I am encouraged that you have the Latin Church at least in the beginning with Peter and Paul and not the entire western Europe.
Hello, the barbarians were all converted by our Latin martyrs and saints which includes popes. Look today who is still standing from the barbarian attacks, they became Catholics at the cost of Catholic saints blood and witness.
Debatable
When did the Church ever council to proclaim and dogmatize that the Holy Spirit proceeds in “Eternity” from only the Father and NOT the Son? Can you answer my question?
Allow me to recap your Orthodox view of a filioque; The Holy Spirit does not proceed from the Son in eternity, the Holy Spirit only proceeds from the Father in eternity, then your Orthodox filioque teaches that “the holy spirit proceeds from the Father” TEMPORARILY through the Son.
Your Orthodox view of the filioque is a MONSTER in the making and your Orthodox filioque is never from the apostolic Catholic faith.
Your new invention of the filioque falls immediately under heresy and creates a monster of the second person of the Trinity.
The filioque as expressed within the Nicene Creed proclaims that Jesus is God incarnate period. The filioque as expressed within the Nicene Creed never adds rigid terms outside of what is professed within the Nicene Creed.
Your Orthodox filiqoue invention is expressed outside of the Nicene Creed and adds rigid terms of eternity, and temporary status to an infinite God head, which immediately falls into heresy, that limits God and mocks the second person of the Trinity as a created being.
If the 2016 Orthodox council is based on a subject of a monster filioque invented by Orthodox Church’s which is never a Catholic teaching are in need of being informed of a correct interpretation of the correct filioque as expressed within the contenxt of the Nicene Creed.
Your Orthodox view of the filioque be it pro and con is never Catholic.
The filioque professes Jesus is God incarnate. Your Orthodox filiqoue creates a heretical monster of the second person within the Godhead of the blessed Trinity.
I would just like to say that I very much disagree with your charge that the Orthodox pneumatology in regards to procession is a “monster, heresy, etc.” For one thing, to view that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son temporally is not a universal dogma of the Orthodox Church and neither is the view that the Latin filioque is heresy. Some Orthodox think the filioque is Orthodox, some think it is acceptable as theologumen. We don’t necessarily unanimously think the filioque is heresy.
And to charge that our theology is a monster and heretical I have to disagree with. If that were so, then the Vatican would charge us with heresy but instead say we are only in schism.
Furthermore our use of referring to the Spirit proceeding from the Father alone is in context of the fact that this was what was stated in the 1st council of Constantinople. Procession as in the creed in this council is in context of ultimate origin (ekporeusis) and in scripture which uses the same verb in John 15:26.
The Latin creed does not use the same verb for proceeds instead using procedit in ex Patre procedentum. This is not equivalent to the meaning employed in the creed as defined by that council.
Catholic theologians do not reject the meaning of the creed as used by Orthodox as they are using it in the context of the original meaning ekporeusis in the council of Constantinople, and fully affirm that the Father is the sole cause of the Spirit in terms of aitia, ultimate origin.
This is why eastern Catholics do not use the filioque as it would be heretical in the context of what they mean by “proceeds” when they say the creed, and only have to affirm the filioque as true in its true context in the Latin expression of its theology.
So both Catholics and Orthodox affirm the Procession of the Holy Spirit as solely from the Father in terms of ekporeusis. The point of disagreement is whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son as a secondary cause ontologically (filioque) or temporally.
And the affirmation that Procession from the Son is only temporal is not a dogma in the Orthodox Church, and there are mixed views regarding the view of the filioque. The only thing we positively affirm is the meaning of proceeds as employed in the language of the council of Constantinople, which Catholics also affirm as true.
Furthermore, the Eastern Father’s never really speak of or affirm that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son ontologically in any form if much at all, except maybe St. Cyril. The filioque understanding comes primarily comes from the Latin Father’s (although Orthodox would say even the Latin Father’s are speaking of an economic Procession, not ontological, but that is a whole another topic). Nevertheless to accuse the Orthodox of having a heretical view of the Holy Spirits Procession is problematic since we just believe we are keeping the teaching as expressed by the majority of the Eastern Father’s.
I’m not here to affirm/reject the filioque as that is above my paygrade, but only wish to respond to your accusations that our view of Procession is a monster that mocks the Trinity.
That’s all.