Not so. IF were talking a Roman Catholic bishop, accepting Chalcedon would have done it.
I am not sure, but I think you missed my point.
I was pointing out that there was no official correspondence between most Latin dioceses and most eastern churches for many centuries. One could say “they have never broken communion” because you will not find a formal document from the Archbishop of Toledo (or Paris/Milan/Carthage) anathematizing the Pope at Alexandria by name or title, or vice versa. Most local churches could theoretically claim they have not broken communion with must other local churches because there is nothing formal extant. They followed their synods.
So no document turns up showing a formal break between Rome and Lebanon, but they were already out of communion with local Catholics, formed their own synod and elected their own Patriarch… basically they were not sharing the Eucharist with the local Catholics and not concelebrating with them for centuries.
Even the group of Maronite refugees who migrated to Cyprus sometime between 1200AD and 1300AD (a time when the island was controlled by Roman Catholics from the west, and after the “reaffirmation”) were definitely NOT in communion with Rome. There were Roman Catholic (and presumably Greek Catholic) bishops right there on Cyprus and they had to have known they were fleeing to a Catholic country.
How much more does it take? This is not rocket science.
“You cast aspersions on my motives, but this is the same position I held when I was a Catholic, and there are many Catholic scholars (judging by what was written in the CE) who have held the same opinion… so your contention does not hold water.”
Excuse me but you were the one that used the word “propaganda”…
But it is propaganda. Some people are stretching the facts, but why?
People want to believe this fantasy for their own reasons, and they want others to believe it too so they post this information and repost it. But there is no evidence that it is true at all.
A good example is someone assuming that “
might your seeing this as “fudgey” really be because you deny the historically legitimate possibility of Papal Supremacy”. When in fact I have never addressed Papal Supremacy. We are simply discussing whether or not the Maronites were in continual communion with Rome.
The way it looks, not even in your dreams could they be in continual communion with Rome once they had broken with the Melkites. If you insist on this, we have to recognize there was an entirely different ecclesiology at the time than the Catholic communion has today.
Does perpetuating an idea like this actually support Papal Supremacy?
