C
catholic1seeks
Guest
I once thought I knew the answer to this, but with recent news regarding Russia, it got me thinking.
There might be division in the Orthodox world over who has primacy (e.g., which bishop is the first among equals), and how it should be determined.
But since the primacy is canonically/ecclesiastically determined, and not inherently connected to a divine foundation in Peter (as in the Catholic view), then is the primacy even necessary according to Orthodox?
In other words, is the primacy in Orthodoxy (“ecumenical patriarch”) only a practical advantage, but not necessary — as opposed to the necessity of having a priesthood, or having a local bishop, for example?
There might be division in the Orthodox world over who has primacy (e.g., which bishop is the first among equals), and how it should be determined.
But since the primacy is canonically/ecclesiastically determined, and not inherently connected to a divine foundation in Peter (as in the Catholic view), then is the primacy even necessary according to Orthodox?
In other words, is the primacy in Orthodoxy (“ecumenical patriarch”) only a practical advantage, but not necessary — as opposed to the necessity of having a priesthood, or having a local bishop, for example?
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