Whatever you mean by “off-centre for the most part”, the claim is most certainly dubious, to say the least! I have learned my faith entirely from Western Doctors and Saints, my spirituality, the road to sanctity, my prayer, my understanding of the Lord’s life and sacrifice and the mystical reality of the church- all 100% fully from Western Doctors.
I’m not talking about an individual’s piety. Obviously any of us would greatly profit if we could thoroughly live out the teachings of any of the Doctors of the Church.
Here’s a comparison that may explain better what I’m talking about.
There are three great scholastic theologians of the later Middle Ages, whose work formed the basis of influential “schools”: St. Thomas Aquinas, Blessed Duns Scotus, and William Ockham. William Ockham was excommunicated, but arguably for political rather than strictly theological reasons, and he has certainly had followers who lived and died wholly within the framework of Catholic orthodoxy. Scotus and Aquinas are both certainly orthodox–Scotus is beatified, while of course Aquinas is a saint and Doctor.
A Catholic is certainly free to follow Scotus in preference to Aquinas–indeed, on the Immaculate Conception Catholics have been required to do so for a century and a half. And one could be a Catholic and follow Ockham on many points, though this would be a somewhat more dubious effort.
Yet I think it’s safe to say that of the three, Aquinas’s work is by
far the most “central” to the Catholic tradition as a whole, and that Ockham’s is the most marginal, with Scotus occupying a middle position between them. This isn’t just a matter of “preference,” like vanilla vs. strawberry.
That’s the kind of thing I’m talking about when I compare East to West.
Any claim that the theology from which their great wisdom springs is off-centre “for the most part” represents not just arrogance but great bias and prejudice.
“Prejudice” refers to dismissing a thing before judging it. It seems to me that you, not I, are the one doing this. When you say “any claim” to this effect
must be wrong you are, in the most technical sense, engaging in prejudice.
I am speaking on this based on my study of the history of Christian theology and my reading of controversial materials on both sides. I may be wrong, and I certainly need to continue to study the question, but I’m not engaging in prejudice. I’m not judging the matter before examining it. I have read Orthodox claims about Western theology, and insofar as they claim that Western theology has skewed emphasis I find them largely convincing. I think many of them overstate the case, but they are onto something. I am trying to express what I think they are onto. I would welcome substantive discussion of the specific points on which my case rests: we could start with the liturgical issues I raised, or we could talk about atonement theology. But you wish to dismiss my claim without consideration, while accusing
me of prejudice!
This is bizzare, to say the least- Since when did Latin theology cease to draw from the Fathers of the undivided church?
From the time of Augustine through the Renaissance at least (if not through the beginning of the 20th century), there was a serious lack of attention to the Eastern Fathers by the West. For instance, when Aquinas cites “Athanasius” in the Summa, in every case I’ve seen he is citing the Athanasian Creed. It’s not clear that he knew any of Athanasius’s authentic writings. He did know some other work by the Eastern Fathers, admittedly.
Of course, if you start from the
assumption that East and West are equal, then one can point out that the East was even more ignorant of the West! (And indeed I’m not denying that this was also a bad thing.) But the Orthodox are right, it seems to me, when they point out that the West’s notion of the “Fathers” is
primarily based on Augustine; that except for Augustine the Western Fathers generally can’t compare in profundity with the Eastern Fathers; and that Augustine himself was largely ignorant of Greek-language theology. All of this adds up to an impoverished sense of the Tradition within the West. Combine this with the West’s later conviction of its own superiority, and you have a very disturbing recipe.
How does that make the CCC or the Western synthesis of the faith “eastern” for that fact?
Because you can quite easily see how the renewed attention to the Eastern Fathers has led to different ways of putting things: a more ontological, therapeutic, and pneumatocentric approach as opposed to a legal, penal, and authoritarian one. Yes, the Orthodox often caricature Western theology. Yes, there are great riches to be found there. But if you compare the tone of, say, the Catholic Encyclopedia with the tone of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, there’s a huge difference.
Edwin