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Alexander_Roman
Guest
I don’t know if Pope Benedict would agree with what he said today . . . In any event, it SOUNDED like a form of “I’m OK, You’re OK” ecclesiology which would ultimate fail to bring about unity between East and West.Cyprian’s later view of all bishops being “petrine” (deriving authority from the keys of Peter) became the default Eastern Orthodox position, whereas Pope Stephen’s view of the unique Petrine descent of the See of Rome became the Roman Catholic view. Thing is - there both saints in both churches.
Cyrprian was later martyred, Stephen died a natural death while his successor Pope Saint Sixtus II also died a martyr under the Romans. All three men are considered Catholic/Orthodox saints by our churches - and yet the difference between us is articulated at that very earlier stage. Consider this: Pope Saint Stephen and Saint Cyprian, representing (at least in Cyprian’s later life anyway) the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox position respectively, are both saints in both Churches.
But did it stop episcopal unity? No, the Church was united for nearly a 1,000 years after this dispute between Stephen and Cyrprian.
Surely you cannot deny that the First Millenium Popes who are saints in the Holy Orthodox Church regarded their position as being of greater authority than Orthodox Christians today believe, not to mention unique authority of and descent from Peter that Orthodox also don’t accept? And surely Roman Catholics realize that some saints and fathers such as Cyprian did not hold the pope to be of as high authority as we claim and as the Popes and other saints/fathers claimed back then?
In this respect, neither of our churches can really “up” the other. This debate goes to the very heart of our churches in the first millenium.
I think that Pope Benedict XVI has been definite on the issue that the Orthodox need not be expected to fully accept the Roman, Latin modern view of the papacy but could possibly re-establish some form of episcopal unity on the basis of how it was in the First Millenium.
Precisely how that could be done, is I concede difficult too know. But we must try.
Much love in Christ![]()
If, as you say, the papacy could be re-established on the basis of what it was in the first millennium, then that would mean some real changes on the part of the modern papacy and how it operates and understands itself.
The suggestion that there could be two different ecclesiologies for East and West won’t cut the mustard.
Alex