Hi Josie,
I just wanted to share my thoughts on a couple of points you made here. I am not trying to start a battle with you, and I have not read Bluegoat’s post yet (I suppose I will later), I just want to point out the difference between your opinion and my opinion. So I am just sort of jumping in.
… i.e., Catholic ecclesiology does not lead to all sorts of factions and individualism,
Actually I think Catholicism is very ripe with factions and individualism. In fact, the institution seems to tolerate a large number of divergent movements and charisms, as well as a variety of theological opinions. There are many spiritualities running as undercurrents in the church, some hundreds of years old and some rather modern. It is part of the tradition, it is not always a bad thing.
I would think that Protestantism is more reflective of the “Western model”.
I think Protestantism has taken it further in some ways.
Yes, there is individualism amongst Catholics but is that the fault of the structure/ functionality of Catholic ecclesiology, i.e., is Catholic ecclesiology reflective of or did it give birth to the “Western model”?
I think the church abhors schism so much that it is very tolerant, much moreso than most people realize.
I think that when Blue Goat mentions the “Western model” she must take into consideration what brought about the “Western model”, i.e., individual interpretation of Scripture and Tradition, which led to subjectivism of Truth in the West.
I disagree.
I think what you describe (subjectivism of Truth in the West) is something one will see in later church history, perhaps 300 years or less. It is not the reason for the ecclesiology to develop the way it has.
The ecclesiology (church mode of governance) of the west seems to have arisen because kings and lords came to dominate the church. They took the original ecclesiology, that of locally elected bishops, and dominated it as “first citizens”. They came to control the local churches, and the selection of bishops. I think that this can be traced to the era when pagan and Arian nations came to control most of western Europe in discrete chunks. The kings of the pagan nations usually functioned as the leading religious figure of their tribe, like a ‘chief priest’, or at least they usually appointed or dominated the chief priests of their pagan temple sites, and when these men agreed to convert to Christianity they intended to extend some influence over the organization that would preach to their own people every week. The church was to be the number one influential organization in their backyards, it would eventually have the ears of almost everyone in the land at least once a week.
Almost everywhere in the core region (especially Spain, Gaul and Italy) the local synods became dominated by the local kings, dukes and lords. This same situation existed in the Roman empire and Armenia, and it spread into the Germanic lands and Slavic lands too.
This situation was undesirable to say the least, but it was a reality the church had to live with. Eventually most of the bishops in a given region would routinely be named or otherwise controlled by the local king, and when the king was pushed out of an area, his bishops were often thrown out too, this went on for centuries. The fact that bishops were once chosen by the locally assembled believers in most areas in the first centuries was eventually nearly forgotten.
There was eventually one successful reform movement that was determined to free the church from the influences of royalty. That was the Gregorian reform, it sought to counter the influence of royals over the church by making the Papacy stronger and more independent. As much as possible the ‘rights’ monarchs and the nobility claimed and had previously usurped over the local church synods were arrogated to the bishop of Rome. This took a long time to accomplish.
That is why the ecclesiology of the west is so centralized today. It had nothing to do with countering subjectivism of Truth.