C
Cavaradossi
Guest
Monks can be a rowdy bunch. Some monks on Mount Athos have at times refused to commemorate Patriarch Bartholomew, because they believed his actions to have crossed the line. That their commemoration of His All Holiness Bartholomew is a sort of on off affair signals that they are not thinking of him as a heretic, but that they are trying to use their clout to try to influence his decisions. Monks have been doing this sort of thing since at least the post-chalcedonian crisis.I’ve argued that case myself. But I think there is a difference. I’m not talking about the Old Calendarist position per se but the broader “anti-ecumenical” position. Generally that tends to line up with Old Calendarism for obvious reasons.
Am I wrong that monasticism is the spiritual heart of Orthodoxy, credited with often maintaining the Faith when the hierarchy has failed?
Am I wrong that Mount Athos is one of the most important centers of Orthodox monasticism?
Am I wrong that many monks of Mount Athos consider Patriarch Bartholomew a heretic?
If I’m not wrong about these things, then this is very different from the truly marginal phenomenon of Catholic sedevacantism.
Yes and no. We have synods which fulfill that function. The problem is that we don’t know, nor do we believe that we have a way of knowing if grace is in heterodox baptisms. It’s not as simple as holding a council, because councils are not for divining the truth. When, therefore, the tradition provides contradictory evidence, we gave to admit that we have reached the limit of human knowing. Better that some bishops could possibly be wrong than we mandate that all bishops do something which could possibly be wrong.I’m a bit baffled by this argument. If human salvation is on the line, surely uniformity is a good thing? If Bishop X is erring in admitting people without baptizing them, and thus putting his and their salvation on the line, wouldn’t it actually be a good thing to have something like the Vatican’s ability to tell Bishop X “no”?
Not really. Once received, other bishops are supposed to respect the decisions of their brother bishops, precisely for the good of the unity of the church. That was Cyprian’s understanding, at least.If one bishop admits me to Orthodoxy without baptizing me, and takes the responsibility of answering for this at the Judgment, and I then move to the jurisdiction of another bishop, wouldn’t that bishop need to rethink the whole thing or else answer at the Judgment for his laxity? Doesn’t this start to unravel the whole conception of a visible Church?
Also understood. The only thing I can say in response is that the Roman approach doesn’t generate much charity for the ‘invalid’ groups, as I have noticed here from some of the remarks posters have made about Mormons and Protestants.I feel weird making this argument, because generally on this forum I argue the merits of the Orthodox approach, and in fact I only got into this because of what I found a weird argument from jam that Rome was inconsistent. But I do find Rome’s approach preferable on this particular point. I think that “legalism” has its uses when it serves charity.