M
mardukm
Guest
Dearest Fr. Ambrose, bless,
Thank you for the responses. I am replying to one of your posts from a few days ago, which basically stated the same thing as your most recent post…
(1) The synodal letter of the Asian churches explicitly admitting that it was Pope St. Victor who gave instruction to have the synod held.
(2) Another synodal letter from the Palestinian Churches to the Pope containing an admission that it is from him whereby the decision of that Synod is to be transmitted to the other Churches. That indicates that there was a prior instruction from the Pope that the Synod should send him their findings; otherwise, if the Palestinian Synod was convened completely on their own initiative and wanted their decision to be transmitted to the other Churches, it could have done so on its own authority.
(1) If we compare the Apostolic Canon to the Antiochene Canon of 341A.D., you will find a very important difference – namely, while the Apostolic Canon uses a genitive (the bishops of every nation), the Antiochene Canon uses a locative (the bishops in every province). The Antiochene Canon is clearly restricting the geographic scope of the Canon – but the Apostolic Canon does not immediately connote such a restriction.
(2) If we look at Scripture, we see Jesus setting up this hierarchical structure - a group of servants with a head servant for His household, the Church universal. How can you be so sure the apostolic canon is not directly referring to this institution from our Lord Jesus Christ? St. John Chrysostom (reflecting his own primordial Syriac Tradition, before the Traditions of the Church of Antioch in the Byzantine empire were eventually replaced by the newer Constantinopolitan Traditions) explicitly identified the head servant as St. Peter and his successors, which is the understanding that the Catholic Church has faithfully retained through the ages.

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Thank you for the responses. I am replying to one of your posts from a few days ago, which basically stated the same thing as your most recent post…
Agreed.The Paschal controversy between Pope St. Victor and the Churches in Asia Minor during the 2nd centiry shows the limits of papal authority and how decisions were made in the ancient Church.
May I humbly suggest you reread Eusebius. There you will discover:There is really only source that we have for this period of Church history, The Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius. It is true that local councils were held to discuss the Paschal controversy, but no where does Eusebius state that Pope St. Victor I ordered them to be held, as one post claimed.
(1) The synodal letter of the Asian churches explicitly admitting that it was Pope St. Victor who gave instruction to have the synod held.
(2) Another synodal letter from the Palestinian Churches to the Pope containing an admission that it is from him whereby the decision of that Synod is to be transmitted to the other Churches. That indicates that there was a prior instruction from the Pope that the Synod should send him their findings; otherwise, if the Palestinian Synod was convened completely on their own initiative and wanted their decision to be transmitted to the other Churches, it could have done so on its own authority.
I don’t understand the intent of this statement. Do you think the decisions of the Church universal are always made by papal decree, or (more to the point) that they are always made unilaterally by the Pope? If the latter is the intent of your statement, can you show any instance in the history of the Church universal wherein a Pope made a unilateral decree or decision for the entire Church, so as to justify such a notion? Please respond to this with an example or two.Even if Pope St. Victor asked the local Churches to hold councils to discuss the matter, this shows that decisions were not made by papal decree, but rather by councils.
And this demonstrates the High Petrine view that the Pope can be corrected by his brother bishops, nothing more. More to the point, what makes you think such a circumstance somehow challenges the High Petrine Catholic teaching on papal primacy?As I have mentioned, when Pope St. Victor threatened to excommunicate the Church is Asia Minor because of their different method to calculate the date of Pascha, St. Irenaeus of Lyons wrote a letter to the Pope protesting that he lacked the authority to take such an action.
The canon could mean the “bishops of all nations” just as easily as it could mean “the bishops of each nation.” Consider the following points:It is a stretch to apply canon 34 of the Apostles which required the Bishops of every nation to accept the authority of the Bishop “who is first among them” to the papacy. This canon sets up regional primates…
(1) If we compare the Apostolic Canon to the Antiochene Canon of 341A.D., you will find a very important difference – namely, while the Apostolic Canon uses a genitive (the bishops of every nation), the Antiochene Canon uses a locative (the bishops in every province). The Antiochene Canon is clearly restricting the geographic scope of the Canon – but the Apostolic Canon does not immediately connote such a restriction.
(2) If we look at Scripture, we see Jesus setting up this hierarchical structure - a group of servants with a head servant for His household, the Church universal. How can you be so sure the apostolic canon is not directly referring to this institution from our Lord Jesus Christ? St. John Chrysostom (reflecting his own primordial Syriac Tradition, before the Traditions of the Church of Antioch in the Byzantine empire were eventually replaced by the newer Constantinopolitan Traditions) explicitly identified the head servant as St. Peter and his successors, which is the understanding that the Catholic Church has faithfully retained through the ages.
That’s a very strange reading, Father. The Canon does not establish" anything. A careful reading of history will reveal that the Churches of Alexandria and Antioch held patriarchal-like authority before the 1st Ecum - hence, the Canon speaks of retaining privileges, not “establishing” them. And a careful reading of the Canon reveals that it was Rome’s primordial primacy that was the basis for its affirmation of the regional primacies of Alexandria and Antioch (hence, “since the same is customary for the Bishop of Rome”). The Canon itself makes absolutely no mention of the exact extent of the Roman jurisdiction - only that it was used as the rational for affirming the Church of Alexandria’s own regional primacy - yet for some reason, non-Catholics have strangely felt justified to impose all sorts of notions on that jurisdiction that is plainly not even in the Canon itself., as was reaffirmed by canon VI of the 1st Ecumenical Council, which established three regional primates, Rome, Alexandria and Antioch.
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