Orthodoxy: Ecumenicity, Receptionism and the Councils

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Maybe you shouldn’t have ignored Cav’s post because you might have learned something about the subject of ecclesiology.
I ignored it for the sake of discussion which is about the challenges faced by Orthodoxy with regard to determining the validity of a council. If Cav wants to start his own thread on Cathlolicism’s challenges, he may do so.
Florence is a false council based on the authority of the Holy Spirit, which is certainly a better claim to authority than any claim of infallibility.
How did the Holy Spirit express His will regarding the Council of Florence?
 
Ah…in time. How long might that be?

A few years? A decade? A century? How will anyone know with certainty when the Orthodox have finally decided to accept or reject what their bishops advocated at a council?
Why does it matter how long? The fact is that it is recognized. That is what matters. You think that things must occur in a logical order, and that they must happen in the same way every time, and someone (the pope) must be in absolute control.
 
The Holy Spirit. What other authority do you need? On the authority of Marcian, emperor of Rome?
How did the Holy Spirit make His will known regarding the Council of Chalcedon?
 
Why does it matter how long? The fact is that it is recognized. That is what matters. You think that things must occur in a logical order, and that they must happen in the same way every time, and someone (the pope) must be in absolute control.
Recognized by whom?
 
The problem with infallibility is that if I need an infallible leader to tell me the truth, then I also need to be infallible so that I can infallibly understand his infallible teaching.
No. You only need to accept the teaching of the infallible authority in faith. You do not need to be infallible yourself in order to do so.
 
I ignored it for the sake of discussion which is about the challenges faced by Orthodoxy with regard to determining the validity of a council. If Cav wants to start his own thread on Cathlolicism’s challenges, he may do so.

How did the Holy Spirit express His will regarding the Council of Florence?
You obviously didn’t want to discuss the subject of the thread with Cavaradosi because that was the subject of his posts. The Bulgakov quote explains the questions of this thread if you want to learn the Orthodox view. Maybe you should go back and read his posts in full.

It’s pretty clear that the Orthodox Church rejected the council of Florence, the specific process is irrelevant. Read Cav’s posts and you might understand.
 
No. You only need to accept the teaching of the infallible authority in faith. You do not need to be infallible yourself in order to do so.
What is the point of infallibility if no one is capable of understanding the infallible proclamations except those who proclaim them?
 
You obviously didn’t want to discuss the subject of the thread with Cavaradosi because that was the subject of his posts. The Bulgakov quote explains the questions of this thread if you want to learn the Orthodox view. Maybe you should go back and read his posts in full.
And as Gary Taylor pointed out, Lossky identified numerous problems with Bulgakov’s theology. So, why would I want to WASTE my time reading the flawed thinking of an Orthodox theologian who has been called on the carpet by other Orthodox theologians?

Really?
It’s pretty clear that the Orthodox Church rejected the council of Florence, the specific process is irrelevant. Read Cav’s posts and you might understand.
So, the Orthodox Church rejected the council of Florence, and because the “whole church” did not accept Florence, it is a false council. Is that correct?
 
Recognized by whom?
Who do you think? The U.S. senate? Do I have to put every proper noun in when I write a paragraph? isn’t it enough to know that we are talking about the Orthodox Church and its ecclesiology? By the Church. That is as clear as it gets, and it is essentially the same response a Catholic would give if presented with the same question.
 
What is the point of infallibility if no one is capable of understanding the infallible proclamations except those who proclaim them?
You can read and understand Munificentissimus Deus for yourself. I think you’ll understand it just fine. Give it a try.

You can read the documents of Vatican II, if you like. It’s available in plain English. 🙂
 
And as Gary Taylor pointed out, Lossky identified numerous problems with Bulgakov’s theology. So, why would I want to WASTE my time reading the flawed thinking of an Orthodox theologian who has been called on the carpet by other Orthodox theologians?

Really?

So, the Orthodox Church rejected the council of Florence, and because the “whole church” did not accept Florence, it is a false council. Is that correct?
Every theologian has had many flaws to their thinking and theology so why waste your time reading theology? The fact is that the paragraph represtns Orthodox ecclesiology. We could poke holes in any saints theology if we really want to. Aquinas had some real duzies that we could point out. But that doesn’t prevent Catholics from referring to him.
 
You can read and understand Munificentissimus Deus for yourself. I think you’ll understand it just fine. Give it a try.

You can read the documents of Vatican II, if you like. It’s available in plain English. 🙂
I’ve read them, and I don’t doubt that I understand them. I also don’t accept the division you have imposed upon the Church.
 
Who do you think? The U.S. senate? Do I have to put every proper noun in when I write a paragraph? isn’t it enough to know that we are talking about the Orthodox Church and its ecclesiology? By the Church. That is as clear as it gets, and it is essentially the same response a Catholic would give if presented with the same question.
No, you don’t, but I wanted you to commit to a position. 😉

You accept Chalcedon because it was accepted “by the Church” or, as Seraphim73 is fond of saying, the “whole church”.

Well, gentlemen, Chalcedon was NOT accepted by the whole Church…that Council is not accepted by several of the ancient Eastern Churches, including the Oriental Orthodox of Egypt, Syria, Armenia, Eritrea, Ethiopia.

So, by YOUR criteria, Chalcedon is a false council because a few folks rejected it. Similarly, Lyons and Florence are false councils because a few folks rejected them.

The difference is that you are not in the rejecting group regarding Chalcedon but you are in the rejecting group regarding Lyons and Florence. So, your acceptance of a Council is pretty selective. You accept them when it suits your fancy or your theology or your political needs.

But there is a problem…you WOULD have accepted the Second Council of Ephesus if it were not for the rejection of that council by the Pope.

What we see from all of this is that when the pope rejected a council, you also reject it. But when a pope accepts a council you may or may not accept that council based upon Orthodox theology. In a way, that’s logical and reasonable.

What blows the whole thing up, though is the BASIS for your acceptance or rejection; namely, the acceptance “by the Church”. And on that basis, you should reject Chalcedon in deference to your Oriental Orthodox brothers.

But you don’t, and that is the double-standard that results from receptionism.
 
I’ve read them, and I don’t doubt that I understand them. I also don’t accept the division you have imposed upon the Church.
Oh.

So you don’t need to **be **infallible to understand an infallible teaching, after all.

That was easy. :dancing:
 
Indeed it was. But this was after it had been rejected by the papal legate and by the Pope, as well.

“When reports of the actions of the Dioscurus led council and the violent actions of his partisans reached Pope Leo he condemned the council and called it the Latrocinium, a Robber Council and refused to recognize Anatolius as the lawful Bishop of Constantinople until he satisfactorily explained his belief. Theodosius, however, ignored the position of Leo. On July 28, 450, the situation changed radically as Theodosius was killed in a horse accident and his sister Pulcheria returned to imperial power and married the general Marcian, who became the new emperor. The empress and new emperor both opposed the teachings of Dioscurus and Eutyches. With the change in imperial leadership Anatolius and many other bishops now also condemned the teachings of Dioscurus and Eutyches. As a step to clarify the disputes Marician now called for a new council which was held in 451 in Chalcedon.”

orthodoxwiki.org/Robber_Council_of_Ephesus
Your source doesn’t suggest the 2nd council of Ephesus was rejected because Pope Leo opposed it, but rather because Emperor Marcian and Empress Pulcheria opposed it.
 
Who says any of those particular churches are part of the Church? No one says there aren’t divisions. Even Rome recognizes that the the Copts aren’t part of the Church.

No one claims that every church and every bishop at the time of the council must accept it for it to be true. That has never been claimed. It hasn’t even been claimed that a majority have to accept it as true. The problem is that you still want to apply a specific mechanism to how things are accepted. The fact is that the history of Christianity isn’t so simple. Some councils were accepted through force, some were smooth. Some may have been rejected by a large proportion of the bishops, only to be accepted later. The one thing that remains constant is the Church’s union in the Spirit which guarantees that the Church will remain true.
 
You obviously didn’t want to discuss the subject of the thread with Cavaradosi because that was the subject of his posts. The Bulgakov quote explains the questions of this thread if you want to learn the Orthodox view. Maybe you should go back and read his posts in full.

It’s pretty clear that the Orthodox Church rejected the council of Florence, the specific process is irrelevant. Read Cav’s posts and you might understand.
Well in the case of Florence at least it’s extremely easy to figure out what happened. The local synods rejected the union. Now if the roles were revered, if the pope had sent a small number of bishops to a council, and upon their return decided to reject what those bishops had signed, no Catholic would even begin to question it. I’m mean this whole concept isn’t nearly as difficult and mysterious as some are making it out to be. Every ecumenical council was formally received as such by a subsequent council. That reception simply formally recognized that the Church had already received the council as a true council. In the case of the robber councils of Ephesus, Lyons and Florence they were rejected by the Church. In the case of Ephesus that rejection was formally expressed at Chalcedon. In the case of Lyons and Florence the rejection was voiced by the local synods.

What Fr Bulgakov is pointing out is that there can be no formulaic entity, no external organ to speak infallibly in the name of the Church. History has shown that. There have been heretical bishops, popes, patriarchs and councils. That is simply a fact of history. So any bishop or assembly of bishops is only infallible insofar as they express the mind of the Church. And only the Church itself can make that determination.
 
Oh.

So you don’t need to **be **infallible to understand an infallible teaching, after all.

That was easy. :dancing:
I don’t but your theological perspective implies that I must. Your argument is false because I confirmed my own argument, not yours. I confirmed that infallibility is a foolish concept.
 
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