C
chimo
Guest
I will say within a couple of generations the unity of our Churches will become established. I am going out of a limb here but the restoration of the relationship between Rome and the Orthodox will be vital to stop this insidious rejection of the Gospel that is spreading in the West. The climate of the rejection of the Gospel in the West may be a preview of what might lead us to the End but I am hopeful the Lord will help us through this by granting us the graces that will lead us together. We forget the Lord is able to do this when we have failed so many times. The circumstances of the West however will point us working together towards this unity we will need to stop this incredible denial of the Gospel. Pope John Paul II was asked once where and when will this unity begin. He quickly answered in North America especially the countries of Canada and the United States. The reason why is simply it is there where we live side by side. We can visit each other and come to know each other with much ease. This eventual unity will become a powerful voice for the rest of the world as it will again for the West. We can work now for this unity to become realized.Though I could not find Benedict’s statement, at least he’s realistically acknowledging that the only doctrine impeding full communion between Catholics and Eastern orthodox are the privileges of the pope over collegiality and synodality (the form of governance in the East, including, at the local level, the Catholic East).
The fact of the matter is that, starting in the Late Middle Age, the pope became rather imperial (red shoes was an exclusive privilege of the Byzantine emperors), going beyond, in degree, the historical role exercised by the patriarch of Rome.
I think that the bulk of the impediments could be dealt with in canon law, but there’d still remain a few that the Catholic Church would have to tread carefully, for they might brush with doctrine.
Given that the Catholic Church moves ever so slowly and the Eastern Orthodox Churches move even more slowly, save a miracle, it won’t be until a few centuries when the Church is one again, regrettably.
Pax Christi