C
Cavaradossi
Guest
If you will recall, the popes went further than that. Was it Unam Sanctam where Pope Boniface VIII claimed that the Pope had both supreme temporal and spiritual power?Furthermore, if the aims of the Roman Pontiffs in their reforms were to ensure the liberty of the Church from lay or political control, then what could possibly be the problem with that? At the very least the Pope was stressing the doctrine of the proper division between temporal and spiritual powers, with the latter taking precedence especially over ecclesiastical affairs and interests, e.g. Church property.
The point is that this was not a problem in the East. There was no lay control of the Church or investiture in the East, as the excerpts which I posted point out. Quite frankly, if you are not willing to believe in the words of a Catholic priest and historian on this matter, then I am afraid that nothing will change your mind (in which case we might as well end this discussion now and quit wasting time).
No, the challenge is that the papacy changed tremendously in the eleventh century from being a powerful metropolitan to being something far greater. Also, while it is true that the *Filioque *existed in the West before the schism, it was not accepted in Rome until the 11th century. Perhaps you will recall that a certain Pope Leo III, who forbade the addition of the *Filioque *to the Creed, had the Creed sans-*Filioque *engraved on silver tablets in the Old St. Peter’s Basilica, with the inscription “HAEC LEO POSUI AMORE ET CAUTELA ORTHODOXAE FIDEI”.Your challenge then appears to be based only on the existence of the Flioque clause’s existence in the West, which existed for a long time before the Great Schism. It hardly compares to a complete break with ancient tradition of Apostolic origin that the Petrine See held both a primacy and a preeminence, and all other Sees drew their authority from that See as a stream from its font.
What happened, if I may ask, to the faith of Pope Leo III? Why did Rome so quickly forget one of her orthodox forefathers?