C
Cavaradossi
Guest
I do not know if the Serbs or Russians agree with the Greeks or not. However, in theory, this teaching ought to be pan-orthodox, since the the pan-orthodox decision of the Synod of Jerusalem and the Confession of Dositheus declares in its 17th article that the mystery of the Eucharist can only be performed by a priest who has received priesthood from a canonical Orthodox bishop.Thanks, Cav,
Are there any other Orthodox Churches–such as the Serbs–who agree with the Greeks?
Are there other Orthodox Churches–like the Russians–who officially teach that the bread and wine DO become the Body and Blood in Catholic Masses?
I do not think so. It is an academic proposal to come up with a set of ecclesiological principles derived from a theological basis rather than from a canonical basis. Traditional objections to the papacy have always been canonical, such that Even at Florence, the Greek delegates and the Emperor insisted that they could only recognize the papacy as having a primacy in accordance with the canons, and without injuring the canonical rights of the Eastern Churches. The problem, of course is that traditional justifications of the papacy are based on theological claims, not canonical ones, so there is a sort of frustrating mismatch between the methodology used to prove the papacy and the methodology used to object to those proofs.Also, is “Eucharistic Ecclesiology” the official ecclesiology of any of the Orthodox Churches?