C
catholic1seeks
Guest
FIRST: I mean no disrespect. I had to figure out a way to express my question in as a direct way as possible. I appreciate Eastern Orthodoxy so much. I love their devotion to ancient Christianity as well as their spiritual patrimony and liturgical expressions. Personally, I don’t see Orthodoxy wrong as much as I do see them as lacking a certain fullness or catholicity.
QUESTION: Again, this is hard for me to express in a concise question. So let me throw out a few things and see if you guys can help me out. Eastern Orthodoxy is directly related to the liturgical and theological traditions of the early centuries of the church, especially the third and fourth onward, with particular liturgical foundation in Constantinople (and so on). Yes, these are ancient and beautiful expressions, but they are not identical to “early Christianity.” As in, if you were Christian in the second century, you wouldn’t have the same liturgical or artistic expressions as Orthodoxy now does. There probably wasn’t incense or vestments or icons or the same prayers and so forth. So yes, Eastern Orthodox liturgy is very old, but it is not equivalent to “apostolic” Christianity.
This is true enough for Catholic practices as well, but I don’t think Catholicism is stuck in the past. It seems our liturgies have developed over time, as have our artistic styles, and so on. But there is no inherent reason why a Catholic Mass ought to have the same embellishments as a fourth century liturgy. Catholics uphold and look to the church fathers, but we don’t only emphasize them. Catholicism has developed theology in the form of councils and papal teaching since the schism, and so on.
I guess my main point could be described like this: Orthodoxy gives an impression of being ancient and different, when really it seems to be stuck in a certain era. Whereas, I would argue, Catholicism includes this “era” but has continued to develop.
Can you guys help me to better understand my own thoughts?
QUESTION: Again, this is hard for me to express in a concise question. So let me throw out a few things and see if you guys can help me out. Eastern Orthodoxy is directly related to the liturgical and theological traditions of the early centuries of the church, especially the third and fourth onward, with particular liturgical foundation in Constantinople (and so on). Yes, these are ancient and beautiful expressions, but they are not identical to “early Christianity.” As in, if you were Christian in the second century, you wouldn’t have the same liturgical or artistic expressions as Orthodoxy now does. There probably wasn’t incense or vestments or icons or the same prayers and so forth. So yes, Eastern Orthodox liturgy is very old, but it is not equivalent to “apostolic” Christianity.
This is true enough for Catholic practices as well, but I don’t think Catholicism is stuck in the past. It seems our liturgies have developed over time, as have our artistic styles, and so on. But there is no inherent reason why a Catholic Mass ought to have the same embellishments as a fourth century liturgy. Catholics uphold and look to the church fathers, but we don’t only emphasize them. Catholicism has developed theology in the form of councils and papal teaching since the schism, and so on.
I guess my main point could be described like this: Orthodoxy gives an impression of being ancient and different, when really it seems to be stuck in a certain era. Whereas, I would argue, Catholicism includes this “era” but has continued to develop.
Can you guys help me to better understand my own thoughts?