H
Hesychios
Guest
I think so too. WE can’t stop the Holy Ghost. He goes where He wills.…I think that non-Orthodox Christian communities have a true experience of Christ, and cannot be said to be truly outside the Church.
I think that modes of music are basically cultural. Since western modes of music are essentially recent, they were not in existence then, and not an issue now. I have to assume that you are referring to music in worship, because we can hear the recordings any time. I am a big fan of Jazz myselfThe second is that it seems to me that there were in fact real losses for Orthodoxy in the schism. Not that they do not now have everything needed, but they are missing things that would enrich them. I think the loss of Western modes of music was a great loss.
Anyway, western Orthodox draw deeply of the rich liturgical (including musical) tradition of the west. If the Latin Catholic church ever did return to Orthodoxy, we wouldn’t expect them to ditch Thomas Tallis, William Byrd or Pierluigi da Palestrina.
But what of David Haas, Marty Haugen and the St Louis Jesuits? I am not so sure
Personally, I think that western theologians love to play with religion. Just like the philosophers who try to top their old teachers and make their own marks. It’s a great past time. The theological models are more or less ‘theories’ until some faction wins the prize of the big chair in Rome and can force their ideas down the throats of the rest of the church. If the idea should become an embarrassment before that point is reached the church claims “it never formally taught that” and leaves the few who are aware enough of history to question this confused. Rome plays these groups off one another, rather than offend anyone it remains often as non-committal as necessary for as long as possible. It’s a very big tent.a I think that in many cases the loss of Western theological models was a loss.
That argument assumes that they have some value to begin with.And if one tries to say “Well, those things would be nice but to not in any way affect the fullness of truth held by Orthodoxy” - it seems to me one begins to water down the ideas of completion and fullness to a degree that they become almost meaningless. But if these things are a loss, should not Orthodoxy wish to have them back?
But for arguments sake let us assume that there is some genuine value in it. The concept of “Two Lungs” famously put forward by Pope John Paul II is dangerously weighted in favor of the Latin, there is no “two” anything and never was. The Latin west is one of many spiritual traditions among the Apostolic churches. Instead of lungs one should think of some other natural multiple, like the fruit on a tree. The Latin spirituality is one example of many beautiful pomegranates/figs/bananas hanging off of that tree, and in the big scheme of things the divergence of one was not as damaging as might be assumed. Apostolic Christianity continues.
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