. I speak especially of the Russians.
That is the biggest issue (and perhaps the only real barrier!)
Now, if the schism between the RO and GO extends to the RO from the rest of the EO, communion between C and the rest of the EO would probably be in short order . . .
I also agree that communion between the OO and C is far closer than between EO and C
We cannot “return to the Orthodox” because it is not we who separated ourselves from them , anyways.
Speaking strictly historically, that just isn’t true–the papal legate purported to excommunicate the GO patriarch, and it spread from there (not that things hadn’t been rough for a long time.). Married clergy, bearded clergy, leavened bread, and “deletion” of the Filioque–all ancient practices–were cited by Rome as “wrongs” by the east.
Well, the Catholic Church is more for a father than a sibling, since it has the primacy.
That’s
quite a modern notion of primacy . . . historically, “older sister” would be
far closer* . . .
but the Orthodox have regional authorities (eg, patriarch) that Catholics do not have.
???
That is
exactly what metropolitans and patriarchs are! And it was only in the last couple of decades that “patriarch of the west” was dropped.
And then, only Catholics have a universal authority (pope).
Simply not true. There are eastern heads of churches in which the patriarch actually exercises
more control than Rome does in the RCC.
Also, primacy of the pope will likely never be recognized by the Orthodox in a juridical manner.
Where are you getting this? I’d be hard pressed to come up with an eastern source
denying Roman primacy. The dispute is to whether that means what it did before the schism, or what Rome has declared it to be post-schism.
If they could ever see the pope as having primacy, it seems this would only be in pastorship—pastoral primacy. I think that’s really all we could hope for—viewing the pope as the “servant of the servants of God.”
Hmm, like for the first thousand years?
Now that it is infallible the chances of that are null.
It wouldn’t even be
difficult to reconcile the
actual language of V I on infallibility (as opposed to the common misconception) with orthodoxy, given good faith on both sides. It is
not a unilateral power of the pope, per V I, but rather a recognition of his role as president of the college of bishops.
The Eastern Orthodox and the Oriental Orthodox restore communion.
this seems to me to be the
least likely combination . . .
I can not see full reunification.
Not even possible, as there never was “union” to restore. There was
communion, which could e restored.