The “eo” or eastern schismatics
Just so you know, forum rules prohibit calling them “schismatics,” because they’re not. Yes, their churches are
in schism from ours, but the Catholic Church now considers that label to apply
only to those personally guilty of schism. Modern-day eastern Orthodox believers are born into and raised in churches that are already outside communion with Rome.
It’s parallel to the situation of Protestants: are
some distinctly Protestant beliefs heresy? Yes, but we are
not to regard Protestants - the persons, the individuals - as heretics or call them such.
The eastern Orthodox are our brothers and sisters in Christ. According to our Catechism,
“Those ‘who believe in Christ and have been properly baptized are put in a certain, although imperfect, communion with the Catholic Church.’ With the Orthodox Churches, this communion is so profound ‘that it lacks little to attain the fullness that would permit a common celebration of the Lord’s Eucharist’.” (CCC 838)
who I have corresponded with have concluded such things as we are all forced to endure God’s presence in heaven after death (there is no hell).
That idea is not a denial of hell, but an interpretation of it: the punishment of the damned, in their view, consists in their inability to enter into a relationship of love with God, such that throughout eternity, exposure to His all-pervading light, love, and glory will be agony for them.
They also conclude that the Roman Pontiff has neither Primacy over the Universal Church nor a Supremacy of teaching power over which there is no other except His Divine Majesty.
Okay, you got me there. We still have to convince them of that.
These are the conclusions that I was referring to. There are more, I merely am in a hurry so only giving a few examples.
Honestly, I think the only substantive, dogmatic incompatibilities are papal supremacy (although many misunderstand it) and papal infallibility. There are a lot of differences, but I honestly get the impression from everything I’ve read and heard said that
other than those, we are orthodox by each other’s standards.
I would agree with you that the “eastern orthodox” have a different “faith” from the Latin/Western and Eastern Catholics.
We’ve got a problem, then, as Rome has repeatedly and consistently instructed the eastern Catholic churches to live out their Christian faith in a way that brings them as close as possible to their eastern heritage. Really, if they’re doing it right, as I said above, they ought to be nigh indistinguishable from the eastern Orthodox.
How far would you have eastern Catholics go in being separate from their traditions, Nicole? You pretty clearly seem to want them to adopt western terminology, but what about other ways? For instance, the Byzantine tradition commemorates the eastern Orthodox St. Gregory Palamas on the Second Sunday of Lent every year. The Byzantine Catholic churches do this too, celebrating and teaching about the hesychastic prayer he led into triumph and full acceptance. Also, eastern Catholics pray the Creed without the
filioque. Do you object to such things, or are you okay with them?
Because it’s concerning precisely such matters that Rome has asked the eastern Catholics to be faithful to in their own tradition.
I do agree that the theology which the “eastern orthodox” use is incompatible with the beliefs held by the Roman Catholic Church, as well.
Honestly, the papacy seems to disagree with you on this, because popes have repeatedly asked the eastern Catholic churches to get as close as possible to living Christianity according to their eastern heritage. The Second Vatican Council, an ecumenical council, asked this of them as well…