A
Ana_v
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That’s one of the issues I am interested in seeing sorted out (the one that disconcerts me the most, at the moment), and which is raised in this post. What follows is taken from a thread on FB, wherein an Eastern Orthodox friend responds to the suggestion that Catholicism and Eastern Orthodox theology have much agreement. His reponse, principally aimed towards a Catholic, was to list several important differences, and it included very pointed criticisms:
NOTE: The “U” word which has been recently prohibited, is used three times. I censored it because I was afraid that this thread would be taken down otherwise (though it is not part of my speech, but of the person I am quoting).
At first, I thought the suggestion that Catholicism gave birth to atheism to be very odd (atheism is ancient, is it not?) I didn’t see the connection. But, in analyzing it again in context of what he previously said about the Catholic emphasis on reason, I assume what he means is that the modern atheists’ fixation with reason (whether their particular arguments against theism/Christianity are reasonable, is irrelevant, the point being that they champion reason in principle) and consequent denigration of faith, has roots in western theology’s ‘elevation’ of reason.
NOTE: The “U” word which has been recently prohibited, is used three times. I censored it because I was afraid that this thread would be taken down otherwise (though it is not part of my speech, but of the person I am quoting).
- Created vs. Uncreated Grace…this is an enormous difference. Does God save us by communicating a created intermediary power to us, or by communicating His very energies to us? The Orthodox followed the Apostles, Prophets, and Fathers in accepting the latter answer. Rome rejected them and turned to the Philosophers, answering the former. Like it or not, you guys rejected St. Gregory Palamas’ view as outright heresy. And now you turn around and say it’s really the same thing. Pff.
- The nature of salvation. Rome, following and developing the theology of Anselm, teaches that salvation is being saved from the wrath of God by having the merits of Jesus applied to you, which appeases His wrath. The Orthodox Church absolutely and 100% rejects this idea. We believe and emphasize Christus Victor. I know you guys claim to believe that as well, but whenever I ask a Roman Catholic about what they believe about the Cross, I never, ever hear Christus Victor unless I bring it up first. It’s always this legalistic tripe about merit and wrath. You accept Anselm’s theory of atonement, we reject it absolutely and call it heresy. Is that a difference, or do we really accept it but not know it?
- The Papacy. Obviously, this is a big difference. You believe that the bishop of Rome, by virtue of his succession from St. Peter, has supreme, universal jurisdiction over every church in Christendom. We believe that the fullness of the Church exists in the local church. A local church is absolutely complete, and if every other church in Christendom was destroyed, it would still be complete. The Universal Church is the voluntary communion of Orthodox local churches. This is the clear teaching of St. Ignatius, who taught that the unity of the Church was grounded in the local bishop. We accept Eucharistic Ecclesiology. You reject it.
- Spiritual practices. After the schism, it became common for Roman Catholic mystics to seek visions from God as a healthy method of growing closer to Him. The pre-schism Fathers rejected this as a dangerous and potentially demonic spiritual practice. Examples from your side are Francis of Assisi and “blessed Angela.” The Orthodox Church continues to reject this practice as spiritually dangerous and leading to prelest.
- The filioque. Florence says that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son “as from one principle.” This clearly teaches the double origin of the Holy Spirit, which is heresy. Lately I’ve been hearing Roman Catholics claiming that the Holy Spirit finds its origin in the Father alone but proceeds through the Son. Rather bizarre considering the words of Florence.
- Faith and reason. Rome elevated reason to an exalted position after the schism. The Church has always respected reason, but it always understood that reason confirms the teaching of the Church understood by faith (not the same as blind faith), rather than being an equal to faith. Reason took such an exalted position in the Papal Church that Rome deprived infants of the Eucharist and Chrismation. They began bizarrely baptizing infants, then communing them at the arbitrarily decided “age of reason”, and then chrismating them as teenagers. This is a flagrant rebellion against the constant Tradition of the Church, which gave Orthodox children full access to the Holy Mysteries and the grace provided therein, and it is a violation of Christ’s commandment to “let the little children come to me.” I am aware that the U-----s often commune infants, but this is only becoming true nowadays because of the growing influence of Orthodoxy and many U-----s’ desire to appear like the Orthodox. In times past, it was very uncommon for the heavily Latinized U-----s to commune infants.
(emphasis mine)if we want to make the world a better place, we will destroy the Western theology which gave birth to atheism. It was the West which waged the Crusades against both the Orthodox and the non-Christians. It was the West which fought the bloodthirsty wars of religion as the Orthodox looked on in horror. It was the West which created such a repugnant doctrine of the Cross that it gave birth to atheism and all the atrocities committed in its name. Atheism wasn’t even known in the East until the West introduced its theology there.
At first, I thought the suggestion that Catholicism gave birth to atheism to be very odd (atheism is ancient, is it not?) I didn’t see the connection. But, in analyzing it again in context of what he previously said about the Catholic emphasis on reason, I assume what he means is that the modern atheists’ fixation with reason (whether their particular arguments against theism/Christianity are reasonable, is irrelevant, the point being that they champion reason in principle) and consequent denigration of faith, has roots in western theology’s ‘elevation’ of reason.