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Guest
Let’s take a look at the letter:
The holy, great and universal synod, which was assembled by God’s will and the favour of our divinely approved emperors Basil and Constantine, the holy friends of Christ, in this royal and divinely protected city and in the most famous church bearing the name of holy and great Wisdom, declared the following. Constantinople IV.
*[T]he holy ecumenical Vatican council should be opened, and be declared to have been opened?
[They replied: Yes]* Vatican I.
These also must be ecumenical councils because they say so.
We exhort your reverence to join us in rejoicing at what we have legally and canonically enacted. Let spiritual love link us together, and let the fear of the Lord suppress all human prejudice and put the building up of the churches before individual attachment or favour. In this way, with the account of the faith agreed between us and with christian love established among us, we shall cease to declare what was condemned by the apostles, “I belong to Paul, I to Apollo, I to Cephas”; but we shall all be seen to belong to Christ, who has not been divided up among us; and with God’s good favour, we shall keep the body of the church undivided, and shall come before the judgment-seat of the Lord with confidence.
Of course, Rome hadn’t agreed to it because it wasn’t there, but Constantinople believed it would. Rome held a local council some years earlier to discuss the semi-Arian situation in the East. Constantinople knew about this council because it is mentioned in the opening sentence of the letter. In fact, it mentions the intent of Constantinople to have joined the Roman synod but for the aftermath of the Arian situation. The letter then mentions that certain representatives would be sent to Rome. I don’t know where you are getting the idea that Constantinople didn’t need to be in agreement with Rome. I invite people to read it for themselves: piar.hu/councils/ecum02.htm
What is supposed to impress me about this language? You emphasized it so I take it you find it significant."So much, in summary, for the faith which is openly preached by us.
Yes, the portion I quoted says the same thing - that whoever penned the letter called it an ecumenical synod. And? Here are a few more councils wherein ecumenical status is claimed:You can take even more heart concerning these matters if you think fit to consult the tome that was issued in Antioch by the synod which met there as well as the one issued last year in Constantinople by the ecumenical synod.
The holy, great and universal synod, which was assembled by God’s will and the favour of our divinely approved emperors Basil and Constantine, the holy friends of Christ, in this royal and divinely protected city and in the most famous church bearing the name of holy and great Wisdom, declared the following. Constantinople IV.
*[T]he holy ecumenical Vatican council should be opened, and be declared to have been opened?
[They replied: Yes]* Vatican I.
These also must be ecumenical councils because they say so.
Okay. I don’t know what you think this proves. Rome agrees with the creed - as expressed in Chalcedon that is.**In these documents we confessed the faith in broader terms **and we have issued a written condemnation of the heresies which have recently erupted."
I’m sure they did believe that. I doubt they thought they were illegally and uncanonically enacting those decrees.We exhort your reverence to join us in rejoicing at what we have legally and canonically enacted."
Wow. What a horrible misrepresentation. Here is the entire context of the relevant provision of the letter:Note, they did not ask approval, just rejoicing. Note also the order of the Sees. Flavian was elevated in direct opposition to Rome’s man, Paulinus (who ordained Jerome).
We exhort your reverence to join us in rejoicing at what we have legally and canonically enacted. Let spiritual love link us together, and let the fear of the Lord suppress all human prejudice and put the building up of the churches before individual attachment or favour. In this way, with the account of the faith agreed between us and with christian love established among us, we shall cease to declare what was condemned by the apostles, “I belong to Paul, I to Apollo, I to Cephas”; but we shall all be seen to belong to Christ, who has not been divided up among us; and with God’s good favour, we shall keep the body of the church undivided, and shall come before the judgment-seat of the Lord with confidence.
Of course, Rome hadn’t agreed to it because it wasn’t there, but Constantinople believed it would. Rome held a local council some years earlier to discuss the semi-Arian situation in the East. Constantinople knew about this council because it is mentioned in the opening sentence of the letter. In fact, it mentions the intent of Constantinople to have joined the Roman synod but for the aftermath of the Arian situation. The letter then mentions that certain representatives would be sent to Rome. I don’t know where you are getting the idea that Constantinople didn’t need to be in agreement with Rome. I invite people to read it for themselves: piar.hu/councils/ecum02.htm
I don’t believe the canons were ever part of the letter. It doesn’t appear the letter itself includes them. But even if it had, they were never confirmed by the Pope. I wonder if acquiescence by silence also applies to the filioque.So much for the charge that Rome didn’t know until Chalcedon. Qui tacit consentit.