C
CharlesdeFoucld
Guest
I’m currently reading Aidan Nichols’s ‘Rome and the Eastern Churches’. In the preface to the second edition (2009) he asserts that the Eastern Catholic churches are ‘to be explained eschatologically.’ He glosses this very briefly over the course of a few paragraphs.
While I like Nichols’s work very much, I wouldn’t characterize him as an original thinker. So I’m guessing this thought has probably been developed more fully by other theologians.
Does anyone know where I could find a fuller development of this idea of Eastern Churches as eschatological sign?
To paraphrase Nichols’s thought: ‘Uniatism’ is a beautiful word that should be reclaimed, but it’s an even more beautiful concept (p. 19). ‘The transformation of a divided Christendom into a unitary communion is itself an eschatological aspiration.’ That every baptized Christian would be in full communion is ‘an ideal reference rather than a practical one.’ You strive for it but never fully realize it. It’s ‘a gift from the Lord’, ‘metahistorical.’ On this side of the eschaton, ‘such unity will be seen most fully in the representative gathering of apostolic churches and traditions around the figure of Peter, represented in his vicar, the Roman bishop (p. 20).
Is such a reading amenable to Eastern Catholics? Does it originate in or is it developed by any Eastern Catholic theologians? Or does it strike you as a ‘western’ reading of ecclesiology?
While I like Nichols’s work very much, I wouldn’t characterize him as an original thinker. So I’m guessing this thought has probably been developed more fully by other theologians.
Does anyone know where I could find a fuller development of this idea of Eastern Churches as eschatological sign?
To paraphrase Nichols’s thought: ‘Uniatism’ is a beautiful word that should be reclaimed, but it’s an even more beautiful concept (p. 19). ‘The transformation of a divided Christendom into a unitary communion is itself an eschatological aspiration.’ That every baptized Christian would be in full communion is ‘an ideal reference rather than a practical one.’ You strive for it but never fully realize it. It’s ‘a gift from the Lord’, ‘metahistorical.’ On this side of the eschaton, ‘such unity will be seen most fully in the representative gathering of apostolic churches and traditions around the figure of Peter, represented in his vicar, the Roman bishop (p. 20).
Is such a reading amenable to Eastern Catholics? Does it originate in or is it developed by any Eastern Catholic theologians? Or does it strike you as a ‘western’ reading of ecclesiology?