P
Paleolutheran
Guest
Semper,An Orthodox believer is free to express his view of the Eucharist as transubstantiation. When there was a Calvinist problem in the Orthodox Church, the Orthodox held a local council and stated that they believed in transubstantiation.
Patriarch Gennadius, as a Greek layman and representative to the Fourth Lateran Council and later appointed Patriarchate of Constantinople, in his Homily on the Sacramental Body of our Lord Jesus Christ uses the word TRANSUBSTANTIATION in his Homily. I suggest you read his work.
This is wrong. “The Orthodox Church” does not alter over the pronouncements from a local council, only that which the ecumenical councils decides upon is doctrine. The rest MAY be allowable, but not infallibly. Also, I do not deny the fact that the Orthodox have used the term “transubstantiation” in their explanation of the Eucharist, but it isn’t the Roman explanation…or perhaps I should quote to you Bishop Kalistos Ware on the subject:
“Today a few Orthodox writers still use the word transubstantiation, but they insist on two points: first, there are many other words which can with equal legitimacy be used to describe the consecration, and, among them all, the term transubstantiation ENJOYS NO UNIQUE OR DECISIVE AUTHORITY: secondly, it’s use DOES NOT COMMIT THEOLOGIANS TO THE ACCEPTANCE OF ARISTOTELIAN PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPTS” (The Orthodox Church 2nd ed., pg. 284)
He then goes on to quote the Large Catechism by St. Philaret as the general position of Orthodoxy: “Question: How are we to understand the word transubstantiation?” Answer: …The word transubstantiation is not to be taken to define the manner in which the bread and wine are changed into the Body and Blood of the Lord; for this none can understand but God; but only thus much is signified, that the bread truly, really, and substantially becomes the very true Body of the Lord, and the wine the very Blood of the Lord" (The Orthodox Church 2nd ed. pg. 285).
With these statements I again submit that regardless of what you think personal opinions are regarding individual Orthodox members, they are using the word “substantially” as the fathers are, with no concern for Aristotelian metaphysics and are only saying that the bread and wine become the body and blood mysteriously. The book continues with a quote by St. John of Damascus wherein he says that it is a mystery we are not meant to know.
While this is not identical it is similar to the Lutheran position that there is a Real Presence “substantially” but we differ in that the bread and wine still remain. This is not consubstantiation as has been brought up, nor is it exactly the Eastern Orthodox view. Regardless, the Roman term does not seem to be validated by the fathers according to the Orthodox nor is it validated when the context is placed on the fathers regarding the word “substantially.”
Pax Christi,
Chris Heren