo-Byzantine” style, with its very harsh colors and sharp lines. But there is a lot of that available if you want it (and honestly it’s not terrible, just different; I much prefer it to the RC-inspired/copied art that is in many Coptic churches). Try a place like
Orthodox Bookstore. I’ve never ordered an icon from them, but I have ordered some books, so I know that they are reliable.
An Ethiopian bible, I have no idea. I think you’d have to ask a Tewahedo person about that, and maybe even go to one of their churches. The only Ethiopian bibles I have seen have either been antiques or modern Protestant translations made in Ethiopian languages. I have a PDF of the Ethiopian liturgy, but haven’t ever seen a translation of the Orthodox canon into English. Sorry.