The point with Pope Clement, he is acting with authority, see post #168 where I quoted him. He acts as if he has the authority to intervene in Corinth
They consulted him.
he asks for obedience, he warns against disobedience. And he says that God is speaking through him.
Indeed.
Quite a display of Papal supreme authority.
Or quite a display of confidence in the truth of what he is saying.
To show papal authority in the sense disputed by the Orthodox you have to show another bishop submitting to a Pope just because the Pope is the Pope. I know that’s a practically impossible criterion–in which case you should admit that the case for “Papal supremacy” is not in fact crystal clear from the early Church.
In this case we have a church that is in a disordered state anyway; some of whose members have consulted Rome (we don’t know if they consulted anyone else or not); and we have Clement asking them to submit to the authority of
his words and of the Holy Spirit speaking through him–absolutely no word about some kind of special authority given to him because he’s the bishop of Rome. (Indeed, as I’ve pointed out, there are serious questions about whether he would have called himself “bishop of Rome” at the time–of course the term was used about him by Irenaeus and others about a century later.)
The fact that you and other Catholic apologists get so excited about something as minimal as this shows just how weak your case is.
If Pope Benedict 16 spoke like this, today, to one of the EO Patriarchs, the EO would be up in arms.
Probably, given the present state of impaired communion between Rome and the Eastern Patriarchs, and given the history of conflict. But this is exactly the way you’d expect an eminent leader of one local church to write to members of another local church who were in a state of disorder. I don’t care what your ecclesiology is. I can imagine the pastor of an Independent Fundamentalist Baptist church writing this way to unruly members of another such congregation who had kicked out the “man of God” who had been leading the congregation.
I’m not suggesting that Pope Clement was a fundamentalist Baptist! I’m pointing out that his tone proves nothing to the point with regard to the issues between Rome and the Communion of Constantinople.
How many times have I heard spoken by EO that “all Bishops are equal”? And yet, Pope Clement acts as if not all (successors to the Apostles) are equal.
What successors to the Apostles? Corinth wasn’t governed by successors to the Apostles at the time, was it? That was the whole problem. He’s not speaking to another bishop or college of rightly established presbyters.
Furthermore, you overstate what the Orthodox mean by the equality of all bishops. They don’t mean that no bishop can ever take a tone of authority to another, but that the differences among bishops are purely a matter of human authority and of different grades of honor.
I am not sure they are right with regard to the Papacy–I think there are reasons (not entirely conclusive, but not without some weight) to believe that the primacy of Rome may be of divine institution. The problem is that the Papacy has clearly been functioning in a highly disordered manner for the past millennium. Admittedly that’s a point in favor of the Orthodox. It all depends on which point you find more significant. You and Ferde are doing a good job of making a case for the Orthodox alternative, however unpalatable those of us who are inclined toward Rome may find it
But at any rate, one Orthodox bishop might possibly write that way to another one, and would certainly be capable of writing that way to people who had thrown out their bishop, which is the case here.
Thanks, Contarini, for pointing out he wasn’t a Bishop. But he was the 4th Pope, the 4th successor to Peter, as in Peter-Linus-Cletus-Clement.
If you think that the Pope isn’t a bishop, then you really are a heretic. If this were the teaching of your Communion, it would be easy to decide for the Orthodox. Unfortunately for the clarity of my mind, more eminent members of your Communion (such as the Pope) speak quite differently!
And of course if there was no bishop of Rome at the time, then a fortiori there was no Pope.
And my point still stands: why wasn’t he promptly condemned and anathematized as a heretic, by his contemporary ECFs?
No, it doesn’t stand, because you haven’t established that he said anything that any Christian couldn’t say to another, much less anything that a bishop with primacy of honor couldn’t say to members of a disorderly congregation who had deposed their own rightful bishop/presbyters.
Do you really think that the Holy Spirit speaks only through the Pope? That speaks volumes for how disordered your view of the Church is.
Do you really think that only the Pope can ever say things that are worth listening to?
This is the problem: you start with the assumption that only the Pope matters, and think that Clement’s tone proves that he makes claims like those of the modern Papacy! But that’s only true if the slavish, authoritarian model of the Church you assume is true, and that’s precisely the point under debate.
The ecclesiology expressed by you and Ferde is so horrifying, that I think there are good reasons for the rest of us to be slow in accepting union with Rome until this ecclesiology has been anathematized by Rome for the blasphemous parody of Catholicism that it is. The fact that the Pope clearly doesn’t think this way is cheering–but the structures of your Communion have been shaped by centuries of this approach.
Edwin