C
Cavaradossi
Guest
No, I actually have no fear of that. At most, you have been quoting authors on administrative issues in America (especially true of Schmemann). But what you evidently do not know or perhaps refuse to acknowledge (after all acknowledging the plain fact that things are better now would severely defang your argument that things could never possibly be fixed in Orthodoxy) is that the situation for Orthodoxy in America now is much better than the chaotic times when Schmemann wrote his remarks on the jurisdictional mess we had in America. The ecclesiological consciousness is that the old calendarists have cut themselves off from the church by schism, and that one should only seek the ministrations of a canonical bishop, which would be a bishop whose own archbishop or patriarch is commemorated by the other patriarchs and archbishops. Thus, if I should wish to know if the people at say St. Jonah Russian Orthodox Church are part of canonical Orthodoxy, I need only to listen to whom they commemorate during the services. The minute I hear Patriarch Kirill or Metropolitan Hilarion, I know that they are canonical, as Patriarch Kirill commemorates the Ecumenical Patriarch, within whose patriarchate my own bishop serves.So frankly, I’m no longer really interested in endless discussions about the "Filioque’ or some fifth century council that most Catholics couldn’t care less about. I’m now focused on the structural problems of Orthodoxy which I believe you cannot and will not ever solve. I think you secretly fear the same thing.
That is a bit like asking when did I stop beating my wife. I do not believe there is a lack of authentic authority in Orthodoxy. You may not believe in the authority of the Scriptures, the Fathers, the Ecumenical Councils and local synods, and if the episcopate as a whole, but that is simply not my problem. As from the beginning, I contend that your questions on this matter do not actually deal with questions of authority, but questions on epistemology.THAT’s what this thread is about. That’s what the OrthodoxWiki quote in post #1 lays out. That’s what the Orthodox author of post #96 was grappling with. That’s what I have summarized in as few words as possible in post #233. That’s what YOU have to deal with if you want to be honest with yourself. How do YOU deal with the lack of authentic authority in your church?
No, and I never accused you of such. But given that Solovyov had heretical views on theological progress, I simply never could and still cannot see the importance people give his remarks. He needed a papacy to ground his system of theological progress, in a similar fashion to how Mormons seemingly ground their doctrine of continuous revelation in the person of the Mormon president.I didn’t misrepresent Soloviev last year.
But you certainly did misrepresent them.I didn’t misquote +Schmemann, +Ware, +Cleenwerck,
Perhaps then you take things too personally. Saying that somebody’s methodology is flawed is not an ad hominem argument. I in fact do not even need to know the name of the person who argues for some conclusion in order to find methodological flaws in his study.Likoudis (now Catholic)or any of the other sources that you have driven me to find. You don’t like what I’m saying, but rather than deal with the message, you attack me personally. My research, my methodology, my scholarship.
But the problem is that you seem to have received a bunch of these quotations from apologetic sources instead of scholarly ones. Apologists are not normally held to any standards of academic rigor and as such you cannot trust that they have quoted these scholars accurately. That is certainly the case with Schmemann whose essay on primacy gets twisted into saying the opposite of what it says through the use of selective excerpting.I claim no scholarship for I am not a scholar. But I can read and summarize those that are, and I can form opinions and arguments based on what they have said.