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catholic1seeks
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At what exact point did Rome become defunct, who decided, and how?
The western schism was a process that spanned a millennium. If you had to pick a date, it would be the Latin Sack of Constantinople in 1204 where most eastern Christians began ignoring the Roman bishop.At what exact point did Rome become defunct, who decided, and how?
Hazard of the process. Pope and anti-popes abound across history. The anti-popes were simply labeled as such, largely, because they lost.But that is utterly arbitrary and canonical,
I only imply that he was no longer recognized as serving the Petrine function. Certainly wouldn’t be the first time in Christian history.Unless you can give a good reason that the succession itself became null? Most Orthodox today at least recognize Rome as having a valid bishop.
It comes down to whether you believe he does.So then, there’s no real way of discerning when the Bishop of Rome no longer serves the Petrine role. It comes down to political and cultural developments as well as a novel theory of primacy NOT based in apostolic succession.
So much for the “Gates of Hell” not prevailing against the church!
The article uses this to express Petrine & Roman primacy. But I also think it’s worth pointing out that he has an implicit idea of papal infallibility. I don’t think Theodore Abu Qurrah would agree that Rome could simply slip into heresy and the Petrine seat there would become defunct!You should understand that the head of the Apostles was St. Peter . . . Do you not see that St. Peter is the foundation of the church, selected to shepherd it, that those who believe in his faith will never lose their faith, and that he was ordered to have compassion on his brethren and to strengthen them? As for Christ’s words, ‘I have prayed for you, that you not lose your faith; but you, have compassion on your brethren, at that time, and strengthen them’, we do not think that he meant St. Peter himself. Rather, he meant nothing more than the holders of the seat of St. Peter, that is, Rome.
Just as when he said to the apostles, ‘I am with you always, until the end of the age’, he did not mean just the apostles themselves, but also those who would be in charge of their seats and their flocks; in the same way, when he spoke his last words to St. Peter, ‘Have compassion, at that time, and strengthen your brethren; and your faith will not be lost’, he meant by this nothing other than the holders of his seat.
Hardly the role the modern ecumenical patriarch would embody today.“Patriarch of the whole world.”
So let’s see the proofsteve-b:![]()
Sure. And for the umpteenth time, the Orthodox claim Peter’s Heir is in Constantinople. They didn’t do away with the Petrine Office. They’re the one’s remaining that are actually keeping it intact, as they would argue.
The Petrine succession was recorded even as early as Irenaeus. And Irenaeus was one man away from an apostle in timeline. Irenaeus gives 12 bishops by name from Peter, in Rome, to make his point about Preeminent authority
Did you actually read what Irenaeus said?I like Iranaeus. He’s tells us that Peter and Paul founded the Church in Rome and that its role was that of arbiter. Not ruler.
So the bishop of jerusalem and the bishop of Antioch are the successors of Peter. In fact there is a local church in this area called St. Peter the Apostle, Antioch Orthodox Christian Church.Peter was Christ’s steward in Jerusalem, and then in Antioch, and then in Rome.
And why not 22 years earlier, 1182? When all the Latins were massacred in Constantinople, and their children sold to the Muslims?catholic1seeks:![]()
The western schism was a process that spanned a millennium. If you had to pick a date, it would be the Latin Sack of Constantinople in 1204 where most eastern Christians began ignoring the Roman bishop.At what exact point did Rome become defunct, who decided, and how?
I quoted the article.How you misused Bishop Ware would be fairer to say. Your dislike and contempt for the Orthodox is transparent, noting profitable would be gained by prolonged interaction regarding that as it is self-evident in your posts here.
Hope everyone had a nice holiday and all fingers are still intact!Well, I can’t continue this conversation, as I have been at it too long today, and we aren’t getting anywhere.
Not on your life. Essentially, what you’ve said here is that we all have to interpret the data by a fuzzy standard that you personally like. I’m sure the problems are obvious enough for you to see when it’s phrased like that.That is to say, both O and C can look at the data, but we have to also recognize an over-arching “hermeneutical key” of sorts.
Consistency is arguably the strongest feather in the hat of Orthodoxy.Such a general outlook must look at the whole picture: continuity with the biblical evidence, internal consistency, plausibility, and so on.
Gently offered - the only reason Roman Catholicism is as large as it is would be because it was the common, shared faith of Spain, Portugal and France - easily the greatest powers (aside from England) of the Age of Colonialism.Is it plausible that the “One True Church” would be reduced to a few ethnic/national communities, whereas the one in schism would be the proportionally larger one (especially today)?
Sure. And from the same providence, God clearly wanted much of the Asian steppe to be dominated by Russian Orthodoxy rather than Roman Catholicism. Which shows the problem of hanging your hat on “God’s providence” when faced with simple happenstance.Does this make sense from the providential perspective of God?
Council is the voice. As it’s always been. The unifying center is “Sacred Tradition” which is analogous to the Catholic “Deposit of Faith”.Where is the unifying center for Orthodoxy to teach with one voice?
Sure. And no one can deny that God was angered by the notion that they wanted a king (1 Sam 8:7 and 12:12).No one can deny that Matt. 16 re: the “keys” is a direct reference to the OT steward who served under the Davidic household (Isa. 22, for example).
Spot on. And if you want to actually be the scholar that you envision yourself then you’ll realize that the weaving of these threads into a picture is an interpretive and subjective act. And the picture constructed can never be better than a good theory which never quite reaches the coveted state of “indubitable fact”.Much more could be said. It’s not just about individual historical datum regarding the papacy. It’s more about an overall picture that takes into account multiple threads of data.