B
Babaganoush
Guest
Fasting rules are different from church to church, even within the Orthodox Church. Some Orthodox churches will rebaptise Catholics based on the lack of triple immersion in the catholic baptismal rite.
Arius, a Libyan by descent, brought up at Antioch and a school-fellow of Eusebius Bishop of Nicomedia.The Arian heresy has its roots in Arius, a north African Berber. While his locus of support naturally gathered around him in his physical location of Alexandria, he had support across the empire before his position was deemed heretical at Nicaea and later just across the Bosphorus in Constantinople.
The West had no support from the Eastern Emperor’s. The Goth’s who were converted to the Eastern Arian heresy invaded the West and brought with them their Arian heretical Church.Arianism would endure in the fallen west for nearly another half millennium via the migrations that collapsed the western Roman Empire.
I believe your personal opinion here contradicts recorded history and all Church historians both East and West. Those Eastern Church’s who did not fall victim to the Arian heresy and suffered persecution, would really be opposed to your opinion here.The notion that Arianism is, somehow, an “eastern” concept is a bizarre one. If I had to guess, it’s forwarded by people who wish to preserve the historical theological integrity of the west via revisionism.
I would concur to your statement. Although the ecumenical movement towards unity or should I say understanding, would be to those who oppose the filioque as professed in the Nicene Creed by the Latin rite expression. Learn that the filioque in no way contradict’s or opposes the Apostolic faith, but emphatically declares that Jesus is God.You’ve missed my original point. The problem isn’t whether the Filoque is sound, the problem is that it symbolizes the divide between the east and west
Yes, until each time a heresy would try and infect the flock of Jesus Christ. The Shepherd of Jesus Christ fought to fend off these wolves in sheep clothing by binding and loosing with a declared Apostolic faith that does not change, in order to separate the goats from God’s flock.Christians did just fine without the Filoque in the creed for hundreds of years, so we can give it up liturgically.
You brought up WWII and the transfer of some (Eastern) Catholic Churches to the Orthodox and the result of some Catholics being treated as Orthodox. I pointed out that it went both ways.They have no relevance whatsoever to anything that I have posted
You don’t think that John Damascus and Photius preached against the filioque?I am surprised that you think that these “no …” are Orthodox dogma of the first millennium.
Libyan in that day would have meant nothing more than “WEST of the Nile”. Which is true because he wasn’t Egyptian. He was a Berber. Libya wouldn’t exist as a specific entity for another 1500-1600 years.Arius, a Libyan by descent…
Spare us.I am not proposing my personal view here. I have only given you historical data.
No we weren’t. We were discussing why it’s silly to describe it as vaguely “eastern” as he wants to.We were discussing where did the Arian heresy develope or begin.
ok, I will submit to my misunderstanding your question about, why the West Consider’s the Arian heresy to be from the East. I am sorry, that my commentary to historical data is not approved by you.No we weren’t. We were discussing why it’s silly to describe it as vaguely “eastern” as he wants to.