J
Jofantioch
Guest
I NEVER suggested that my beloved leave the Latin Church. Where did you get this? Please stop the unloving speech.
I made the original post, btw
I made the original post, btw
You didn’t suggest this. Mickey did.I NEVER suggested that my beloved leave the Latin Church. Where did you get this? Please stop the unloving speech.
I made the original post, btw
Some of the Orthodox would re-chrismate someone coming back, even if baptized and chrismated Orthodox originally. I have a friend they did that to.Are you sure this is true of the Eastern Orthodox? I am pretty sure they will accept you back if you return with sorrow, repentance, and penance.
Ditto. I agree with many of your points here. I also feel that the church in the East and the West are meant to be one, but since ~1054 A.D. they have not appeared so. After all we are all men (male and female), and men are fallible and tend to cause problems, even in the best of things. True charity is needed.Thank you for your words of warning and encouragement. Here are my thoughts.
I know I ranted, but I needed to get this off my chest. As a convert, I am more interested in Christ than heirarchy. Maybe it’s the American in me.
- I became Orthodox to align myself with the church that Christ planted. I didn’t want a cheap imitation.
- Christ’s will is NEVER separation. The schism is man-made and therefore not recognized by Christ.
- If indeed the Roman Catholic Church is the original church and the Orthodox church is the original church, than they are one. God does not separate.
- If a man and woman become “one flesh”, wouldn’t that be a reconnecting of our churches within our family?
- All leaders are human, but the holy spirit (given at baptism), isn’t. If my leaders say one thing, but God says another, whom am I to follow? There are Popes who have been unholy and there have been Patriarchs who have been unholy. Ultimately, we need to behave according to what Jesus wants. He is the true head of the church. No?
- The tragedies of the Western Church occurred because there were no checks and balances with the East. The same is true of the Eastern Church. The Crusades, the Inquisition, the Dark Ages, Indulgences, etc. were a result of unchecked power in the West and lack of communication with the East. Our churches’ separation makes both churches weaker. All of the sins of the Eastern Church that I’ve read on this site were the result of a lack of checked power and lack of communication with the West. Certainly we can see this. Why are we continuing to honor a separation that is detrimental to the Church of Christ?
- As far as marrying my Roman Sweetheart: I love him and want our home to be a peaceful one. I think that my Orthodoxy is more a daily thing than a Sunday thing. I need an icon corner, singing my prayers, censing the house, etc. I’m perfectly happy belonging to a Roman Parish. We’ll see if he will propose.

lol, that’s supposed to say an acorn seed into an oak treelike a seed into an acorn
Both.I’m not sure what you’re saying about healing the schizm. Do you mean with in the Protestant churches or returning to the Catholic Faith?
Yes, there is a lot of differences. It will not be easy to unite all these groups.Ok. I guess. The problem with Protestants is first they are so diverse. They are not able to agree. The first major division is the faiths that are too Roman for the taste of the other denominations such as the Lutherans, and Anglicans. Then there is the Armenianism, Calvanistic divide. Then there is many subdivisions under these such as the followers of Menno Simmons and Jacob Amans, Evangelical, Fundalmentalist, ect… Too many. Each with very strong resentment of the other. I guess there will be a move towards unity in the future but we have a ways to go.
The One Catholic Church is a full communion of 23 sui iuris Catholic Churches that share among themselves these major traditions: Roman, Constantinopolitan, Alexandrian, Antiochene, Armenian, and Chaldean.Now I only understand the Roman Catholic church when you mention Catholic. I understand there are eastern Catholics but I believe they submit to the Pope. ( I’m not really knowledge able about it to be truthful) The main difference is language.
The Apostolic Christians not in full communion with the Catholic Church are:Then there is the Orthodox and the Copts. Orthodox don’t seem to me very interested in unifying with the Roman Catholic church and the Copts have the one nature problem.
When I said Protestants returning to the Western Church (Roman Catholic Church), I meant one of the 23 Churches. When I said Universal Church, I meant the whole Church, the Catholic Church. But, by returning to the Western Church, they **automatically ** become in full communion not just with the Western Church but also the whole Church, the Catholic Church, which includes the 22 other Churches. All 23 Churches are in full communion with the Pope of Rome.So when you said Protestants returning to the Western Church (RCC) and then uniting with the Universal Church I’m understanding that you’re meaning something different than the Church under the Pope in Rome. Or are you saying that the Eastern Catholics will be more in union with Rome? Or are you saying the Orthodox? Sorry if I seem dense on these matters. I’m just clarifing what you mean.
sui iuris, sometimes written sui juris, means self-governing. Each sui juris church maintains its own hierarchy*, may have its own canon laws (subordinate to the CCEO universal Canon Laws for the Eastern Churches), and may maintain its own theological, liturgical, and traditional systems.However, can you refer me to sources so I can find out more about the different aspects of the Catholic church? Also is
sui iuris Greek? What does it specifically mean?
Sui & iuris/juris are Latin words. j is not the appropriate letter in Classical Latin, but reflects the difference between i that is i and the i that is j. Think of the English word jurisdiction and you will realized that iuris is in fact the Latin root. Sui makes it reflexive, and I do believe that it is the reflective pronoun used when referring thing back to yourself. Hence, it means self-governing as explicated by the previous poster.Also is sui iuris Greek?
To be fair, a couple Roman Catholics proposed that she could convert.Hmmmm. Trying to convert people from our Church? I think there is a rule here at Catholic Answers about that.![]()
To be fair, a couple Roman Catholics proposed that she could convert.