D
dzheremi
Guest
Hey, what happened to my other post?
I guess it didn’t go through. Oh well. What I put up was probably more than enough. 
That’s not actually true, though. While it rarely rises to the level of disagreement between patriarchs, there have been times in the past, even the recent past, when churches have interacted with one another in order to preserve one from error. I have posted several times in the past about the recent controversy surrounding the disciplining of a priest at Debre Sahel Medhani Alem Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church in Kansas for teaching against the Immaculate Conception, which is not Orthodox dogma in the first place. In that controversy, the parishioners of the church wrote to the Coptic Orthodox Church for support against their own archbishop, who they felt had acted wrongly in disciplining their priest in this context. This eventually led to the area’s Coptic Orthodox bishop, HG Bishop David if I remember correctly, coming to the Church to teach the correct doctrine. At around that same time, the church in question also held a symposium of sorts about what the EOTC believes on these topics, so as to make it absolutely clear what the faithful are to believe. So it is not really true that autocephaly means that every patriarch gets to make his own version of the truth. Autocephaly does not mean that we cannot come to one anothers’ aid when needed, but rather that no individual patriarch can impose himself on another church. Hypothetically, if the EOTC itself were to begin teaching the Immaculate Conception as dogma (which it does not do and has never done; I’ve gone into this detail in other threads), then we would have reason, as a communion, to break communion with them. This is the extent of what we can do, for the sake of guarding the faith. And it has happened, e.g., with the Chalcedonians. In the wake of Chalcedon, we cut each other off from communion. But neither we nor they can tell the other one what they have to do; we can only say “If you believe X (or in the case of the Chalcedonians’ approach to us, if you don’t believe X), we are not going to be in communion with you.” No bishop or Patriarch may interfere with the affairs of another autocephalous church. (I like wynd’s explanation: they are not mini-popes; they are still accountable to the faith that is to be held by all in the communion.)After reading the last few posts, it makes me wonder concerning if Peter is not the head of the Church and as in the Orthodox community different Patriarchs run their Churches independent of the other Patriarchs, Then it seems to me that any Patriarch can decide what is and what is not and the other Patriarchs can not say differently since there is no recognized leader or head of the whole but of the part.
Again, yes to the first part (they are all equal), not to the second (that no one can say that one is right and the other is not).If Peter is first among equals what this seems to say is that all are equal and have equal say and no one can over rule the other or say that one is wrong while the other is right or correct.
This does not make sense, though. Peter’s authority does not disappear just because Mark is in Alexandria, preaching and founding the Church there. He retains his authority no matter what the other apostles are doing, and that authority is shared equally by all. Peter never had any authority to tell the other churches or apostles what to do. Peter was rebuked by Paul at Antioch for his acceptance of Judaizing (Galatians 2:11-14), which shows clearly that when he was in the wrong, they did not see opposing him as transgressing the authority that all would have recognized that he had. Peter can be (and the Orthodox argue, is) the foremost of the apostles without ruling over them.It seems to me that Peter was the accepted leader of the group of Apostles and their spokesperson during the time when Jesus was teaching, and after words as in Acts Peter seemed to be still the leader. So what I am now thinking based on what has been so far said concerning Peter’s role and the other Apostles and first among equals is meaning that each and every Apostle had equal authority, no more or no less than what Peter had, so when the Apostles each went off to preach and teach the Good News Peter no longer held any real authority, but was just equal with the other Apostles and so did not have the authority to tell any of the other Apostles or any Church for that matter what is and what is not.
What?! Yes he is. St. Ignatius did not found the Church at Alexandria.I would like to point out that Mark was not an Apostle, not one of the 12, so Mark is not any different than St. Ignatius of Antioch who was I think appointed by Peter, and Ignatius is not considered an Apostles even though he was appointed by Peter.
IMHO, this doesn’t matter. There’s no problem with saying that St. Ignatius would be a successor of St. Peter, as he did indeed succeed St. Peter and St. Evodius as bishop of Antioch, and anyway all bishops are successors of St. Peter. We do not argue that Antioch is superior to Alexandria if it is older, however. In that case, by many accounts Alexandria is older than Rome, so what are we to make of Rome? Best to stick to the conciliar guidelines, which state (at Nicaea) that the prerogatives of both Alexandria and Antioch are to stand as is proper to them, in like manner to those of Rome (canon VI).If the Pope of COC is the successor of Peter than so to would be St. Ignatius since Antioch is older than the COC. IMHO.