Sigh… Perhaps one day I can actually get down to a real study of Eastern theology from scratch, away from its comparison with the West.
A few recommendations for that day, whenever it comes:
Ware,
Orthodox Church, for the basic overview (and/or
Orthodox Way for a somewhat different approach);
Meyendorff,
Byzantine Theology, for a more in-depth account;
And Aidan Nichols for a sympathetic but critical Catholic approach.
Light from the East is a survey of important Orthodox theologians and theological themes;
Rome and the Eastern Churches is a historical analysis of the schism itself. Fr. Nichols is in my judgment extremely fair to the Orthodox, to the point that one of his remarks on the differences in liturgy in
Rome and the Eastern Churches gave me a serious push toward Orthodoxy. But he
also doesn’t pull any punches on the reasons why he thinks the Orthodox need to reunite with Rome.
That’s why I really like reading Ghosty’s posts on these controversial issues regarding inexplicable (to me) Eastern concepts, because he seems to be able to do this translation in both directions easily. Before I read a certain thread where he explained the difference in “essence” in Eastern and Western thought, I had made up my mind that the East had fallen into real heresy here, but who knew that even essence is defined differently between us?
I remember that conversation you’re referring to, not one of my proudest moments I admit- I actually asked the moderator to delete the more thoughtless posts between me and Constantine TG which he did thankfully. I think I’ll remain perplexed about these broad differences in approaches though, until I do this study of the East I’m threatening to do, as honestly as I did latin Catholicism. I admit that reason is very important to me- I don’t know if that’s Thomistic influence or just my own psychological wiring, but that’s where I am for better or worse.
Well, I have a certain acquaintance with both sides, but also know the Latin tradition better. One of the recurring tendencies in us Eastward-looking Westerners (one that I think you called me to account on in that conversation) is to project into the comparison of East and West all our own issues and struggles with Western theology. I’ve noticed this pattern for a long while, since I first encountered converts to Orthodoxy, and while I’ve become increasingly sympathetic with the tendency as I’ve become more frustrated with Western theology and more enamored of Eastern theology, I still try to guard against it.
One of the reasons I’m not Orthodox is that I had close encounters with a traditional Orthodox society (Romania) before I had much contact with Catholics. And I viewed the Orthodox initially through the eyes of my Romanian Protestant friends. So I’m less disposed to idealize Orthodoxy than some Westerners, much as I have come to love it. At the end of the day, tempted as I am to conclude this at times, I can’t quite accept the idea that the many problems and difficulties of Western Christianity are just due to wrong turns we’ve made, and that the East has no such intrinsic problems/difficulties.
And that’s one of the basic questions, I think, for a Protestant approaching either Catholicism or Orthodoxy: the flaws in both traditions on the “human” level are obvious, but are they (in one or both cases) due to some specific wrong turn that vitiates the tradition’s claims, or are they just due to human sinfulness?
Edwin