M
Marybeloved
Guest
Right. You’d rather just outrightly contradict Jesus and the Fathers, than pretend then? How brave!They are tolerated in the Catholic Church as well…
We just don’t have the same penchant for loopholes.
Right. You’d rather just outrightly contradict Jesus and the Fathers, than pretend then? How brave!They are tolerated in the Catholic Church as well…
We just don’t have the same penchant for loopholes.
IN the Catholic Church? Sure! By the Catholic Church? :nope:They are tolerated in the Catholic Church as well…
You’d rather just openly do away with any pretence to obedience of the teaching of Christ and the Fathers then? How brave! I’ll take our “penchant for loopholes” any day, though.We just don’t have the same penchant for loopholes.
I think he was talking about the legal wrangling that enables people who shouldn’t get an annulment to get an annulment.I do know plenty of divorcees regularly receiving the Holy Eucharist in the Catholic Church.
Yes - my comment was not really directed to Nine_Two, but in support of his response.I think he was talking about the legal wrangling that enables people who shouldn’t get an annulment to get an annulment.
I meant “ecclessiastical divorces” or the idea of an actual dissolution of a sacramental marriage other than by death.Yes - my comment was not really directed to Nine_Two, but in support of his response.
That said, I would not have gone so far as to have suggested a “penchant for loopholes”, but acknowledge that as an unfortunate and understandable perception, which gets to your point as well.
That’s what we believe. Is that wrong in Orthodox theology?Julia mae
absolute divine simplicity Brief definition?
-God is not made of parts, he’s not the whole of many constituent parts (like cells making up a body, atoms making up a molecule etc). It means he is indivisibly one.
Hmmm. Maybe we need a definition of “grace” then. Or, do you mean Sacraments?created grace Not sure what this means, either.
-It means the temporal acts (acts with a beginning) by which God grants grace, as opposed to uncreated grace which means the grace itself granted which is God himself (eternal, without a beginning)
Again, depends on who you’re talking to. Some’s explanations of the essence-energies distinction seem to directly contradict this though they will not openly say that God is made of parts. Others have other ways of saying it that does not necessitate this contradiction.That’s what we believe. Is that wrong in Orthodox theology??
No, I mean sanctifying Grace- The life of God that is born in the soul of the baptized, shared with creatures. Latins say created grace because they consider the act of giving this grace to the soul to be a grace in itself, though it is not eternal. The life of God in the soul is eternal though, which they distinguish by calling uncreated grace. It’s just terminology.Hmmm. Maybe we need a definition of “grace” then. Or, do you mean Sacraments?
To say that the essence-energies distinction violates divine simplicity comes with a presupposition that the Thomist and Aristotelian understanding of God as pure act is the only way to understand simplicity. The idea that perfect and simple things have both an inner act, the essence, and an outward manifestation, energy, can also be found articulated in the thought of many philosophers, like among some of the Neoplatonists.at Julia mae
absolute divine simplicity Brief definition?
-God is not made of parts, he’s not the whole of many constituent parts (like cells making up a body, atoms making up a molecule etc). It means he is indivisibly one. It’s a Latin, thomistic formulation to express this truth.
created grace Not sure what this means, either.
-It means the temporal acts (acts with a beginning) by which God grants grace, as opposed to uncreated grace which means the grace itself granted which is God himself (eternal, without a beginning). It’s a Latin expression.
accept:
the essence/energies distinction I read this, it seems to me we really believe the same thing using different words. Would someone correct me, please?
-Depends on who you are talking to. I have not read anything official by the Orthodox Church on it, so I don’t know how representative some of these opinions represented at CAF are. It can be said in a manner that is unorthodox and ends up violating the non-composite nature of God, and it can be said in a manner that does not do this.
I said certain explanations of the distinction do, they end up saying God has two parts, one less divine nature than the other. How do you get from that that I said that the distinction itself violates the simplicity? It does not matter what philosophical constructs one uses, Aristotelian or platonist. That God is not made of parts is simple enough a truth for me.To say that the essence-energies distinction violates divine simplicity comes with a presupposition that the Thomist and Aristotelian understanding of God as pure act is the only way to understand simplicity. The idea that perfect and simple things have both an inner act, the essence, and an outward manifestation, energy, can also be found articulated in the thought of many philosophers, like among some of the Neoplatonists.
Take your loopholes, just don’t go around telling us how great you are for obeying the Fathers.IN the Catholic Church? Sure! By the Catholic Church? :nope:
.You’d rather just openly do away with any pretence to obedience of the teaching of Christ and the Fathers then? How brave! I’ll take our “penchant for loopholes” any day, though.
Take your loopholes, just don’t go around telling us how great you are for obeying the Fathers.
We could also list many things in which your Church no longer follows the Fathers, but as a guest, I do not feel that I should participate in such savagery. All I will say is that your Church tends to view divine law as an end unto itself, whereas we view the commandments as being directed towards an end. Yet another difference which probably cannot be reconciled.Oh right! Catholics do this, not the EO! No, dont you go round telling US how great you are at following the fathers. Your ecclessiastical divorces and second marriages and contraceptive allowance say you are not. And we are following the fathers, thank you very very much. Dont even need Nine-two’s permission to say it, too.
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What is your source for the idea that Catholicism regards divine law as an end unto itself?We could also list many things in which your Church no longer follows the Fathers, but as a guest, I do not feel that I should participate in such savagery. All I will say is that your Church tends to view divine law as an end unto itself, whereas we view the commandments as being directed towards an end. Yet another difference which probably cannot be reconciled.
Earth matters. Hence the Incarnation.I have a few questions, if you don’t mind. First, about the thread title:
Why would anyone want them to reunite? I am asking what’s in it for everyone? I assume we will stop killing each other, I hope, but why should the churches unite? They actually are united in the only place that matters, so what’s the big deal with the earthly union?
But this isn’t a doctrinal issue per se. It’s a matter of “economia”–it’s a pastoral approach.I know they are not freely accessible, that’s not the point. But they are tolerated in circumstances that the CC teaches they cannot be so tolerated. How “hard” or “easy” they make it does not take away from the fact they are tolerated in circumstances where the CC teaches that they can never be, by Divine Law.
I’d like to know. Why should it be savage? Just information with references would be fine.We could also list many things in which your Church no longer follows the Fathers, but as a guest, I do not feel that I should participate in such savagery.