D
dzheremi
Guest
Alright. My point was not that Western Rite Orthodoxy is free of problems, but the fact that it exists (and the existence of the British Orthodox and French Orthodox Churches, both of which are OO) shows that the there is no such simple dichotomy as “the West is heretical because it’s Western”. That’s just silly.I’m no expert on western-rite Orthodox Christianity, but in the discussions I’ve read online, where people far more informed, specific, and detailed than I in their knowledge and terminology have discussed it, there were many who found it to be problematic. Some even identified aspects they claimed amounted to “Byzantinizations” - the Orthodox equivalent of our far longer, more extensive, and more embarrassing history of Latinization of eastern churches in communion with Rome.
I think you need to re-read what I wrote, because that’s not what I pointed out. I wrote “you cannot really say ‘sure, we think differently, but that doesn’t mean we’re necessarily heterodox’, if, yes, your doctrine is heterodox.” The key here is the if, which is not an element that would be there if I were just assuming that Rome is heterodox just because it’s Rome. Rome used to be very Orthodox, and was no less Roman/Latin/Western for it. And, furthermore, the proposition that Rome and the East are ontologically different does not argue in and of itself that Rome is heterodox – rather, it explains how it is that Rome and the East arrive(d) at the philosophical underpinnings of their faiths. Remember what I wrote earlier about me not understanding you as much as the reverse is also the case.Don’t you see that this “ontological difference” business is useless for discussion precisely because it assumes, as you’ve just pointed out, rather than argues for the notion that Rome is heterodox?
I’m not hoping to accomplish anything. I’m attempting to expound upon an idea that I think, if carefully considered, can help Catholics better understand where the Eastern Orthodox are coming from. This thread is about Eastern Orthodoxy, is it not? I would think that asserting that Eastern Orthodoxy is the true church, as all EO would do, without presenting such ideas/support would garner even more criticism from the Catholics.It really shouldn’t surprise you that we who are Catholic - whatever our rite and church may be - don’t believe that. So I don’t know what you hope to accomplish by asserting something that presupposes the very claim whose legitimacy is in question.
Now who’s assuming what? I have been in Eastern Catholic churches that recited the Filioque, even though they technically weren’t supposed to be allowed to. And anyway, this is a situation in which I am actually more sympathetic to the Roman Catholic Church than many of its detractors. We OO have been subject to our fair share of historical and contemporary condemnations for things that we do not believe and have never believed. That said, the Filioque is not accepted by our church, regardless of who says it may be interpretable in an Orthodox fashion (and I have read some big names who do, like the EO writer and theologian Kallistos Ware). So it would be a stumbling block to reunion.The filioque? You do know, don’t you, that the growing consensus is that the filioque can be interpreted in an Orthodox manner, right? (And don’t dodge the question by implying in any way that we’d want to force it on you; Rome has literally gotten flack from some eastern Catholic churches for making them remove the filioque from their liturgies…)
Mardukm is wrong. There is a reason why the Coptic Catholic Church is tiny. 90+% of Copts do not accept such things as Mardukm must accept to be in union with Rome. It is fitting to remember that even the first errant bishop to lead the Coptic Catholics, Anba Athanasius of Jerusalem, eventually thought better of his move and went back to Orthodoxy.From many of the things Marduk has explained, Oriental Christianity actually has many things in common with Latin Christianity that are different from Eastern Christianity.
Within the context from which you extracted it, it is a sensible and immediate illustration of our differences on an everyday level. If Roman Catholics (and not just “scrupulous” ones, but theologians and others, too) preoccupy themselves with questions that the East doesn’t even think to ask, what does that tell you? They have very different mindsets. That’s all.I don’t see why you think this is in any way significant when many Catholics agree. Just look at any thread in which a scrupulous question is asked or a nitpicky distinction is made, and you’ll find plenty of Catholics who react quite strongly against such things.