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Not that it would happen but that it could be possible some time in the future but only if they would join with Rome.
Why would I want my Patriarch to become the Latin Pope? Restoration of communion would not include “assimilating those Orthodox into the RCC Borg”.Not that it would happen but that it could be possible some time in the future but only if they would join with Rome.
If I’m correct…So if the Eastern Orthodox ever joined with Rome the Eastern Orthodox wouldn’t want to see one of their Patriarchs ever become the Pope? Why?
This is a good analogy. The question makes no sense. In fact, the paradigm in which it was developed points to part of the problem.If I’m correct…
It’s because that’s not how they see the hierarchy of the Church. In their view it stops at the Patriarchs, so it would be like saying that a president/prime minister from Europe could be the next American president, it just doesn’t work like that in their eyes.
This is one of the reasons it will be hard to reconcile completely, because the orthodox do not agree with papal supremacy. To them, the Pope is the like Roman Patriarch and would be on the same authoritative level as their own Patriarch. They would see no reason to switch.
That’s how I understood it.This is a good analogy. The question makes no sense. In fact, the paradigm in which it was developed points to part of the problem.
Dzheremi, I think Knut was just saying that his patriarch becoming the Coptic Pope makes as much sense as his becoming the Roman Pope.
Well that depends on the nature of the reunion; Orthodox don’t have the idea of “Rites.” I attend a Serbian parish, but I am not “Serbian Orthodox,” I’m just Orthodox.Wouldn’t such a hypothetical Orthodox patriarch becoming the Roman Pope then cease being a Byzantine patriarch? I was under the impression that the Roman Pope is the Patriarch of Rome and the head of the Latin Church. If this is the case, wouldn’t any Byzantine rite member elected to the papacy need to switch rites and become Roman?
Fair enough, but it’s not like the Orthodox Metropolitan or Patriarch would then (once the Bishop of Rome) continue celebrating Divine Liturgy according to St. John Chrysostom, for example. He would be bound to wear Latin vestments and celebrate according to the Roman Rite, no?Well that depends on the nature of the reunion; Orthodox don’t have the idea of “Rites.” I attend a Serbian parish, but I am not “Serbian Orthodox,” I’m just Orthodox.
On the other hand clergy are Canonically tied to their Bishop who are tied to a synod, which sort of corresponds to your Rites…so maybe?
Well, it really depends.Fair enough, but it’s not like the Orthodox Metropolitan or Patriarch would then (once the Bishop of Rome) continue celebrating Divine Liturgy according to St. John Chrysostom, for example. He would be bound to wear Latin vestments and celebrate according to the Roman Rite, no?
I think it would be the same as if an Eastern Catholic Patriarch became the Pope which could have happened at the most recent Papal election.EO Christians don’t want to be pope, but there is an interesting won’t-ever-happen-but-what-if in there.
It is curious that you ask this, because even though EO Christians don’t want to be pope…you have brought this up. So do you/would you want an EO Christian as pope? Have you thought through what that would be like for the average Roman Catholic? I haven’t, as I am neither Catholic nor Orthodox. And I don’t really think there will be unity between the two, and even if there was it would not be the kind of unity that Eastern Catholicism now has. But that is a curious thought, and I’m curious about how that follows through for you.
No, because that would be speaking against what has already been declared as doctrine, and therefore wouldn’t be able to be considered infallible. Even our popes can’t do that.If our patriach became a Pope could he infallibly speak against what rome has proclaimed for the past thousand or so years?
I have to disagree with what you’re saying here Rawb. Since you guys have WRO (Western-Rite Orthodox), clearly you do have to idea of “Rites”.Well that depends on the nature of the reunion; Orthodox don’t have the idea of “Rites.” I attend a Serbian parish, but I am not “Serbian Orthodox,” I’m just Orthodox.
On the other hand clergy are Canonically tied to their Bishop who are tied to a synod, which sort of corresponds to your Rites…so maybe?
This piece discusses the possibility of the non-Catholic becoming Pope (or, more precisely, a new Catholic becoming Pope).EO Christians don’t want to be pope, but there is an interesting won’t-ever-happen-but-what-if in there.
It is curious that you ask this, because even though EO Christians don’t want to be pope…you have brought this up. So do you/would you want an EO Christian as pope? Have you thought through what that would be like for the average Roman Catholic? I haven’t, as I am neither Catholic nor Orthodox. And I don’t really think there will be unity between the two, and even if there was it would not be the kind of unity that Eastern Catholicism now has. But that is a curious thought, and I’m curious about how that follows through for you.