If I convert to orthodoxy will I go to hell?

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I don’t think when Jesus made peter the rock of the church his intention was for the pope to just excommunicate anyone who disagrees with him so he can maintain his political power.
Not many (any?) Catholics today will disagree with you here. The Pope cannot condemn someone to hell; only Christ has the authority to do that. A pope who uses the power of the papacy to do something bad does not divest the papacy of that power, it just means that person is not being a good pope.
 
I think that’s why many orthodox don’t think the pope should have that much power. It seems counterproductive for Jesus to set the church up in a way that a single bad pope could damage it so horribly.
 
Are they more in the same position as the SSPX, after a fashion, with the added wrinkle of refusing submission to the Roman Pontiff? I don’t know.
The difference being, the SSPX profess belief in the Supremacy of the Office of the Papacy and acknowledge it’s necessity, and it’s more rather a dispute about things that certain individual Popes have said recently. On the other hand, the Eastern Orthodox Church rejects the Supremacy of that office and does not believe in the Papacy, by that I mean, they do not believe that Christ divinely instituted an office with supreme authority to rule the entire universal church, but believe that all bishops are equal rather and that the Pope can be excommunicated by another patriarch.

We must also remember that unity with the Eastern Orthodox Church is considered a matter of ecumenism by the Holy See and this is handled by the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue and the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and Eastern Orthodoxy is the main priority of this. On the contrary the SSPX is not included in this. The reason the SSPX is not part of this is answered by Bishop Morerod of the Swiss diocese of Lausanne, Geneva and Fribourg, who adds in some of his own opinions of the society of course:

“ First of all, differently from the Orthodox or Protestants who can use the churches of the diocese under certain conditions and in case of need (for instance, because they do not have a nearby church, or due to construction in their own church, this possibility often being reciprocal), the priests of the SSPX present themselves as Catholics. The dialogue with the SSPX is not properly speaking “ecumenical”, but an internal dialogue……The difficulty proper to these priests, compared to Orthodox priests or Protestant pastors, is that their ministry in fact contributes - perhaps not in their intent - to divide the Catholic Church from the inside.”

So even by these standards, orthodoxy is an external church matter whereas the sspx is an internal church matter
 
Pope St. Leo IX was not a bad pope and did not actually excommuniate Michael I though, his legate did, and it was invalid because Leo IX died. Why did Michael excommunicate Leo IX? Vengeance? On what authority? I don’t think Jesus intended the successor of Andrew to just excommunicate the successor of Peter because they disagree.

It’s like a petty posthumous sibling rivalry with catastrophic consequences.
 
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But I think he excommunicated the pope because from their point of view he was abusing his power and had lost their way. Also if most people would agree that the excommunications were silly and unwarranted why would God condemn someone to hell for becoming orthodox?
 
Canonizations are supposed to be infallible, and while Pope John Paul made a reference to “St Seraphim of Sarov” in his book ‘ Crossing the Threshold of Hope ’, he was not canonized however. There can be no certainly as to his final destination. The Roman Missal therefore even in the Novus Ordo Mass does not celebrate his feast on the 2nd of February unlike many other eastern saints. Sadly the last few popes have not appreciated enough the supremacy of their office, perhaps due to good intentions like humility for example. We must make a distinction however between the person and the office of the papacy.
@OrbisNonSufficit would disagree…He recently posted on another thread the following: “…canonizations were never believed to be completely infallible (neither ones done by Latin Church or the Pope). Hence one can privately disagree with veneration of Photius, veneration of Palamas, but also all Latin Saints … however no one can deny their theology as it was accepted by the Church (hence, one can be against veneration of Palamas but not against Palamism as theology).”
 
In any case, Paul VI Pope of Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople lifted the excommunications.

ZP
 
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HomeschoolDad:
Does “subjection to the Roman Pontiff” get pulled behind “valid, salvific sacraments” the same way a trailer gets pulled by a truck?
If the sacraments are salvific, and it is necessary for salvation to be subject to the Roman Pontiff, then yes, receiving valid sacraments is, ipso facto, to be subject to the Pope. Can there be valid sacraments that are not salvific?
According to St Augustine, sacraments can be valid without being salvific:

One cannot have [salvation] except in the Catholic Church. Outside of the Catholic Church one can have everything except salvation. One can have honor, one can have the sacraments, one can sing alleluia, one can answer Amen, one can have the Gospel, one can have faith in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit and preach, but never can one find salvation except in the Catholic Church.” – Sermon to the People of the Church of Caesarea, Chapter 6.

I do not mean to imply that Orthodox sacraments are valid without being salvific. I am simply quoting Augustine, nothing more.
 
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On the other hand, the Eastern Orthodox Church rejects the Supremacy of that office and does not believe in the Papacy , by that I mean, they do not believe that Christ divinely instituted an office with supreme authority to rule the entire universal church, but believe that all bishops are equal rather and that the Pope can be excommunicated by another patriarch.
Might it be more correct to say that the Orthodox admit that the papacy exists, and that it has some authority — a pride of place and primus inter pares — but not the extent of authority that Rome claims for herself? To my mind, that is not the same thing as “not believing in the papacy”.
 
Is this what Unitatis Redintegratio states? What it does say is the we, Orthodox, are “true Churches” with “apostolic succession” and a “valid Eucharist.”
By having ex opera operato succession, a Christian group is a church. Therefore the orthodox church is given the title church. Why is the Church of England not also considered a church? There is only one reason and Cardinal Ratzinger Head of the CDF (later Pope Benedict XVI) answered this:

“According to Catholic doctrine, these communities do not enjoy apostolic succession in the sacrament of the Orders, and are, therefore, deprived of a constitutive element of the Church. These ecclesial communities which, specifically because of the absence of the sacramental priesthood, have not preserved the genuine and integral substance of the Eucharistic Mystery cannot, according to Catholic doctrine, be called ‘Churches’ in the proper sense."

Had the Church of England not changed changed the rite of ordination and the intentions etc under Queen Elizabeth I they would have also be described as a church by Vatican II.
And the Pope of Rome has authority of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople or any other Eastern Patriarch for that matter?
Yes, as even Vatican II itself states (which everyone seems to keep mentioning):

“the college or body of bishops has no authority unless it is understood together with the Roman Pontiff, the successor of Peter as its head. The pope’s power of primacy over all, both pastors and faithful, remains whole and intact. In virtue of his office, that is as Vicar of Christ and pastor of the whole Church, the Roman Pontiff has full, supreme and universal power over the Church… The Roman Pontiff, as the successor of Peter, is the perpetual and visible principle and foundation of unity of both the bishops and of the faithful.” LUMEN GENTIUM
 
Yet the Chieti document states otherwise:
  1. Over the centuries, a number of appeals were made to the bishop of Rome, also from the East, in disciplinary matters, such as the deposition of a bishop. An attempt was made at the Synod of Sardica (343) to establish rules for such a procedure.(14) Sardica was received at the Council in Trullo (692).(15) The canons of Sardica determined that a bishop who had been condemned could appeal to the bishop of Rome, and that the latter, if he deemed it appropriate, might order a retrial, to be conducted by the bishops in the province neighbouring the bishop’s own. Appeals regarding disciplinary matters were also made to the see of Constantinople,(16) and to other sees. Such appeals to major sees were always treated in a synodical way. Appeals to the bishop of Rome from the East expressed the communion of the Church, but the bishop of Rome did not exercise canonical authority over the churches of the East.
ZP
 
I do not mean to imply that Orthodox sacraments are valid without being salvific. I am simply quoting Augustine, nothing more.
Forgive me, but we Orthodox count St. Augustine as one of our own as well, and we too confess ourselves to be the One, Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Secondly, if the doctrine of Papal Supremacy was so vital and necessary for the eternal salvation of each Christian soul, then do you not think that it would have been included in the Creed? Such an important matter would obviously not have been overlooked by the Early Church Fathers assembled in Council to define the salvific doctrine of the Church. Thirdly, if the Patriarch of Constantinople (Michael I) had so greatly erred in anathematizing Pope Leo IX, do you not think that he would have immediately been called into account by the other Patriarchs of the remaining Sees in the Pentarchy? Such an offense against the Papacy (if it were necessary for salvation) would have elicited an outcry from the rest of the Church…Let the historical record speak for itself.

By the by I do think that Patriarch Michael Cerularius was wrong to anathematize the Roman Church. He was not of great virtue and certainly provoked the Schism by his actions with the Latin Eucharist…
 
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Had the Church of England not changed changed the rite of ordination and the intentions etc under Queen Elizabeth I they would have also be described as a church by Vatican II.
I’ve wondered that myself, but England did not constitute by itself a separate rite of the Church, rather, it was merely an ecclesiastical province (or provinces), comprised of dioceses, under the Pope of Rome.
Forgive me, but we Orthodox count St. Augustine as one of our own as well, and we too confess ourselves to be the One, Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church . Secondly, if the doctrine of Papal Supremacy was so vital and necessary for the eternal salvation of each Christian soul, then do you not think that it would have been included in the Creed?
I don’t know. What you say makes sense, but does not the Orthodox Church admit in some way a certain primacy of Rome, even though in her judgment Rome has far “overshot the runway” on the matter with her alleged excesses? And that attenuated primacy isn’t in the Creed either.
Thirdly, if the Patriarch of Constantinople (Michael I) had so greatly erred in anathematizing Pope Leo IX, do you not think that he would have immediately been called into account by the other Patriarchs of the remaining Sees in the Pentarchy?
I can’t answer that either. Never gave it any thought, to tell you the truth.
 
Canonizations are supposed to be infallible
That is not accurate. It is somehow popular to view them as infallible, but there is nothing that suggests it outside popular notion. Church does not regard canonizations as absolutely infallible.
Interesting take since the Catholic Church considers us Orthodox to have valid Apostolic succession and valid Eucharist.
So do SSPX, but they also have valid views on Papal doctrines.
Orthodoxy and Catholicism are the same church.
Then Church has lost one of it’s four marks by not being One, and as such Church did not survive as Christ’s Church, and Christ broke His promise to protect the Church, and Holy Spirit failed. Orthodox people have quite good communion with the Church herself, but not same as Catholics do. Every baptized Christian is in some way in communion with the Church (though not all in full, not all in as good as Orthodox people are).
I’ve wondered about this myself — are all baptized Christians subject to the Roman Pontiff whether they know it or not, and whether they want to be or not?
All Catholics are subject to Ecumenical Councils, to Pope and infallible dogmatic declarations. Yet, at the same time, some deny this to varying degrees and some view it as nominal submission, some don’t view it as being subject to them at all. Same with canon law, same with secular law etc etc… and same with Christians being subject to Pope.
It seems counterproductive for Jesus to set the church up in a way that a single bad pope could damage it so horribly.
And it seems counterproductive to set up Church in way that several fallible people can screw it up by calling a fake council or something… that happened in history quite a lot. Every single time there was controversy in the Church, Rome stood on correct side (even from Orthodox view, up until Schism of course). Pope can not damage Church horribly at all, he is simply guided by Holy Spirit and prevented from teaching non-sense.
 
But I think he excommunicated the pope because from their point of view he was abusing his power and had lost their way.
That was not what happened. Read the history before you make those claims… it was completely different. Pope didn’t even play part in excommunications at all. Pope sent his legates to investigate why did chaplain of Patriarch of Constantinople step on Latin Eucharist. Patriarch ignored them and then Pope died- Legates were recalled home. However, one of Legates succumbed to anger of being denied even entry to investigate entire thing and excommunicated Patriarch. People rallied behind Patriarch, Emperor behind Pope. Greek Patriarch of Antioch rejected validity of either excommunication (keep in mind, Legates were called home so they could not validly excommunicate anyone anymore). Said Patriarch later proved to be quite power-hungry and ended in exile for playing “Emperor-maker” of Byzantium- he even wore shoes reserved only for Emperors and behaved like he was Emperor himself. Only thing Pope did was send Legates because someone stepped on Holy Eucharist.
Yet the Chieti document states otherwise
For Catholics, infallible statements get priority over Chieti Document. If Chieti Document contradicts them, we can not accept them while being in good standing with the Church. Of course, that’s an “if”. Chieti Document actually provides proofs Rome had jurisdiction over Constantinople (appeals made to Constantinople could be re-judged by Rome, as shown in footnotes) and that Primacy was linked with conciliarity. If something can be re-judged based on later’s authority, later has to have authority over former. At the same time, it doesn’t exactly prove “immediate” part, but it proves “universal” jurisdiction of Papacy (and special place Constantinople had, but that is a bit misled because how Constantinople got into being 2nd to Rome was not pretty, neither very canonical and neither accepted by the Church at the time, and not by Latins until Lyons and Florence).
if the doctrine of Papal Supremacy was so vital and necessary for the eternal salvation of each Christian soul, then do you not think that it would have been included in the Creed?
There is nothing in Creed saying only consecrated Priest can administer sacraments (apart from Baptism), neither about True Presence of Christ in Eucharist. Are they not vital though? I do also think that centralization of Rome is wrong… doctrines of Papacy (infallibility, power to intervene if necessary) are all proven even from East by Pre-Schism Church… but centralization like this… never).
 
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does not the Orthodox Church admit in some way a certain primacy of Rome, even though in her judgment Rome has far “overshot the runway” on the matter with her alleged excesses? And that attenuated primacy isn’t in the Creed either.
In the first millennium and preserved in our Tradition, we certainly gave primacy to Rome, but it was understood that she was first among equals, and since she alone had weathered the early heresies without falling into them while all the Sees of the East had fallen at one time or another, she was esteemed as a bulwark of Orthodoxy and often consulted as the final court of appeals for bickering patriarchates. Further, her position as founded upon the martyrdoms of Ss. Peter and Paul and being the capital of the Empire to which she was subjected to harsh regular persecutions gave her great sanctity…the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. True, this “attenuated primacy” is not in the Creed, because it is not a necessary dogma for the salvation of Christians. The Creed was defined and formulated to protect the Holy Faith against perversions that would lead Christians away from God and His Life-Giving Gospel.
 
There is nothing in Creed saying only consecrated Priest can administer sacraments (apart from Baptism), neither about True Presence of Christ in Eucharist. Are they not vital though? I do also think that centralization of Rome is wrong… doctrines of Papacy (infallibility, power to intervene if necessary) are all proven even from East by Pre-Schism Church… but centralization like this… never).
Good point.

I also agree about the centralization. For the most part, I think apart from some Hyperdox and Orthotrads the sticking point for union (which has been belabored on this forum over and over and over and over again ad infinitum) is the degree of Papal Supremacy and Universal Jurisdiction. The Orthodox fear an Eastern Vatican Council that would destroy our beautiful traditional liturgies and change ancient doctrines to be “up to date” and therefore “worldly”. There is also fear of the false ecumenism which has been promoted by Rome since the before the sixties that blurs the lines between Revealed Truth and leads people into the darkness of religious subjectivism, or indifferentism.

As a side note, I am a great admirer of Bp. Athanasius Schneider. If he were to become Pope we would heal the Schism in a hot second. 😊
 
The Orthodox fear an Eastern Vatican Council that would destroy our beautiful traditional liturgies and change ancient doctrines to be “up to date” and therefore “worldly”.
I don’t think that is by far, what Vatican would do. I can’t imagine current administration, or anything close to it, trying to revise Eastern Liturgies. I can’t imagine anyone more traditional than them doing so either.
There is also fear of the false ecumenism which has been promoted by Rome since the before the sixties that blurs the lines between Revealed Truth and leads people into the darkness of religious subjectivism, or indifferentism
Yes, but that is also something Latins should be afraid of. Having East to back us up against that would be nice 😃 It is almost ironical how false Ecumenism actually destroys true Ecumenism.
For the most part, I think apart from some Hyperdox and Orthotrads the sticking point for union (which has been belabored on this forum over and over and over and over again ad infinitum) is the degree of Papal Supremacy and Universal Jurisdiction.
Yeah. From what I have read about, East did to some degree regard Rome as infallible up until Photian controversy and rise of anti-Latin party of clergy in Constantinople, but it was not certainly limited to Pope. It was more of a “Church of Rome is inerrant” kind of scenario. Even those who regarded Rome as such, however, were not always going to Rome with every problem that occurred. St. George the Hagiorite went to his superiors at Constantinople and solved things out there… there was no need for centralization or anything like that. And that centralization was source of Latinization, of East drifting apart from West and many other bad things. Currently, that seems to be going away and more and more authority and autonomy is enjoyed by Eastern Catholic Churches- but that sometimes also results in people who deny Papal dogmas. Either extreme is bad, in my view.
As a side note, I am a great admirer of Bp. Athanasius Schneider. If he were to become Pope we would heal the Schism in a hot second. 😊
So am I 🙂 I hope that either he, or some other Pope will heal the Schism but by real charity and not false Ecumenism. Not by throwing Eastern Catholics under the wheels neither by throwing Latins under the wheel… then, and only then, will unity really work.
 
Might it be more correct to say that the Orthodox admit that the papacy exists, and that it has some authority — a pride of place and primus inter pares — but not the extent of authority that Rome claims for herself?
that would definitely be more in line with what the Orthodox say!

And, generally, they would acknowledge a level of what, in English, we wold call “appellate authority” in disputes in other Churches.
As a side note, I am a great admirer of Bp. Athanasius Schneider. If he were to become Pope we would heal the Schism in a hot second. 😊
As for that, I think any of the three most recent Popes and +Bartholomew could handle the schism in very short order–if not for the bear in the room . . .
Don’t tell that to the EP. They would politely tell you no (that’s the most charitable way I can put it).
I’m less than certain . . . I would actually expect +Bartholomew to give a rather nuanced answer. The synod as a whole might be another matter, let alone what the MP would say, but . . .

But then, I’m one of the folks that denied that the bishops of Rome and Constantinople have the authority to be in schism . . .
 
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