M
mardukm
Guest
Dear brother ematouk,
My viewpoint mitigates this by assuming that had he known what the Church would definitively state on the matter in the future (i.e., Mary was sinless, above the angels, the holiest in all Creation, etc., etc.), then he would have aligned himself to the teaching of the Church - given the example of his sheer orthodoxy. Your understanding is simply that a person can believe heterodox teaching and STILL be considered a Saint, with no explanation. I believe it is your viewpoint that makes the Church’s standards of orthodoxy pointless, not mine.
I will have to answer the rest of your post(s) later - I won’t be back until next weekend. The discussion has been great so far. Thank you.
Blessings,
Marduk
Let’s just put the IC aside for now. Actually, it is the apostolic teaching of the ENTIRE Church, East, West and Orient, Catholic and Orthodox, that Mary was SINLESS. This means that even by your standards, St. John Chrysostom is a heretic.This is very silly, what you are suggesting is that we dont really know if anyone is truly a heretic. Many “heretical patriarchs” of Constantinople, Alexandria and Antioch died prior to the councils which declared them heretics…I dont think your theory is too tenable. If the Immaculate Conception is a DOGMA then St John Chrysostom is a heretic!
My viewpoint mitigates this by assuming that had he known what the Church would definitively state on the matter in the future (i.e., Mary was sinless, above the angels, the holiest in all Creation, etc., etc.), then he would have aligned himself to the teaching of the Church - given the example of his sheer orthodoxy. Your understanding is simply that a person can believe heterodox teaching and STILL be considered a Saint, with no explanation. I believe it is your viewpoint that makes the Church’s standards of orthodoxy pointless, not mine.
That’s the way Catholics view it as well. Misinterpreting what the Church teaches about Peter and the papacy doesn’t prove your point.There needs to be a primacy of servitude/honour/authority - nobody denies this. But Peter was not ABOVE the rest of the disciples but AMONG them. He confirmed them as brother does to his brother, he did not confirm them as a king does to slaves. The difference is the first is in a relationship sense, while the second is seen in “legal” terms.
So to be consistent, in your view, the second part of the canon which states that the head bishop should not do anything without the consent of all should ALSO only apply merely to the calling of a Council. How silly is that?Apostolic canon 34 states “The bishops of every nation must acknowledge him who is first among them and account him as their head, and do nothing of consequence without his consent… but neither let him (who is the first) do anything without the consent of all; for so there will be unanimity…”
A pope can call an ecumenical council, but does he need to confirm it in the end for it to be valid? The canon doesnt say that. All it says in my private judgement is that the Pope can call an Ecumenical Council.
No orthodox Catholic denies that the Pope is subject to the canons and laws enacted by the Ecumenical Councils. But unlike you, we don’t say “Ecumenical Council” as if the Pope was not a member of it. We don’t say that an Ecumenical Council is above the Pope. We say that an Ecumenical Council cannot be ecumenical without the entire body of Pope and his brother bishops, and when we say “Ecumenical Council” it INHERENTLY includes the Pope. EVERY legislator in the Ecumenical Council is bound by the dogmas and rules it promulgates.In a discussion with a traditionalist Catholic, he told me that the Pope has the authority to alter canon laws. But he is still subject to them as, if he falls under the penalty of a canon law after it is passed, he is still subject to it. Shouldn’t it be the same with councils - the pope can call it, but becomes subject to it if the pope himself is found by the council to be wrong after the judgement is passed?
But even the Patriarch of Constantinople turned to the Pope to confirm the Faith of the Church.Well you answer your own question. They turned to the Pope, but in the same manner that we turn to the Patriarch of Constantinople today.
We don’t use St. Stephen himself to demonstrate papal primacy (ironically, we use St. Cyprian for that - i.e., his writings), but to demonstrate infallibility. He had the right teaching on the matter.The Pope’s word was not the last word, St Stephen’s position wasnt held because it came from a Pope, it was held because it was approved by a council later on. The council settled the dispute, not the pope.
I will have to answer the rest of your post(s) later - I won’t be back until next weekend. The discussion has been great so far. Thank you.
Blessings,
Marduk