L
lanceg
Guest
At the Council of Florence, the Latin Church indeed did expect the Greek Church to accept Purgatory as a place of fire. But in the union of Brest with the Belarusans and Ukrainians, over 150 years later, the churches agreed “not to discuss” purgatory.That still doesn’t disprove my post. The specific nature of purgatory is not dogmatically defined and Catholics are just as free to accept a literal view of purgatorial fire as they are to reject it. Just as long as we accept the basic dogma, we are free to believe that purgatory is a place, a state, a fiery pit, an ice cave, a Barbra Streisand concert, etc…
If the Latins did try to force the literal view on the Greeks, it was out of stubbornness (Latin bishops are humans too, after all) and not because it was necessary for the Greeks’ salvation.