B
Badaliyyah
Guest
I thought I would point out that 1. Christy is quite correct that Rome owns no copyright on Peter, even if we all recognize Rome’s unique role.This is not Church politics, its obedience to authority…that given to Peter. There is only one Seat (Chair of Peter) as there was only one Seat (Chair of Moses). These are not bound by ‘geography’.
This two seats complication sounds like a very big side stepping, in order to explain away that unique authority and ignore some of its implications (“I want to be in union, in word only, and still maintain my right to do whatever I want, regardless of what “Rome” says”)…
There is no doubt that an objective study of the evidence yields the conclusion that the Catholic Church **believed in Universal Primacy, had an Ecumenical center of unity and agreement in Rome, and the unanimous testimony of the Fathers and Councils demonstrates this – and to deny this is based purely on “anti-Roman prejudice” **
…
"It is impossible to deny that, even before the appearance of local primacies, the Church from the first days of her existence possessed an ecumenical center of unity and agreement. In the apostolic and the Judaeo-Christian period, it was the Church of Jerusalem, and later the Church of Rome – ‘presiding in agape,’ according to St. Ignatius of Antioch. This formula and the definition of the universal primacy contained in it have been aptly analyzed by Fr. Afanassieff and we need not repeat his argument here. Neither can we quote here all the testimonies of the Fathers and the Councils unanimously acknowledging Rome as the senior church and the center of ecumenical agreement.
“It is only for the sake of biased polemics that one can ignore these testimonies, their consensus and significance. It has happened, however, that if Roman historians and theologians have always interpreted this evidence in juridical terms, thus falsifying its real meaning, their Orthodox opponents have systematically belittled the evidence itself. Orthodox theology is still awaiting a truly Orthodox evaluation of universal primacy in the first millennium of church history – an evaluation free from polemical or apologetic exaggerations.” (Schmemann, page 163-164)
- That quoting Schmemann quoting Afanasiev may not be the best way to make your point since neither of them were in communion with Rome and Afanasiev’s (very influential: i.e., cited in Vatican2) ecclesiology, boarders on congregationalism at times and even the Orthodox feel the need to reign in his interpretation of the independence of the bishops (e.g., Zizioulas’ critique in Being and Communion). Yet both of them were able to articulate an understanding of the primacy of Rome.
- Your attempt to reduce ecclesial unity to direct legal submission to Roman authority and power is precisely what Schmemann has in mind we he talks about the over-juridical interpretation of Roman authority in the Latin West. Licking the boots of the Pope is never going to be an acceptable definition of Christian unity. If Latins wish to lick his boots, they can be my guest, but I really don’t see that flying anywhere else. Nor is it the understanding of the role of the Pope for most Eastern Catholics.