Well, it’s not clear to me that we can “know” any matter of divine revelation. We have to accept it by faith in the testimony of the Church.
I don’t see why, accepting the Church’s testimony on such things as the resurrection of Jesus, I should cavil at something like this.
So what are we not free to do, under the broad license of revelation? When the Scriptures and Traditions present no clear evidence for something, we simply must confess our ignorance. Just as with the question of the fate of unbaptized children, we don’t understand how Holy Orders work, only that they are passed from one man to another by the laying on of hands (and effected by the Holy Spirit). All of this later stuff we find about limbo and ontological marks on the soul is just speculation (I have no problem with speculation, but I find trying to draw logical conclusions from speculation, especially when they are foreign to the tradition, to be disagreeable). Now if we cannot even understand how Holy Orders work, how can we expect to know what happens when those with orders go into apostasy?
I’m unaware that Cyprian did argue this. It seems to me that St. Basil’s “economic” interpretation is just as much a modification of Cyprian as is Augustine’s interpretation. The question is: which of them is the better modification?
Cyprian in his epistle to Stephen writes:3. We have brought these things, dearest brother, to your knowledge, for the sake of our mutual honour and sincere affection; believing that, according to the truth of your religion and faith, those things which are no less religious than true will be approved by you. But we know that some will not lay aside what they have once imbibed, and do not easily change their purpose; but, keeping fast the bond of peace and concord among their colleagues, retain certain things peculiar to themselves, which have once been adopted among them. In which behalf we neither do violence to, nor impose a law upon, any one, since each prelate has in the administration of the Church the exercise of his will free, as he shall give an account of his conduct to the Lord. We bid you, dearest brother, ever heartily farewell.
newadvent.org/fathers/050671.htm
Firmilian, mentions the same principle (although his tone is far more acidic and polemical):6. But that they who are at Rome do not observe those things in all cases which are handed down from the beginning, and vainly pretend the authority of the apostles; any one may know also from the fact, that concerning the celebration of Easter, and concerning many other sacraments of divine matters, he may see that there are some diversities among them, and that all things are not observed among them alike, which are observed at Jerusalem, just as in very many other provinces also many things are varied because of the difference of the places and names. And yet on this account there is no departure at all from the peace and unity of the Catholic Church, such as Stephen has now dared to make; breaking the peace against you, which his predecessors have always kept with you in mutual love and honour, even herein defaming Peter and Paul the blessed apostles, as if the very men delivered this who in their epistles execrated heretics, and warned us to avoid them.
newadvent.org/fathers/050674.htm
Isn’t the promise that the Holy Spirit would guide the Church a pretty good justification?
But that promise could mean anything from indefectibility over time to absolute infallibility.
And the theological principle involved is that the sacraments are the work of Christ. Which, I think, is an extension of the “two or three” principle I cited from the NT.
But how has that passage been interpreted historically? How many fathers interpreted this text to apply to those not visibly in union with the Church?
You misunderstand. No mind-reading is involved, only text-reading. Intention is determined from what people explicitly say they are doing. The English Reformers explicitly said that they were not consecrating bishops/priests with the power to offer sacrifice. Hence, Rome judges that our orders are invalid, even if some Anglican bishops privately “intend” to do what the Catholic Church does.
Similarly, Mormons explicitly say that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct, bodily beings, and that the concept of “three persons in one essence” is a lot of Greek philosophical mumbo-jumbo. Hence, when they baptize into “Father, Son, and Holy Spirit” they are baptizing into a tritheistic association of deities and not into the one Triune God of orthodox Christianity. No mind-reading is involved. Some Mormons may privately hold to the orthodox view of the Trinity, but official Mormon teaching does not.
So then even the Catholic Church applies some form of economy, but in reverse. For it could be possible that the one conferring the sacrament of baptism could have proper intention, in which case it should be a true baptism, shouldn’t it? Or does the Holy Spirit overlook these organizations after reviewing their teaching materials and deeming them to be heterodox, even though He can read the hearts of those conferring sacraments in His name (whether vainly invoked or not)? I think the idea of judging by organizational intent is a bit strange (like the idea of impersonal guilt or impersonal sin), unless they are doing so out of oikonomia, simply because it is impossible to read the minds of those trying to confer sacraments.
Yes. That kind of statement generally shows that the passage in question presents a problem for the existing doctrine. Hence the need for doctrinal development. I don’t find Cyprian’s dismissal of the passage convincing at all.
So then we should ignore the fathers because they are unsatisfactory? Even if we develop our understanding of things, to jettison patristic interpretations for novel ones signifies that some change in faith has occurred, does it not?
I don’t get this. Perhaps I’m defining “indifferentism” too naively (I’m the first to condemn etymological definitions). But it seems odd on the face of it to say that it’s “indifferentist” to say that there are widely differing levels of communion with the Church.
I’m not saying that the teaching itself is indifferentist, I’m saying that it’s nuanced to the point that it leads people into the error of indifferentism.
I’m not sure that the fact that people oversimplify a teaching and ignore its less comfortable aspects is a reason to reject the teaching.
Yes and no. St. Cyril of Alexandria’s preferred Christological formula ‘one incarnate nature of the Word’ cannot be taught without qualification in the Eastern Orthodox Church, because people heretically interpreted it to mean that the natures mixed or that the Word became a tertium quid. The Chalcedonian definition with its ‘in two natures’ formula, cannot be taught without the clarification that it is in contemplation alone that this distinction may be made. Because of particular misinterpretations, those two statements cannot be taught unqualified any longer. The same is true in this case. Bad interpretations signal that there is something deficient with the Vatican’s choice of words.
I agree. I wish that the liberal Catholics who ran the RCIA program I dropped out of had been willing to say, “You are turning away from the true Church.” I was an impressionable young man (still am too impressionable and indecisive for my relative years and ostensible maturity!) and probably would have listened to them. But of course they told me how much they respected my spiritual journey, etc.
This happens a lot these days, I would think.
Apart from the question of whether one can learn something about God from pagans, the fact that you immediately leap to parallels with paganism demonstrates the huge problem I have with your position. As I said earlier, by denying that baptisms outside the Orthodox Church are intrinsically valid you are essentially saying that non-Orthodox are basically the same as pagans.
And that, to my mind, is itself a form of “indifferentism,” at least in the etymological sense–you aren’t making a difference that badly needs to be made.
I think that I was unclear. I brought up pagans to counter the charge that we reject learning from non-Orthodox sources. That is categorically untrue. However, the teachings of all people, from pagans to Roman Catholics must have the truth sifted out of what we would contend is untrue. Hence, Archbishop Rowan Williams or Alister Mcgrath is a much more trustworthy source for investigating the doctrinal history of Christianity than say John Piper not only by virtue of their superb scholarship, but also of their Church affiliation which is generally more agreeable with Orthodoxy. It’s somewhat like C.S. Lewis’ comparison of the truth as being like an addition problem. There is only one right sum, but others may have come to something close.
Phillip